Showing posts with label ECB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ECB. Show all posts
Monday, October 17, 2016
Big Picture: Central Bank balance sheet growth accelerates YTD: Now at $21.4 trillion
A new flood of liquidity is being unleashed. Where will it go? (below is from the Bloomberg article)
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.
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.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Central bankers among the wolves
Last week Janet Yellen talked to Congress and on Monday Mario Draghi spoke to the European parliament. I happened to watch some of each on TV.
Janet Yellen probably regards her recent testimony to Congress as a low point, at least so far. Like Rodney Dangerfield, she got no respect. (“I come from a stupid family. During the Civil War my great uncle fought for the West!” – NB: I think that was said by Dangerfield, not Yellen.) Gone are the halcyon days of the representatives’ and senators’ groveling and obsequious boot-licking of Greenspan and Bernanke. The image that came to my mind was the movie scene where the caveman, or, in this case, cave-chair finds herself alone at night surrounded by a pack of hungry wolves held at bay only by the sputtering flames of a dying torch. The wolves respect the flames but not the chair, and they know the flames are dying. I was half expecting a band of loyal governors to rush into to hearing room at the last minute to rescue her, but they didn’t.
Mario Draghi looked more impressive, speaking with assuredness, surrounded by well-groomed advisors in Italian suits, until the Q&A, when the camera turned and revealed that the large parliamentary room was almost empty. Draghi gave his usual “we’ll do what it takes” and even boasted that half of the Eurozone’s growth has been from ECB actions. (The other half was, according to him, from low oil prices, leaving out government, policy, individual initiative, invention, and hard work, all of which are of no account, at least in Mario’s mind.) I couldn’t help thinking that he keeps saying he’ll do “whatever,” but in reality he does rather less than his words suggest. No doubt there are some puppet strings leading to the restraining hand of Wolfgang Schäuble, just offstage.
For several years at least, people have been reassured by the assumption that the central banks have matters under control. Now that doubt has crept in, who or what will be the new repository of hope? So far, the political leaders are AWOL and have been a long time. Nature abhors a vacuum. This has the makings of a crisis.
Janet Yellen probably regards her recent testimony to Congress as a low point, at least so far. Like Rodney Dangerfield, she got no respect. (“I come from a stupid family. During the Civil War my great uncle fought for the West!” – NB: I think that was said by Dangerfield, not Yellen.) Gone are the halcyon days of the representatives’ and senators’ groveling and obsequious boot-licking of Greenspan and Bernanke. The image that came to my mind was the movie scene where the caveman, or, in this case, cave-chair finds herself alone at night surrounded by a pack of hungry wolves held at bay only by the sputtering flames of a dying torch. The wolves respect the flames but not the chair, and they know the flames are dying. I was half expecting a band of loyal governors to rush into to hearing room at the last minute to rescue her, but they didn’t.
Mario Draghi looked more impressive, speaking with assuredness, surrounded by well-groomed advisors in Italian suits, until the Q&A, when the camera turned and revealed that the large parliamentary room was almost empty. Draghi gave his usual “we’ll do what it takes” and even boasted that half of the Eurozone’s growth has been from ECB actions. (The other half was, according to him, from low oil prices, leaving out government, policy, individual initiative, invention, and hard work, all of which are of no account, at least in Mario’s mind.) I couldn’t help thinking that he keeps saying he’ll do “whatever,” but in reality he does rather less than his words suggest. No doubt there are some puppet strings leading to the restraining hand of Wolfgang Schäuble, just offstage.
For several years at least, people have been reassured by the assumption that the central banks have matters under control. Now that doubt has crept in, who or what will be the new repository of hope? So far, the political leaders are AWOL and have been a long time. Nature abhors a vacuum. This has the makings of a crisis.
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