Kristian Rouz – Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), said the unconventional monetary policies are still necessary to support the pace of economic expansion in the Eurozone, as the regulator awaits new evidence of macroeconomic stability.
Ahead of the 8 June ECB policy meeting, President Draghi cited the still moderate inflation as the main reason to keep stimulus policies in place. Even though the German economy has driven the Eurozone’s economic expansion to its best in roughly a decade, growth discrepancies across the monetary union still pose significant structural challenges to the Eurozone.
"For domestic price pressures to strengthen, we still need very accommodative financing conditions, which are themselves dependent on a fairly substantial amount of monetary accommodation," Draghi said in a speech before the European Parliament's committee on economic affairs.
In Southern Europe, however, a loose monetary environment is still vital to support positive GDP growth amongst the member states. This reflects the long-lasting structural problems of the Eurozone, where the regional discrepancies in economic expansion pose an existential threat to the common currency area, and the ECB’s mandate is to find balanced monetary solutions allowing the Eurozone to move forward.
"At its June monetary policy meeting the Governing Council will receive an update of the staff projections and a more complete information set on which it will be able to formulate its judgment on the distribution of risks around the most likely outlook for growth and inflation," Draghi said.
Eurozone consumer prices and core inflation both slowed recently, to 1.4 and 1.0 percent, respectively, after accelerating to almost 2.0 and 1.4 percent earlier this year. Draghi and the ECB staff are considering exit strategies from the asset purchase and zero-to-negative rate policies, but the timeline is still undecided, as there is little predictability in overall Eurozone growth and inflation. Whilst there is more certainty with the German economy, the lingering banking sector woes in Italy and low economic efficiency in France bring a significant degree of volatility in the ECB planning.
“Draghi will explain that the improvement in the economy is not sufficient at this point to make sure that the improvement in the inflation outlook is self-sustained,” Philippe Gudin of the British bank, Barclays Plc., said. “We are still far from the point at which we could see inflationary pressures materialising.”
The size of the ECB’s bond-buying programme has reached some $2.6 trln, and the ongoing central bank buyouts of private debt provide support to domestic investment in the Eurozone in the absence of single fiscal policy within the bloc. Even though the Eurozone’s unemployment rate has dropped to the current 9.5 percent from 12 percent in 2013 (3.9 percent from 5.3 percent in Germany and 9.6 from 10.4, in France), and euro-area economic activity and confidence near six-year highest, the structural imbalances are preventing the ECB from normalising their monetary policy.
The ECB recently reaffirmed their commitment to start raising interest rates only after the asset-purchase programme is wrapped up, but the current purchases of 60 billion euro worth of bonds per month are projected to continue till the year-end. This is making any substantial changes to the ECB policies a more distant perspective, adding risks to the German economy, where the Bundesbank might take action aimed at stabilising the buoyant growth.
In September, the ECB will determine whether to extend its bond purchase programme into the next year.