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Friday, September 28, 2018

European Central Bank (ECB)







The European Central Bank (ECB) is the central bank of the 19 European Union countries which have adopted the euro. Our main task is to maintain price stability in the euro area and so preserve the purchasing power of the single currency.

The ECB is an official EU institution at the heart of the Euro system and the Single Supervisory Mechanism. 
The main objective of the ECB is to maintain price stability in the euro area. To this end, the ECB uses interest rates – and since the crisis also other measures – to affect financing conditions in the economy. By steering financing conditions, the ECB can influence the overall level of activity in the economy and can ensure that the inflation aim is met. 
Over 2,500 staff from all over Europe work for the ECB in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. They perform a range of tasks in close cooperation with the national central banks within the Euro system and, for banking supervision, with the national supervisors within the Single Supervisory Mechanism.

Key interest rates

The Governing Council of the ECB sets three key interest rates.
·       The interest rate on the main refinancing operations. In these operations banks can borrow liquidity from the Eurosystem against collateral on a weekly basis, at a pre-determined interest rate. 
·       The rate on the deposit facility, which banks may use to make overnight deposits with the Eurosystem at a (pre-set) rate lower than the main refinancing operations rate.
·       The rate on the marginal lending facility, which offers overnight credit to banks from the Eurosystem at an interest rate (also pre-set) above the main refinancing operations rate.
The rate on the deposit facility and the rate on the marginal lending facility define a corridor for the overnight interest rate at which banks lend to each other. The deposit facility rate acts as the floor of this corridor and the marginal lending facility acts as the ceiling.

Non-standard measures

Before the crisis, the ECB provided a pre-set amount of credit to banks through auctions, in which banks put up collateral to guarantee the loans. Banks would also lend to and borrow from each other in the interbank market to fulfil their liquidity needs. 
Since the financial crisis began in 2007, the ECB has introduced several non-standard monetary policy measures. The ECB’s non-standard measures have responded to the challenges posed by the different phases of the crisis.
In the first phase of the financial crisis, the primary aim of the ECB’s non-standard measures was to provide liquidity to banks and to keep financial markets functioning. 
As the interbank market dried up in autumn 2008, and banks could no longer rely on borrowing from each other, the ECB amended its approach and provided unlimited credit to banks at a fixed interest rate. The amended approach came to be known as fixed-rate full allotment. The maturity of these operations was extended considerably. Furthermore, the range of eligible assets that could be used as collateral in refinancing operations was expanded.
In the second phase of the crisis, which took the form of a sovereign debt crisis, the ECB’s non-standard measures aimed to address markets’ malfunctioning and to reduce differences in financing conditions faced by businesses and households in different euro area countries. 
The ECB 
·       purchased debt securities (Securities Markets Programme)
·       carried out very long-term refinancing operations (VLTROs)
·       announced conditional Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT), which acted as a powerful circuit breaker against self-reinforcing fears in sovereign bond markets. 
In the third phase of the crisis the ECB’s non-standard measures addressed the onset of a credit crunch and the risk of deflation. With short-term interest rates already close to zero, the ECB’s non-standard measures were intended to influence the whole constellation of interest rates that are relevant for financing conditions in the euro area.
The ECB’s measures included:
·       targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTROs), designed to support bank lending to businesses and households;
·       an asset purchase programme (APP), involving private and public sector securities, to put downward pressure on the term structure of interest rates;
·       forward guidance, which means communicating how the ECB expects its policy measures to evolve in the future and what conditions would warrant a change in the policy stance. 

 

Who is who?


The ECB’s President is Mario Draghi and the Vice-President is Luis de Guindos. The main decision-making body is the Governing Council, which consists of the six members of the Executive Board plus the governors of the central banks of the 19 euro area countries.

The Governing Council is the main decision-making body of the ECB. It consists of
·       the six members of the Executive Board, plus
·       the governors of the national central banks of the 19 euro area countries.

Responsibilities

·       to adopt the guidelines and take the decisions necessary to ensure the performance of the tasks entrusted to the ECB and the Eurosystem;
·       to formulate monetary policy for the euro area. This includes decisions relating to monetary objectives, key interest rates, the supply of reserves in the Eurosystem, and the establishment of guidelines for the implementation of those decisions.
·       in the context of the ECB’s new responsibilities related to banking supervision, to adopt decisions relating to the general framework under which supervisory decisions are taken, and to adopt the complete draft decisions proposed by the Supervisory Board under the non-objection procedure.

Meetings and decisions

The Governing Council usually meets twice a month at the ECB’s premises in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The Governing Council assesses economic and monetary developments and takes its monetary policy decisions every six weeks. At the other meetings, the Council discusses mainly issues related to other tasks and responsibilities of the ECB and the Eurosystem. To ensure the separation of the ECB’s monetary policy and other tasks from its supervisory responsibilities, separate meetings of the Governing Council are held.
The monetary policy decision is explained in detail at a press conference held every six weeks. The President, assisted by the Vice-President, chairs the press conference.
In addition, the ECB publishes regular accounts of the Governing Council’s monetary policy meetings before the date of the next one.
Find out more about decision-making within the Single Supervisory Mechanism. Banking supervision website

How do voting rights rotate on the ECB Governing Council?

The accession of Lithuania to the euro area on 1 January 2015 triggered a system under which National Central Bank Governors take turns holding voting rights on the Governing Council.










(source: https://www.ecb.europa.eu)

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