European Monetary System
largely focusing on the primary objective of the Eurosystem, which is to
maintain price stability in the euro area. In this context, let me briefly
explain our terminology, which may perhaps not be known to everybody as
yet. The "Eurosystem" is the name we gave to the European Central Bank
(ECB) and the currently eleven national central banks of those countries
which have introduced the euro. The "euro area" comprises these eleven
countries.
I should like to start with some observations on the objective and
limitations of monetary policy in the euro area. Owing to the successful
process of disinflation and convergence within Europe over the past decade,
the launch of the euro last January took place in an environment of price
stability that few observers would have predicted only a few years ago.
Consumers and firms are already reaping the benefits of this environment.
The relative price signals on which the efficiency of the market mechanism
relies are not obscured by volatility in the general level of prices. By
avoiding the costs and distortions inflation would impose on the economy,
price stability is contributing to the growth and employment potential of
the euro area.
This contribution is substantial. Unfortunately, it is all too easily
taken for granted. Memories of the still recent past relating to the
consequences of high and unstable inflation tend to fade rapidly. We are
sometimes already hearing the argument that, given that price stability has
been achieved, monetary policy should now be re-oriented away from its
primary objective of price stability towards other goals. One of the
challenges facing the Eurosystem is to maintain the support of the broad
public constituency necessary to resist these calls, which - as I hardly
need to point out to such a distinguished audience of central bankers and
monetary economists - are misguided and ultimately counter-productive.
However, it can be said that the situation is the same as that in the world
of sports; winning a championship and reaching the top is difficult, but
staying there is even harder.
The institutional framework for European monetary policy, as created
by the Maastricht Treaty (i.e. the Treaty on European Union, which has
become part of the Treaty establishing the European Community, or the EC
Treaty, in short) is well suited to meeting this challenge. Most
importantly, the single monetary policy has been clearly assigned the
primary objective of maintaining price stability in the euro area. To
facilitate the achievement of this goal, the ECB and the national central
banks have been accorded a high degree of institutional independence so as
to protect monetary policy decisions from undue external interference.
The Treaty imposes several duties and tasks on the ECB. However,
there is no doubt that the objective of price stability is over-riding. For
example, the Treaty stipulates - if I may quote - that the Eurosystem
"without prejudice to the objective of price stability, … shall support the
general economic policies in the Community, with a view to contributing to
the achievement of the objectives of the Community", which include
"sustainable and non-inflationary growth" and "a high level of employment".
Given the clear priority attached to the primary objective of price
stability, how does the ECB address these other Treaty obligations? Let me
make three points in this regard.
First, among economists and central bankers, there is overwhelming
agreement that there is no long-run trade-off between real activity and
inflation. Attempting to use monetary policy to raise real economic
activity above its sustainable level will, in the end, simply lead to ever
higher inflation, but not to faster economic growth. I am convinced that
the best contribution monetary policy can make to sustainable growth and
employment in the euro area is to maintain price stability in a credible
and lasting manner, allowing the considerable benefits of price stability
to be reaped over the medium term. This is the economic rationale
underlying the EC Treaty and the Eurosystem's monetary policy strategy.
Second, it is generally acknowledged that monetary policy does affect
real activity in the short run. Although the focus must always be on price
stability, in many cases the policy action required to maintain price
stability will also help sustain short-run economic and employment
prospects. The reduction of the Eurosystem's main refinancing rate on 8
April was a case in point. Following the Asian and Russian financial crises
last year, global demand weakened. Weaker external demand led to a shift in
the balance of risks to price stability in the euro area towards the
downside, as demand pressures abated. As monetary indicators did not signal
inflationary risks at that time, the Governing Council of the ECB concluded
that a cut of 50 basis points in the main refinancing rate best served the
maintenance of price stability. This lower level of interest rates may also
be supportive of real activity and employment in the short-run. Our eyes
must always be firmly focused on the goal, on our goal, to maintain price
stability in the medium term. Our monetary policy does not explicitly aim
at influencing the business cycle. However, as said in many cases, the
necessary monetary policy measures to achieve our goal also tend, almost
automatically, to work in the right direction from a cyclical point of
view.
This leads me to my third point. In situations where monetary policy
might face a short-term trade-off between adverse developments in real
activity and deviations from price stability, the over-riding priority
accorded to countering the latter must be made absolutely clear. Any
ambiguity on this point will simply endanger the credibility, and therefore
the effectiveness, of the monetary policy response. This does not mean that
the policy action must be draconian. The medium-term orientation of the
Eurosystem's monetary policy strategy permits a gradualist and measured
response to previously unforeseen threats to price stability, should this
be regarded as appropriate, depending on the nature of the threat. Such
gradualism may help to avoid the introduction of unnecessary uncertainty
into the real economy.
