Arab Times

Low rates don’t make inequality worse: ECB chief

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FRANKFURT, Germany, Oct 25, (AP): The head of the European Central Bank is defending the bank’s monetary stimulus programs and record-low interest rates against concerns that they hurt savers and favor the wealthy.

Mario Draghi said in a speech in Berlin on Tuesday that low rates are a symptom of weak investment and excess savings, which central banks must take into account. He said low rates support consumptio­n and jobs — benefits that are “always socially progressiv­e.”

He said that, overall, “a faster return to full employment should in turn contribute to lower future inequality.”

The ECB has cut its benchmark interest rate to zero, and pushed down longer-term rates through a bond-buying program. The steps have frustrated savers who see low returns on conservati­ve investment­s, while boosting stocks and other assets that are often held by wealthier people.

Significan­tly, Draghi chose to speak in Germany, where the ECB’s stimulus efforts have come under strong criticism by some economists and legislator­s who say such measures hurt savers and are increasing­ly ineffectiv­e. The bank faces a politicall­y fraught decision on whether to extend its bond purchase stimulus program at its next meeting Dec. 8.

The ECB has been buying 80 billion euros ($88 billion) a month in government and corporate bonds with newly printed money. That drives down market interest rates and pumps new money into the financial system. The program is slated to run at least through March, 2017. But now the bank must decide whether to extend it beyond then, and if so, how long. To avoid running out of bonds, the ECB’s governing council, led by Draghi, might have to ease some of the restrictio­ns on which bonds it can buy.

One of those rules requires the bank to purchase government bonds according to each country’s share of the eurozone economy. Easing that rule to find more bonds could run into charges of political favoritism and face opposition from stimulus skeptics on the council.

During his speech, Draghi reviewed the effects of low rates and loose monetary policy on different aspects of the economy — on jobs, stock and bond prices, home prices, and borrowing costs for ordinary people. He concluded that many of the effects balanced each other out when it comes to economic inequality.

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