European Unit of Account

The European Unit of Account (EUA) was a unit of account most notably used in the European Communities from 1975 to 1979, when it was replaced at parity by the European Currency Unit, in turn replaced at parity in 1999 by the euro.

The EUA was introduced as the internal unit of account for the European Payments Union when that organisation was formed in 1950. The EUA was defined as 0.888671 grams of gold, or one US dollar. The unit was first used outside the EPU in 1961, when Kredietbank Luxembourgeoise issued a bond denominated in EUA.[1] After the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, the EUA was redefined as a basket of European currencies.

The EUA was used for Lomé Convention and European Investment Bank operations before being gradually introduced into other sectors of Community activity.[2]

The EUA was a basket of European currencies, originally designed to have the same value in mid-1974 as the IMF special drawing rights basket, both worth US$1.20635; they immediately moved apart in value. Different units of account had previously been used for different purposes, including the budget, the European Coal and Steel Community, and the Common Agriculture Policy[3] following the abandonment of the gold parity unit of account in the early 1970s in the wake of the collapse of the Bretton Woods system.[4]

Bond market baskets of currencies

Various European currency baskets were used as units of account in international bond markets. Some of these were defined in ISO 4217.[5]

Alphabetic codeNumeric codeName
XBA955European Composite Unit (EURCO)
XBB956European Monetary Unit (E.M.U.-6)
XBC957European Unit of Account 9 (E.U.A.-9)
XBD958European Unit of Account 17 (E.U.A.-17)
XEU954European Currency Unit
EUR978Euro
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References

  1. https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/173757/1/wp301en.pdf
  2. "Timeline of the European Union | EU Facts". Europeaninstitute.org. Archived from the original on 2010-05-14. Retrieved 2010-06-30.
  3. The Units of Account as a Factor of Integration CEC 87/75
  4. European Union Public Finance, European Commission, ISBN 978-92-79-06937-6, published 2008, accessed 2019-05-28
  5. ISO currency codes list


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