Recognition and an understanding of these three central points are
essential for the implementation of a successful monetary policy.
Communicating both the objective and the limitations of monetary policy to
the public is a vital issue to which I will return later in my remarks. But
it would be remiss at this point if I did not address what is surely the
greatest economic challenge facing the euro area at present, namely the
unacceptably high level of unemployment. There is a broad consensus that
unemployment in the euro area is overwhelmingly structural in nature.
Monetary policy cannot solve this problem. National governments bear the
main responsibility for structural economic reforms. In particular, further
reforms of the tax and welfare systems are required in many EU countries in
order to increase the incentives to create new jobs and to accept them.
Wage moderation can also have a significant beneficial impact. Monetary
policy makes its best supportive contribution by providing the environment
of price stability in which structural reforms can work most effectively.
It should be recognised that the implementation of EMU has made it
even more urgent to improve the flexibility of labour and goods markets. In
this context, it would very likely be the wrong answer if governments were
to try to create a "social union", harmonising social security systems and
standards at a very high level. The ECB will continue to cajole governments
into implementing necessary and long overdue reforms, but the final hard
decisions - and I acknowledge that they are hard decisions, since the
considerable benefits of structural reform often only become apparent with
time - lie with the national authorities. In those countries where
appropriate structural reforms have been implemented and wage growth has
been moderate, unemployment is either low by euro area standards or is
falling more rapidly. These experiences offer important lessons for other
countries in the euro area. Fortunately, a broader awareness of the
necessity of structural reforms recently seems to be emerging in Europe. Of
course, ultimately only sustained action will count. The cyclical recovery
that is underway is no substitute for such action.
Thus far, I have largely discussed the goal of the single monetary
policy. How is this goal to be achieved? At the heart of the answer to this
question is the Eurosystem's monetary policy strategy. The strategy has two
closely related aspects. First, the strategy must structure the monetary
policy-making process in such a way that the Governing Council of the ECB
is presented with the information and analysis required to take appropriate
monetary policy decisions. Second, the strategy must ensure that policy
decisions, including the economic rationale on which they are based, can be
presented in a clear and coherent way to the public. The communication
policy as part of the strategy obviously has to be consistent with the
structure of the internal decision-making process.
In designing the Eurosystem's strategy, the Governing Council of the
ECB recognised the new circumstances faced by monetary policy in the euro
area. Where there were previously eleven open, generally small economies,
there is now one large, relatively closed single currency area. The
challenges implied by this transformation in the landscape of monetary
policy are profound.
Relatively little is known as yet about the transmission mechanism of
monetary policy in the euro area after the transition to Monetary Union.
One important challenge for the Eurosystem is to obtain a better knowledge
of the structure and functioning of the euro area economy and the
transmission mechanism of monetary policy within it, so that policy actions
can be implemented accordingly. Together with experts in the national
central banks, the ECB has embarked on an intensive programme of analysis
and research into these issues.
One obvious problem related to the fact that the euro area did not
exist as a single currency area in the past regards the availability of
statistical data. Compared with national central banks, we do not have the
same amount of long historical time series of monetary and economic
indicators, based on harmonised statistical concepts, at our disposal.
However, we have already developed quite reliable estimates for a number of
these historical series, and the quality and availability of current
statistics on the euro area has increased significantly over the last few
quarters, for example in the areas of money and banking and balance of
payments statistics, but also across a wide range of economic statistics.
This process of improving the quality and the availability of statistical
data covering the euro area will continue.
It would have clearly been unwise for the ECB to develop a strategy
which relies mechanically on the signals offered by a single indicator or
forecast in order to take monetary policy decisions. Indeed, such a
simplistic approach to monetary policy-making is unwise in all
circumstances. Our knowledge of the structure of the euro area economy and
the indicator properties of specific variables - although improving rapidly
- is simply too limited.
The primary objective of monetary policy has been quantified with the
publication of a definition of price stability, against which the
Eurosystem can be held accountable. This definition illustrates our
aversion to both inflation and deflation, since it defines price stability
as annual increases of below 2% in the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices
(HICP) for the euro area. To maintain price stability according to this
definition, monetary developments are closely monitored against a
quantitative reference value for the broad benchmark aggregate, M3. In
parallel, a broadly based assessment of the outlook for price developments
in the euro area is undertaken. This assessment encompasses a wide range of
indicator variables, including inflation projections produced both inside
and outside the Eurosystem. Using all this information, the Governing
Council comes to a decision on the level of short-term interest rates that
best serves the maintenance of price stability over the medium term.
