The “E” in ECB stands, lest it be forgotten, for “European”. It is the central bank of all the countries belonging to the Euro Area. It is also thanks to the Treaty and its own statutes independent of instruction from European and national public bodies. This does not prevent national lobbyists, commentators and politicians from giving it unsolicited advice, however, particularly when ECB policies are perceived to be out of line with the real or supposed “national interest”, or that of the social group in question.
Germany is something of a special case in this regard, for a number of reasons. It is the EU country most clearly associated with inflation-hawkism and, related to that, upholding the idea of central bank independence. It is the largest Euro Area economy. In theory this makes it less likely that its economic needs will differ widely from those of the currency area as a whole, creating pressure to seek changes in the monetary policy stance. Yet, in practice Germany has been something of a Euro Area outlier. It would have needed lower interest rates for much of the pre-crisis EMU period and would not, by itself, require the extraordinary expansionary measures pursued recently by the ECB. Lastly, its size, economic performance and the nature of the euro crisis mean that Berlin very much calls the policymaking shots in the EU as a whole.
It is against this background that we should reflect on reports that Chancellor Merkel is today meeting Mario Draghi and has been urged by party officials, Bundesbank president Weidmann and lobbyists from the German financial sector to – how to put this delicately? – persuade the ECB president to bring low interest rates and quantitative easing to an end sooner rather than later. [Read more…]