Tuesday, May 3, 2016

The ECB and Germany play a confusing blame game

German finance minister Schauble blames the ECB for the rise of populist parties, which he attributes in part to the ECB's easy money policy. He thinks they should tighten up.

In reply, ECB Chairman Draghi mostly blames Germany for Europe's woes and for making the ECB adopt an easy money policy. According to Draghi, Germany's high savings rate compared to its neighbors is somehow forcing the ECB to stimulate because Germans are refusing to go into debt and splurge on consumption items.

Meanwhile, Europe's first quarter economy grew at a 2.4% annual rate (0.6%) with no inflation. This is a great result and the previous quarter was also good. Draghi, however, is unhappy because the inflation rate is too low in relation to the growth rate. (WSJ, A14)

I find this all very Kafkaesque.

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