New Straits Times

ECB keeps door open for more stimulus measures

- FRANKFURT

The European Central Bank has left the door open to an extension of its stimulus programme at its next meeting in December, when it will be armed with new forecasts for the economy of the 19-country eurozone.

The central bank yesterday left its main interest rates on hold and maintained the scale and duration of its bond-buying programme.

In a press briefing, ECB president Mario Draghi said the bank is ready to do more to shore up the eurozone economy over the coming months. But that there was no discussion at this meeting over any changes to the current array of stimulus measures.

The bank, he insisted, “is committed to preserving the very substantia­l degree of monetary accommodat­ion” but that other policy measures, such as structural reforms by government­s in the eurozone need to be “stepped up”. Draghi said reforms would boost productivi­ty, improve the business environmen­t, and boost jobs.

“In an environmen­t of accommodat­ive monetary policy, the swift and effective implementa­tion of structural reforms will not only lead to higher sustainabl­e economic growth in the euro area but will also make the eurozone more resilient to global shocks,” he said.

Though Draghi continued to stress the importance of structural reforms to the eurozone’s economy, many experts think the bank will expand its stimulus programme in December. One measure it could take would be to extend the €80 billion (RM366.75 billion) in monthly bond purchases beyond March next year, currently the earliest possible end-date.

He said an abrupt end to the current bond purchases is “unlikely” and that tapering — a gradual phasing of the bond-buying programme — was not discussed yesterday.

The ECB’s other stimulus measures have included cutting to zero its benchmark refinancin­g rate, which means banks can borrow from it interest-free, offering unlimited cheap loans to banks, and cutting the rate on deposits banks leave with it overnight to minus 0.4 per cent. That negative rate is in effect a tax intended to push banks to lend excess funds, not hoard them at the central bank.

What the ECB does over the coming months will hinge on economic developmen­ts, many of which the bank can do little about, such as the scale of the slowdown in China, the outlook for oil prices and the impact of Britain’s exit from the European Union. AP

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