Fornaro, LucaGrosse-Steffen, Christoph2024-04-112024-04-112024-06http://hdl.handle.net/10230/59735We provide a theory of financial fragmentation in monetary unions. Our key insight is that currency unions may experience endogenous breakings of symmetry: that is episodes in which identical countries react differently when exposed to the same shock. During these events part of the union suffers a capital flight, while the rest acts as a safe haven and receives capital inflows. The central bank then faces a difficult trade-off between containing unemployment in capital-flight countries, and inflationary pressures in safe-haven ones. By counteracting private capital flows with public ones, anti-fragmentation monetary programs mitigate the impact of financial fragmentation on employment and inflation, thus helping the central bank to fulfill its price stability mandate.application/pdfengFragmented monetary unionsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaperMonetary unionsEuro areaFragmentationOptimal monetary policy in openinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess