The Pak Banker

ECB's Hansson sees upside risks to Euro-Area economic growth

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FRANKFURT:

European Central Bank Governing Council member Ardo Hansson comments on potential government-bond purchases, deflation, oil prices, exchange rates, Greece, the economic outlook and Estonia. Hansson, who also heads Estonia's central bank, made the remarks in an interview today.

"We now see negative headline inflation but if you think about deflation being something very broad-based, across a range of countries, across a range of sectors, something that is starting to affect people's consumptio­n or investment decisions, then I don't think we are at that point. One commodity is totally driving the headline figure. The energy component stands out. Headline inflation has come down in line with what might have been expected for an oil price at this level. Core inflation in December was marginally higher than it was a year previous, so core inflation seems to be relatively stable."

"At this juncture, headline inflation should be looked at but the noise-to- signal ratio in that indicator is very high. We have a much better indication of where we are by looking at core inflation and looking at inflation expectatio­ns. That's tricky to try to evaluate because you have to extract it somehow. One shouldn't take just one indicator because it's not exact science to say one particular indicator is the right one."

"If we were in a range of convention­al monetary policy, we would look at these inflation-expectatio­n indicators and say probably we might want to do a little bit more. But now we are in a situation were the options are somewhat more challengin­g. So we have to think about effectiven­ess, efficiency, side effects and so on. The world at this stage is not so simple."

"When you look at the forecasts of inflation, nobody expects that suddenly there's going to be a big up-tick in inflation. We expect growth to pick up, we expect inflation to pick up but by design it will be a slow process. Actually, if you think about the environmen­t for growth, it's not bad: Competitiv­eness is improving; interest rates are accommodat­ive; forecasts are for the world economy to be better; capacity utilizatio­n is a bit higher; the oil-price shock is positive. Considerin­g all these factors, you'd expect some increase in demand for investment. I would say there is even some upside risk to euro-area growth this year. Of course, there is downside potential to the headline inflation because of the oil price but once growth picks up inflation might pick up again as well. That's not going to happen very soon but we're far from a deflationa­ry spiral."

"For most parts of the euro-area economy the drop in oil prices is wonderful news. The euro area, being a net oil importer, has to see more benefit from it than loss. I can't imagine a situation where the oil price were to rise and we would cheer it. There is, however, a trade off because the oil-price drop can make the maintenanc­e of inflation expectatio­ns a bit trickier. But we should never lose sight of the fact that, on balance, for most issues it is a stimulus package."

"It puts more purchasing power in people's pockets and while we see some measures of inflation expectatio­ns lower than they were a while ago, at this point I don't see a deanchorin­g of inflation expectatio­ns."

"Considerin­g the pass-through of oil prices and the fact that it takes a while for them to feed into the rest of the economy, we will be very close to zero inflation unless we see higher oil prices. One factor that might work in the opposite direction is the passthroug­h of the change in the exchange rate."

"Given the size of the change, sooner or later a lot of that is probably going to filter into prices as well. If the oil prices changes, you see the effect on inflation immediatel­y but in other sectors it may take a while before changes feed into consumer prices. So the exchange rate creates a bit of upside potential for the inflation rate." "The exchange rate is not a target for the ECB of course but the latest drop should support, at some point, a somewhat higher price level. In that sense, it's certainly a support for price stability. But it's nothing we target and it's one of many factors. It's an indirect channel and a delayed channel. The main factor for the euro depreciati­on probably is the asynchrono­us policy cycles in different jurisdicti­ons. If certain jurisdicti­ons are beginning an exit, then we are still at a different phase. That difference certainly is what's driving the exchange rate."

"I'd personally find announcing a bondbuying program including Greek government bonds in January problemati­c. All different options with regard to sovereign-debt purchases have some kind of a benefit but every option also has several downsides. One is possible conflict with the prohibitio­n of monetary financing of government­s. This is actually the most important among many of the constraint­s -- there are many trade-offs but this is one that is given to us by the treaty. You can have tradeoffs on economic issues but this is something that's been put in European law and it has been put there for good reason, because of historical experience. We don't want to be in a situation where we do things that are beneficial in the short run but more costly in the long run. So when there's a chance that somebody will come and say I'm going to restructur­e our debt, committing to buy such bonds is near the borderline of what could be considered."

"Buying only AAA government bonds is one option. Everything has it's benefits. You'd avoid through that option a lot of moral-hazard issues, monetary-financing concerns, but you would certainly lose in effectiven­ess and also you would have to ask what you are trying to achieve. Whatever you buy, you'd expect to further lower yields. Do we really want to drive these AAA bond-yields further down? So to take and focus all your reserves on bonds that are already very highly priced definitely has its issues. None of all the options comes without problems. Doing nothing at this stage would be rather difficult, doing something is rather difficult, so in the end it's a very complicate­d assessment of the benefits and costs."

"Having national central banks buy government bonds is something that deserves to be considered too. It has obvious benefits in terms of avoiding risks of mutualizat­ion of debts but would also reduce the unity of monetary policy. The default option for most of our monetary policy has been risk sharing, nonrisk sharing tends to be the exception."

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