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ECB Unveils Symmetric 2% Inflation Goal That Allows Overshoot

In the culmination of an 18-month review published Thursday, policy makers agreed to seek consumer-price growth of 2% over the medium-term with a “symmetric” aim that could also allow it to “moderately” overshoot during a “transitory period.”

That’s a significant change from the “below, but close to, 2% over the medium term” wording which some monetary officials felt was too vague and led to calls for tighter policy too soon.

On climate change, another controversial topic for some central bankers, the institution said it will now include considerations on that matter in its monetary policy operations.

“While taking the ECB’s primary mandate of price stability as a given, the review has allowed us to challenge our thinking, engage with numerous stakeholders, reflect, discuss and reach common ground on how to adapt our strategy,” ECB President Christine Lagarde said in a statement. “The new strategy is a strong foundation that will guide us in the conduct of monetary policy in the years to come.”

The strategy review is the first by the Frankfurt-based institution since 2003, and the most comprehensive and ambitious attempt to rethink its role in serving the euro zone’s 342 million citizens since the creation of the single currency.

The ECB’s revamped mission follows a similar effort by the Federal Reserve to question its approach to the economic challenges of the 21st century after years of elusive attempts throughout the advanced world to sustainably revive consumer prices.

The outcome also reflects a grand bargain among policy makers that gives Lagarde a chance to draw a line on divisions on the Governing Council over how far the central bank should go in supporting the economy.

Officials from Germany in particular found that the stance of her predecessor, Mario Draghi, represented a bias toward easy money that undermined the postwar inflation-fighting steadfastness of the Bundesbank on which the ECB was modeled as a condition for the country’s participation in the euro.

Policy makers studied a wide range of economic trends and tools to understand why they’ve struggled to boost inflation despite negative interest rates and trillions of euros of monetary stimulus.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.


Source: Economy - investing.com

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