National Post

No phones, no leaks: How Christine Lagarde is making her mark on ECB.

NEW PRESIDENT LAGARDE TAKES CHARGE AT ECB

- BALAZS KORANYI, FRANCESCO CANEPA AND FRANK SIEBELT

Gathered in a German mountain castle last November for an evening retreat that ended with a whiskey- tasting, rebel European Central Bank policy-makers and Christine Lagarde, their newly confirmed president, made a pact.

Lagarde pledged to spend more time listening, and not to front-run decisions before policy- makers had weighed in, as her predecesso­r Mario Draghi was often accused of doing.

In return, she asked for discipline from the Governing Council, the ECB’S top policy- making body, which comprises national central bank chiefs from the 19 euro zone countries and six Executive Board members, including Lagarde herself.

Governors had to stop trashing policy decisions once taken and keep internal disputes out of the media, presenting a common external front, 11 sources — both critics and supporters of the ECB’S last, controvers­ial stimulus package — told Reuters.

A look at her first three months in office suggests Lagarde is using the entente of Schlosshot­el Kronberg to make subtle but significan­t changes at Europe’s most powerful institutio­n.

“The change is cultural but quite profound,” one of the sources, who asked not to be named, told Reuters. “Culture drives how we make decisions so it impacts policy.”

A greater emphasis on consensus has boosted the Governing Council’s role and given more voice to critics like Germany whose support may be vital whenever the next downturn comes, most of the sources, all with direct knowledge of the inner workings of the ECB, said.

But Lagarde has also made clear that Draghi’s disputed September stimulus package will not be revisited, and has kept on his key aides, architects of the plan.

In Europe, the role of ECB president is uniquely powerful: backed by the Governing Council, she or he is the face and voice of the institutio­n, carrying its message to businesses and households and to world leaders.

The ECB and Lagarde declined to comment. Draghi did not respond to a request for comment.

Meetings now start several hours earlier, leaving more time for deliberati­on and giving policy-makers time to speak. Lagarde mostly presides over the debate, many of sources said, talking relatively little herself and keeping her own views quiet to foster open debate.

“When governors talk, she listens. That doesn’t sound like a big deal but Mario was often on his phone or ipad,” a second source said. “Madame Lagarde tells people to put their phones away.”

Meeting proposals are now handed to governors up to a week in advance, some of the sources added, not just hours before for fear of leaks.

These changes have shifted power away from the close circle of advisers that Draghi relied on and given Governing Council members more capacity to shape the debate, reducing the need to bring disagreeme­nts into the open.

All of the sources said they consider Draghi — known as ‘ the man who saved the euro’ — a superb central banker. But his willingnes­s to forego consensus — as in September, when he pushed through the new stimulus package despite strong opposition — annoyed some policy-makers, prompting open dissent.

In another sign the peace is holding, Governing Council members have largely accepted Lagarde’s request not to publicly discuss the substance of the ECB’S wide-ranging policy review.

Colleagues said Lagarde’s charm and approachab­ility contrasted with the more aloof Draghi. She takes the staff elevators inside the ECB tower, asks people’s names and happily chats to colleagues.

But the former French finance minister is a ruthless timekeeper, keeping meetings on schedule and often reminding people to keep their messages short and to the point.

“In one (European Systemic Risk Board) meeting, when a speaker ran out of time and pleaded for leniency, she said sorry, we need to move on, and that was it,” a third source said.

What didn’t change is also significan­t.

ECB chief economist Philip Lane continues to lead policy discussion­s, given the necessary space by Lagarde, a former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief and a lawyer by training who lacks the monetary policy expertise of her predecesso­rs.

“Christine knows her limitation­s on monetary policy and knows that she needs to preside over the debate and not dominate it,” a fourth source said. “She is more presidenti­al.”

Former colleagues at the IMF describe her as a tough negotiator whose strength was consensus-building.

Regarded as more politicall­y adept than Draghi, Lagarde is said to be on cordial terms with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Their support could be vital as the ECB’S depleted policy arsenal puts the onus on government­s to drive growth.

In her first speech in charge, Lagarde praised German ex-finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, a stern ECB critic.

The strategic review Lagarde launched last month could be transforma­tional for the ECB, bringing tweaks to the “below but close to 2 per cent” inflation target and more tolerance for deviation, although at the risk of irritating the hawkish Germans.

But her desire for the ECB to take a bigger role in fighting climate change could bring early challenges to Lagarde, who joked in a meeting last year that Draghi “left big shoes to fill ... but I have high heels.”

 ?? Thomas Lohnes / Gett y Imag es ?? Christine Lagarde is known for no-nonsense meetings,
approachab­ility and consensus-building.
Thomas Lohnes / Gett y Imag es Christine Lagarde is known for no-nonsense meetings, approachab­ility and consensus-building.

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