National Post

Draghi says ECB still has ammunition

- Noah Barkin and Paul Taylor

• European Central Bank president Mario Draghi said on Friday that the bank had plenty of instrument­s at its disposal to push meagre eurozone inflation levels higher and was both determined and willing to act.

His comments at t he World Economic Forum in Davos came a day after the ECB surprised markets by signalling a readiness to pursue further monetary easing at its next policy- setting meeting in March.

Sharp falls in the price of oil, slowing growth in China and steep drops in financial markets have raised new questions about the strength of Europe’s economic recovery and the ECB’s ability to steer inflation back up to its target of close to, but just below, two per cent.

“We have plenty of instrument­s and especially we have the determinat­ion and willingnes­s and capacity of the Governing Council to act and deploy these instrument­s,” Draghi said.

Speaking on a later panel, Draghi’s colleague on the ECB board, Benoit Coeure defended the bank’s policies and communicat­ions strategy against criticism from former Bundesbank president Axel Weber, now chairman of Swiss bank UBS AG.

Coeure said the ECB’s quantitati­ve easing program was working, pointing to a “tremendous improvemen­t” in the eurozone’s capital markets, and what he called an 80- basis- point re- duction in average funding costs for companies since the launch of the scheme.

Weber, who resigned as Bundesbank president in protest at the more modest bond- buying program of Draghi’s predecesso­r Jean-Claude Trichet, responded: “We understand that there maybe no limit to what the ECB is willing to do but there’s a very clear limit to what the ECB can and will achieve.

“The problem is t hat monetary policy has largely run its course,” Weber said.

Drag hi signal led on Thursday, after the bank’s governing council left interest rates unchanged, that a further easing of ECB monetary policy was likely in March, telling a news conference that the policy-making council was unanimous in its determinat­ion to act.

Asked in Davos about a financial market rout since the start of the year, he described it as “market vibrations, gyrations” and said it was premature to say that the global economic outlook had worsened as a consequenc­e.

“There’ s certainly a heightened sensitivit­y to risk, but it’s too early to say t he perspectiv­e has changed. As far as we are concerned, we basically see a recovery that is continuing at modest pace, but it’s a regular one.”

He dismissed concerns about divergence between the U.S. Federal Reserve’s December interest rate increase and the ECB’s easing of monetary policy days earlier.

Draghi said it reflected their different positions in the economic recovery cycle.

“It’s entirely natural that monetary policies do differ and they will be on a diverging path for a while. This will be reflected in different interest rates but it’s a normal process,” he said.

The ECB chief said the eurozone recovery was being driven partly by cheap money and lower oil prices, which i ncreased households’ disposable income, but also by government fiscal policies that had become “broadly neutral, if not slightly expansiona­ry.”

The i nflux of refugees fleeing war and conflict in the Middle East and North Africa would push government­s to increase public investment spending further to accommodat­e the migrants, he said.

He acknowledg­ed difference­s among European leaders over how to share the refugee burden, but said he was “pretty confident” that an agreement would be found.

“Not to co- operate is to ignore the challenge, and to ignore it will not make it disappear,” Draghi said.

Draghi also expressed confidence t hat Greece, which came to the brink of exit from the euro area last year, would achieve a positive first review of its third bailout program very soon.

Negotiatio­ns were under way on fiscal targets, a ref orm to make the Greek pension system sustainabl­e and completing a cleanup of the financial sector, which is still dogged by nonperform­ing loans (NPLs).

Asked about turmoil in Italian markets over NPLs in the country’s own banks, Draghi said a questionna­ire sent by the ECB’s Single Supervisor­y Mechanism to Italian banks about the loans had been misunderst­ood.

It was not a sign that more provisions were forthcomin­g, he said, but rather an attempt by the SRM to get more informatio­n about national practices in dealing with NPLs.

“There was big confusion, I think, in my native country,” the Italian ECB chief said.

WE HAVE PLENTY OF INSTRUMENT­S.

 ?? MATTHEW LLOYD / BLOOMBERG ?? Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, at a panel session Friday at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Asked about current economic conditions, he said, “We basically see a recovery that is continuing at modest pace, but it’s a regular...
MATTHEW LLOYD / BLOOMBERG Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, at a panel session Friday at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Asked about current economic conditions, he said, “We basically see a recovery that is continuing at modest pace, but it’s a regular...

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