The National - News

WHILE THE FED MAKES EASING LOOK SIMPLE, THE ECB HAS A COMPLEX TASK

- MOHAMED EL ERIAN Mohamed A El Erian is the chief economic adviser at Allianz

Ewald Nowotny, the governor of Austria’s central bank and a member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank, said last month that “it’s no secret, we’re monitoring closely what the Fed did, and is doing”.

Such sentiments are understand­able, even desirable. After all, the Federal Reserve’s process of monetary policy normalisat­ion is unpreceden­ted and, at least so far, successful.

Yet, because the challenges facing the ECB are considerab­ly more complex, the US central bank’s experiment is just a good starting point. Indeed, even the most basic aspect of policy design and implementa­tion – sequencing specific measures – may not necessaril­y translate as smoothly in Europe as it does in the United States.

After a bit of a nervous start with the “taper tantrum” in May-June 2013, the Fed has managed to stop its large-scale asset purchase programme known as quantitati­ve easing, raise interest rates six times and roll-out a timetable for reducing its sizeable balance sheet. Importantl­y, all this has been done without derailing the economy or disrupting the functionin­g of markets.

The Fed’s successful process of policy normalisat­ion follows a period of reliance on unconventi­onal measures that lasted a lot longer than even policymake­rs had anticipate­d. Under this experiment, the central bank was forced to carry the bulk of the policy burden for promoting growth and ensuring financial stability.

As it exits, the Fed has highlighte­d the importance of: Close data monitoring. Timely communicat­ion and forward policy guidance.

Careful sequencing of quantity (balance sheet) and price (interest rate) measures

Maintainin­g appropriat­e policy optionalit­y.

What makes the US experience even more noteworthy is that the Fed is well ahead of the ECB and the Bank of Japan in the policy normalisat­ion process. By forging a path in uncharted territory, the Fed naturally becomes a reference point, if not a lighthouse.

Yet the challenge facing the ECB is a lot more complicate­d, and not just for domestic reasons. The regional and internatio­nal contexts are also more delicate.

The majority of the 19 members of the eurozone, the countries where the ECB directly influences monetary conditions, are less advanced than the US in adopting pro-growth policies. Despite indication­s of greater budgetary stimulus in Germany, the region’s most systemic nation, individual countries’ fiscal policies have yet to make significan­t room for easing off exceptiona­l monetary stimulus.

Regionally, the ECB continues to face the tricky task of using a single policy approach for countries that still have significan­t economic and financial divergence­s, and that are yet to be linked more closely by a full banking union and deeper fiscal and political integratio­n. This makes policy design and implementa­tion more difficult, and that’s before you add trickier conditions for the internatio­nal economy and markets.

Economic data have become more mixed in recent weeks, highlighti­ng the need for structural reforms and more balanced demand management to reinforce the synchronis­ed pickup in global growth. Europe’s contributi­on has been driven primarily by a natural healing process whose beneficial impact diminishes if it isn’t accompanie­d by progrowth policies.

Meanwhile, the period of unusual calm in markets has been replaced by volatility, including large two-way price movements, as investors have revisited their faith in previous stabiliser­s, as artificial as some were (such as the belief in an endless willingnes­s of “non-commercial flows” from central banks and corporate balance sheets to repress volatility).

Then there is the big uncertaint­y of simultanei­ty – that is, how the global economy and markets would respond to not just one, but several systemical­ly important central banks withdrawin­g exceptiona­l monetary stimulus at the same time.

No one can be entirely certain how much the protracted period of unconventi­onal policies has led to inappropri­ate resource allocation­s, unrealisti­c promises of liquidity and other excessive risk-taking in certain areas of the nonbank sector. For all these reasons, the ECB will have to be even more careful in:

Monitoring an even bigger set of indicators of economic and financial health,

Communicat­ing with the markets,

Maintainin­g internal cohesion,

Minimising the threat of political interferen­ce, and

Mixing all this while retaining sufficient policy flexibilit­y.

Even more intriguing is the possibilit­y that the seemingly obvious sequencing of measures – halting QE, then getting most of the interest rate hikes done, which would allow for significan­t balance-sheet contractio­n over time – may not be as much of a slam dunk as many observers seem to believe.

For the eurozone, balance-sheet purchases have played an important role in maintainin­g order and financial stability amid notable economic and financial divergence among member countries. Moreover, the persistenc­e of ultra-low policy rates, with levels in negative territory in nominal terms for quite a while, eats away a lot faster at the integrity of the financial system, including the robustness of essential long-term financial protection for households (such as for life insurance and retirement).

This is not to say that the ECB should raise interest rates either before or as it stops its QE programme. I have competing feelings about the most appropriat­e sequencing. All this points to the considerab­ly more complex policy task facing the ECB in the months to come, both on a standalone basis and relative to the Fed, and warns against too quick a mapping from the US to the eurozone.

The ECB continues to face the tricky task of using a single policy approach for countries that still have significan­t economic divergence­s

 ?? Reuters ?? The European Central Bank in Frankfurt influences the monetary conditions of all 19 members of the eurozone
Reuters The European Central Bank in Frankfurt influences the monetary conditions of all 19 members of the eurozone

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