The Pak Banker

‘Helicopter money’ not under discussion at ECB: Coeure

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FRANKFURT: The concept of "helicopter money" where the European Central Bank would print and hand out cash directly to eurozone citizens "is not currently part of the discussion" on the ECB's governing council, a top official said today. "As an economist, of course I find the academic discussion exciting.

It is good that academics force us to think outside the box. But as a policymake­r, as interestin­g as it may be, helicopter money is not currently part of the discussion in the governing council," executive board member Benoit Coeure told media. "Helicopter money" was originally posited by US economist Milton Friedman in 1969 when he suggested in a thought game that a helicopter fly over a community and drop bills from the sky in the hope that by putting more money directly into consumers' pockets, they would scurry to the shops to spend their windfalls.

The ensuing surge in demand would revitalise the economy and avert the threat of deflation by persuading retailers to raise their prices, Friedman argued.

It is a concept that has never been tried out in real life by any major central bank. But with growing concern that quantitati­ve easing and zero or even negative interest rates may have lost their power to kickstart the economy, ECB president Mario Draghi recently described it as an "interestin­g concept."

Helicopter money need not take the form of air-dropping cash. It could also be implemente­d by cutting taxes or healthcare payments, all financed by money printed by the ECB.

Neverthele­ss, implementi­ng such financial relief in an area as big as the 19 countries that share the euro would encounter a number of technical and ethical hurdles, not to mention legal ones. Under the ECB's own statutes, it is expressly forbidden from financing government­s, even if there appears to be nothing to stop it from handing cash out to citizens.

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