European Central Bank President Mario Draghi  is likely to plead for governments to do more to  boost the euro zone’s economy in the coming  week as the fallout of Britain’s vote to  leave the EU and weaker global growth threaten the  bloc’s fragile recovery. Governments in China, Japan and Britain have  already started easing their fiscal stance or  hinted at plans to do so as sub-par global growth  and inflation show that central banks’  ultra-easy monetary policy has run up against its  limit.    The ECB is not expected to change its monetary  stance on Thursday, its last meeting before an  eight-week summer break. But a reiteration of  Draghi’s long-standing call on governments  to spend more where possible and speed up  growth-boosting reforms is once again likely to  fall on deaf ears.    The only country with significant fiscal  firepower, Germany, is reluctant to give up its  budget surplus and has resisted any attempt to  pool more money at the European level in the  absence of greater power-sharing.        “We fear, therefore, that Mr Draghi's  calls for a loosening of the purse strings will go  unheard, at least for now,” economists at  BNP Paribas said.    “As things stand, then, the burden of  responding to the Brexit shock will remain with  the ECB, which is all too aware that it has fewer  and fewer tools with which to respond.”    Calls for greater fiscal spending have been  intensifying, with OECD head José Ángel Gurría  and doyen investor George Soros throwing their  weight behind the argument in recent weeks.    The need for more stimulus was particularly  visible in the euro zone, where unemployment is  high in many peripheral countries and resentment  toward the euro project is growing.    The recent slide in many governments’  borrowing costs on the bond market has been seen  by some economists as providing more room for  public investment.                       So far, however, there is little to suggest  that Europe’s fiscal stance is about to get  looser.    In fact, European Union finance ministers  agreed this week to sanction Spain and Portugal,  two countries battling to emerge from a deep  financial and economic crisis, for not doing  enough to correct their excessive budget deficits  last year.    NO RUSH                       Thursday’s ECB meeting is likely to bring  tricky questions for Draghi about the  effectiveness and sustainability of the  ECB’s monetary policy and the state of  Italian banks, struggling under the burden of bad  debt.     Inflation expectations and German bond yields  have slid since the British referendum on June 23,  fuelling speculation that the ECB may have to  extend its money-printing program and will  eventually run out of bonds to buy.    The ECB is unlikely to take further action  before seeing updated inflation forecasts at its  Sept. 8 meeting, taking comfort from a  stabilization in financial markets after an  initial ‘Brexit’ shock.    But economists expect it to announce as early  as the autumn that its 80-billion-euro asset  purchase program will continue beyond its current  end-date in March 2017.    A change to the technical terms of the bond  purchases is also expected, to allay concerns  about a scarcity of bonds to buy in some countries  such as Germany.                       The most palatable solution is likely to be  scrapping a rule barring the ECB from buying more  than 33 percent of any bond, so long as it does  not have a Collective Action Clause.    Where there is a CAC, the ECB sets a limit of  25 percent, to avoid the risk of being a block to  any debt restructuring.    Finally, Draghi is likely to try and assuage  concerns about Italian banks, which are seen as  particularly vulnerable to any downturn due to  their 360 billion euro ($    400 billion) pile of  soured credit.     Shares in Italian banks have repeatedly come  under pressure this year on concerns about those  bad loans, which the ECB is anxious to see brought  down.    The Italian government is in talks with the EU  to provide aid to the troubled lenders, hoping to  shield savers from any loss.    “(Draghi) is unlikely to be able to calm  fears to the extent he did in January this  year,” Societe Generale economists wrote in  a note.     (Editing by Kevin Liffey)
Sunday, July 17, 2016
Draghi to ask governments to chip in to counter Brexit fallout – Reuters
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