International News

ECB to hold out longer before ending bond-buying: analysts

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, (MILLAT ONLINE/APP/AFP): The European Central
Bank will fend off calls to wind down its massive monetary stimulus when governors meet Thursday, preferring to wait for calmer political waters and fresh economic data, analysts predict.
Faced with continuing political uncertainty and weak inflation,
policymakers are unlikely to turn off the taps on mass bond-buying or raise
interest rates from historic lows, fearing that doing so would risk nipping the eurozone economic recovery in the bud.
The bank’s interventions in the economy are designed to power growth
and push inflation towards its target of just below 2.0 percent.
But while price growth in the 19-nation single currency area briefly
overshot the goal in February, it fell back to 1.5 percent in March.
ECB president Mario Draghi on Friday reiterated his conviction that
“very substantial” support from the central bank is still needed to bring core, or underlying inflation — excluding volatile food and energy prices — back towards the target.
“Underlying inflation… is expected to rise only gradually over the
medium term,” he told the International Monetary and Financial
Committee in Washington.
Draghi and his supporters on the governing council see slack
remaining in the economy.
The ECB chief in March labelled higher wages the “lynchpin” of
increased inflation, but high unemployment in some member countries means employers still don’t need to offer pay rises, as workers bargain from a weak position.
Meanwhile, policymakers are anxious not to upset financial markets
while eurozone heavyweight France navigates a high-stakes presidential election, which far-right anti-euro candidate Marine Le Pen has a real chance of winning after reaching the run-off.
“The meeting comes at a time at which the ECB would rather say
nothing than give markets any new information to speculate about,” said economist Carsten Brzeski of ING Diba bank.