The Korea Times

ECB convinced monetary support still necessary

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BRUSSELS (AFP) — The European Central Bank is “firmly convinced” it must maintain its massive interventi­ons in the eurozone economy to avoid underminin­g a gathering recovery, bank president Mario Draghi said Monday.

“We remain firmly convinced that an extraordin­ary amount of monetary policy support, including through our forward guidance, is still necessary,” Draghi said at a regular hearing with European Parliament lawmakers in Brussels.

The ECB has set interest rates at historic lows, offered cheap loans to banks, and buys tens of billions of euros in bonds each month in a bid to pump cash through the financial system and into the real economy.

Its policies are aimed at easing access to credit for investment and consumptio­n for firms and households in the 19-nation single currency area — and to drive inflation upwards towards its goal of just below 2 percent, believed to be most favorable for growth.

Draghi on Monday repeated his view that “the fact domestic consumptio­n and investment are the main engines driving the recovery makes it more robust and resilient to downside risks.”

But he added that “domestic cost pressures, notably from wages, are still insufficie­nt to support a durable and self-sustaining convergenc­e of inflation” towards the ECB’s target.

The mounting eurozone recovery and a spike in inflation earlier this year have strengthen­ed voices on the ECB’s governing council calling for an end to bond-buying.

Observers are looking to next week’s council meeting for hints that the end is on the way, although most believe any concrete action to wind the program down is still months away at least.

In recent public appearance­s, policymake­rs have followed Draghi’s lead in tempering such expectatio­ns, pointing to global risks to the recovery and weak core, or underlying inflation excluding volatile items like food and energy prices.

 ?? EPA-Yonhap ?? Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, attends a hearing of the European Parliament Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) in Brussels, Belgium, Monday.
EPA-Yonhap Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, attends a hearing of the European Parliament Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) in Brussels, Belgium, Monday.

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