On the basis of this strategy, I am confident that the Governing
Council has taken - and will continue to take - appropriate monetary policy
decisions. The effectiveness of these policy decisions will depend, in
large part, on the credibility of the single monetary policy. Transparent
and accountable policy-making can help to build up a reputation and, hence
credibility. Transparency and accountability, in turn, rely on clear and
effective communications between the Eurosystem and the public.
In this regard, the Eurosystem faces an especially formidable task.
As mentioned earlier, the euro area currently consists of eleven different
sovereign nations, each with its own distinct monetary history and
heritage. With each policy announcement or Monthly Bulletin, the Eurosystem
must thus communicate with the public of eleven different countries and
must speak in all eleven different official languages of the European
Union. Such a situation is unprecedented. This diversity of language,
history and culture across the euro area raises further challenges for the
ECB.
Over the years, each national central bank had developed its own
strategy and, linked to this, its own "monetary policy language" for
communicating with the public in the nation it served. This language
reflected the unique circumstances of the country in question. The process
by which the public learnt this monetary language from the statements and
behaviour of the national central bank was largely subconscious. Over time,
the strategies and the related language and conventions of monetary policy
came to be so well understood as to be almost second nature. In these
circumstances, private economic behaviour was shaped by the monetary policy
environment.
Many of us have experienced the problem of trying to learn a second
language in adult life. This rarely comes as easily as learning your native
tongue as a child. It is certainly not a subconscious process, but rather
one that requires effort and perseverance. It is often difficult to
overcome the habits and conventions of one's first language, which are
inevitably somewhat at odds with those of a foreign tongue. Of course, it
is easier to learn a language that shares common roots with one's own.
Nevertheless, to obtain any degree of fluency, there is no alternative to
long hours practising pronunciation, studying grammar and learning
vocabulary. Even then, the idioms and slang of the new language are
sometimes hard to follow. There are no easy short cuts.
With the adoption of the euro last January, the public, financial
markets and policy-makers in the euro area have all had to get used to a
new monetary policy environment and have, thus, had to learn a new
"monetary policy language". The Eurosystem's monetary policy strategy has
been designed, in part, to make this learning process as straightforward as
possible. Continuity with the successful strategies of the national central
banks prior to Monetary Union was one of the guiding principles governing
the selection of the monetary policy strategy. Nevertheless, given the
changed environment for monetary policy, a new strategy with a new
vocabulary had to be developed, reflecting the unique and novel
circumstances facing the Eurosystem.
Some commentators have suggested that the Eurosystem simply adopt the
strategy used by another central bank or by a national central bank in the
past. Tellingly, such observers often suggest the strategy they know best:
Americans suggest using the Federal Reserve as a model; Britons, the Bank
of England; Germans, the Bundesbank. However, the Eurosystem cannot simply
adopt a strategy designed by another central bank for a different currency
area under different economic circumstances. A strategy that might have
been suitable in one situation may be quite inappropriate for the unique
and novel circumstances facing the Eurosystem, given the very different
economic structure and environment confronting it.
A key feature of the ECB's communication policy is the monthly press
conference given by the ECB's Vice-President and myself, usually
immediately following the first Governing Council meeting of each month.
During these press conferences, I make an introductory statement
summarising the Council's discussions and conclusions before answering
questions from journalists. As the statement is agreed, in substance, with
all the Council members beforehand it is similar to what others call
minutes. The press conference provides prompt information in an even-handed
way, and it offers the opportunity for immediate two-way communication. As
far as I am aware, no other central bank communicates with the public in
such a prompt manner immediately after its monetary policy meetings.
These press conferences are a tangible expression of the Eurosystem's
commitment to be open, transparent and accountable in its conduct of
monetary policy. In my view, our commitment to openness should not be in
doubt. However, ensuring that this openness translates into effective
communications continues to be a challenge. Journalists, financial markets
and the public are still learning the new strategy and language of monetary
policy in the euro area.
By its nature, the challenge of improving communications between the
Eurosystem and the public is two-sided. On the one hand, the ECB must use a
clear and transparent language consistent with the strategy it has adopted.
It must help the public understand the changes of emphasis and
communication necessitated by the new monetary policy environment in
Europe. We have made important progress in this regard over the last eight
months, but I acknowledge that we still have some way to go. The ECB must
do its utmost to be understood by its counterparts in the media that act as
important intermediaries to the public at large. By learning from one
another, we can improve the transparency, democratic accountability and
effectiveness of the single monetary policy.
Before concluding, I should like to add a brief comment on the likely
future enlargement of the European Union (EU) and, prospectively, the euro
area. Currently, the EU negotiates the accession of six countries to the
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