Lagarde’s
corona blunder
ECB chief
flunks on her strongest suit — communication.
By PAUL
TAYLOR 3/13/20, 4:01 PM CET
Paul
Taylor, a contributing editor at POLITICO, writes the “Europe At Large” column.
PARIS —
Christine Lagarde was supposed to be The Great Communicator. But the European
Central Bank president sent markets into a tailspin Thursday when she set out
her emergency stimulus measures to protect the financial system from the
crippling shock of coronavirus.
The problem
was not the measures themselves — flooding the banks with cheap money and
increasing bond purchases — although investors had expected a more radical
response. The U.S. Fed and the Bank of England had, after all, already slashed
interest rates.
It was what
she said and failed to say that triggered the panic sell-off, forcing her to
walk back those comments in a subsequent television interview. Lagarde’s chief
economist, Philip Lane, had to dig her out of a hole on Friday in a blog post
by promising further action as required.
Facing her
first big test after replacing Mario Draghi in November, Lagarde sent the wrong
message about the ECB’s determination to preserve the eurozone through this
crisis, even if she was right to press EU governments for ambitious fiscal
action
Since the
coronavirus crisis began to spread from China, Lagarde has shown mounting
frustration at what she sees as the complacency and inability of EU governments
to formulate a joint economic response.
With
several eurozone countries already in lockdown or on the brink, and swathes of
economic activity frozen for weeks and possibly months to come, markets and
governments were looking to Lagarde for a reaffirmation of Draghi’s
market-soothing 2012 statement that the ECB would do “whatever it takes” to
preserve the currency area.
Lagarde
pointedly refused to send that signal, saying she did not seek to be “whatever
it takes, number two.”
“We are not here to close spreads,” she said,
referring to the difference in borrowing costs between, say,
coronavirus-struck, debt-ridden Italy and Germany, which was in healthier
economic shape even before Rome took extreme measures like shutting down shops
and restricting movement.
“There are
other tools for that and other actors to deal with those issues,” Lagarde
added, passing the buck implicitly to governments. Her comment immediately
raised the Italian government’s borrowing costs.
Hidebound
view
As
Thursday’s biggest sell-off of Italian assets in history showed, central
bankers can fuel crises with words as well as calm them.
If
Lagarde’s remarks were a carefully reflected policy statement on the limits of
central bank responsibility, they constitute an alarming step back from her
Italian predecessor’s willingness to stretch the ECB’s mandate to the limit to
keep the currency area together.
Draghi was
widely credited for turning the tide of the eurozone crisis by effectively
declaring the ECB would be a lender of last resort, ready to buy unlimited
numbers of bonds from any eurozone government that implemented an agreed
adjustment program. He never needed to make good on the commitment. His word
was enough to calm the markets.
Lagarde has
since tried to correct her mistake by making clear that the central bank does
indeed have a responsibility to combat fragmentation in the currency zone,
saying that “high spreads due to coronavirus hamper the transmission of
monetary policy.”
But her
comments suggest she takes a much more limited, legally hidebound view of the
ECB’s treaty mandate to uphold price stability.
If true,
this is music to the ears of conservative German guardians of central banking
orthodoxy, who accused Draghi of exceeding his powers and lurching toward the
illicit monetary financing of governments. But she drew rare public criticism
from both the Italian and French presidents.
Tactical
pressure
It is also
possible, however, that the Frenchwoman, who by her own acknowledgement is a
lawyer, not an economist by training, was making a tactical statement to pile
political pressure on divided European governments to act more boldly, rather
than drawing a definitive line under the limits of central banking.
Lagarde
made clear in her European Parliament confirmation hearing in September that
monetary policy could no longer be “the only game in town” to support the
eurozone economy. Draghi issued similar warnings in his last months in office,
venting his impatience at the reluctance of Germany and the Netherlands — the
eurozone countries with the biggest current account surpluses — to invest far
more in public infrastructure to stimulate the economy.
Since the
coronavirus crisis began to spread from China, Lagarde has shown mounting
frustration at what she sees as the complacency and inability of EU governments
to formulate a joint economic response. Diplomats said she was blunt in
conveying that view to the 27 EU leaders during their emergency summit by
videoconference on Tuesday.
Before she
was hit by an unexpected crisis that economists would call an “exogenous shock”
(a bolt from the blue that impacts the economy massively), Lagarde had made a
promising start in the hot seat. She had used her charm and management skills
to heal bitter divisions in the ECB’s governing council, making national
central bankers feel their voices were being listened to and practicing a more
collegial style of leadership.
Her corona
blunder exposed one of her vulnerabilities — a weaker understanding of market
psychology than Draghi’s. The Italian was a master at managing down market expectations,
then exceeding them to amplify the impact.
The ECB
could and should have done more before Thursday to lower the wilder market and
media expectations of a cut in the bank’s record low interest rate, which would
anyway have taken 18 months to produce a stimulus.
But above
all, Lagarde must learn the lesson that public and market faith in the central
bank’s willingness to do “whatever it takes” is crucial. By casting doubt on
that determination, she is sawing the branch on which she, and the eurozone,
are seated.
PARIS —
Christine Lagarde was supposed to be The Great Communicator. But the European
Central Bank president sent markets into a tailspin Thursday when she set out
her emergency stimulus measures to protect the financial system from the
crippling shock of coronavirus.
The problem
was not the measures themselves — flooding the banks with cheap money and
increasing bond purchases — although investors had expected a more radical
response. The U.S. Fed and the Bank of England had, after all, already slashed
interest rates.
It was what
she said and failed to say that triggered the panic sell-off, forcing her to
walk back those comments in a subsequent television interview. Lagarde’s chief
economist, Philip Lane, had to dig her out of a hole on Friday in a blog post
by promising further action as required.
Facing her
first big test after replacing Mario Draghi in November, Lagarde sent the wrong
message about the ECB’s determination to preserve the eurozone through this
crisis, even if she was right to press EU governments for ambitious fiscal
action
Since the
coronavirus crisis began to spread from China, Lagarde has shown mounting
frustration at what she sees as the complacency and inability of EU governments
to formulate a joint economic response.
With
several eurozone countries already in lockdown or on the brink, and swathes of
economic activity frozen for weeks and possibly months to come, markets and
governments were looking to Lagarde for a reaffirmation of Draghi’s
market-soothing 2012 statement that the ECB would do “whatever it takes” to
preserve the currency area.
Lagarde
pointedly refused to send that signal, saying she did not seek to be “whatever
it takes, number two.”
“We are not
here to close spreads,” she said, referring to the difference in borrowing
costs between, say, coronavirus-struck, debt-ridden Italy and Germany, which
was in healthier economic shape even before Rome took extreme measures like
shutting down shops and restricting movement.
“There are
other tools for that and other actors to deal with those issues,” Lagarde
added, passing the buck implicitly to governments. Her comment immediately
raised the Italian government’s borrowing costs.
Hidebound
view
As
Thursday’s biggest sell-off of Italian assets in history showed, central
bankers can fuel crises with words as well as calm them.
If
Lagarde’s remarks were a carefully reflected policy statement on the limits of
central bank responsibility, they constitute an alarming step back from her
Italian predecessor’s willingness to stretch the ECB’s mandate to the limit to
keep the currency area together.
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