Central Bank News


ECB’s Visco: Removing Policy Support Early Worse Than ‘Being a Little Bit Too Late’

ECB’s Visco: Removing Policy Support Early Worse Than ‘Being a Little Bit Too Late’

At the press conference following the meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors, Visco, who heads Banca d’Italia, urged a ‘state-contingent and data-driven approach when deciding’ about a withdrawal, which in any case should proceed in a ‘gradual and targeted way in order to minimize long-term financial stability risks.’

7 April 2021
ECB’s Knot: Our Baseline Scenario Implies Phasing Out PEPP Starting Third Quarter

ECB’s Knot: Our Baseline Scenario Implies Phasing Out PEPP Starting Third Quarter

In an interview with Reuters, Knot, who heads the Dutch National Bank, said, 'If the economy develops according to our baseline, we will see better inflation and growth from the second half onwards. In that case, it would be equally clear to me that from the third quarter onwards we can begin to gradually phase out pandemic emergency purchases and end them as foreseen in March 2022.'

7 April 2021
ECB’s Visco: Cannot Make Any Mistakes As We Approach End of Tunnel

ECB’s Visco: Cannot Make Any Mistakes As We Approach End of Tunnel

In an interview with Financial Times, Visco, who heads Banca d’Italia, said that vaccinations rather than monetary or fiscal policy were ‘[t]he main instrument we have at the moment’, but that ‘close international co-operation within the G20’ was needed ‘to avoid that the different stages of the vaccination campaign in the various countries result in excessive divergences of the respective economies.’

4 April 2021
ECB’s Weidmann: Post-Pandemic Demand Won’t Sustainably Boost Inflation

ECB’s Weidmann: Post-Pandemic Demand Won’t Sustainably Boost Inflation

The projected increase in euro area inflation this year is due chiefly to ‘special effects’, he said in comments to the International Club of Frankfurt Economic Journalists, and the upward trend in subsequent years could turn out even weaker than thought. However, stronger-than-expected developments are also possible, he said, citing the effect of higher commodity prices on intermediate goods.

1 April 2021
German Inflation Accelerates Further, Registering 1.7% Y/Y in March

German Inflation Accelerates Further, Registering 1.7% Y/Y in March

The increase was the highest since 1.7% in February of last year and represented a renewed acceleration of prices after January’s 1.0% and February’s 1.3% were preceded by negative readings in each of the last four months of last year. On the month, German CPI in March came in at 0.5%.

30 March 2021