Speech by
Mario Draghi, President of the ECB,
on
receiving an honorary degree in political science, LUISS “Guido Carli”
University,
Rom, 6 May
2013
My first
grateful and fond mention goes to Guido Carli. My gratitude goes to the
university that bears his name, to its Rector, Professor Massimo Egidi, to its
Senatus Academicus, which has honoured me with this title, and to Professor
Messori for his kind words, as well as to the entire academic body of this
university.
The origins
of the crisis in the euro area
Until a few
years ago monetary policy was considered a textbook discipline, almost a
mechanical skill involving the implementation of computational applications by
conscientious experts. In the period known as the Great Moderation, from the
middle of the 1980s to the beginning of the global financial crisis, inflation
had been brought under control. Macroeconomic volatility was contained and this
was a source of great pride for all central bankers. Some foresaw a future of
genteel and honourable oblivion for monetary policy. This is no longer the
case. The experience of the first five years following the crisis shows that
all central banks have adjusted their monetary policies along hitherto
unexplored lines:
some have been abandoned and no new paradigm has yet been
formulated, the wish is to put an end to the emergency and return to normality
where the rules are based on a well-established discipline of long standing,
but it is not known with any certainty what reality will emerge in the long
term. Furthermore, although the precise shape of monetary policy has always
been influenced by the respective institutional and historical context –
consider the varying “mandates” of the central banks – the various forms that
the crisis took in different parts of the world reinforced this correspondence
between the specific institutional and financial contexts and the monetary
policies pursued in them.
In the euro
area, the extraordinary success of the single currency concealed for years the
risks that were building up. The governments of the Member States considered
themselves free from previous constraints: with the exception of Germany and a
few other countries, they delayed structural reforms that could have redressed
the competitiveness of obsolete economic structures to meet the challenges of
relentless globalisation; they undermined the limits introduced in the Stability
and Growth Pact, jeopardising their own credibility as partners in a Monetary
Union.
In the
years preceding the crisis, this Union began to divide countries with positive
trade balances and sound budgets from those with growing budget deficits and
external deficits financed by private credit flows increasingly sourced from
the first group of countries and not used for investments to increase
competitiveness, but rather to finance unproductive spending, or property
bubbles. No one ever imagined that the Monetary Union could become a union
divided between permanent creditors and permanent debtors, where the former
would perpetually lend money and credibility to the latter.
A profound
change in the governance of the Union became necessary, with new rules whereby
the solidarity clamoured for had as its counterpart the transfer of national
powers. But this too was delayed and its urgency was downplayed in the face of
the requirements of a purported national sovereignty which was in reality
weakened by globalisation and growing levels of public debt.
The global
financial crisis, which swiftly and dramatically increased market perceptions
of risk, rudely awakened all the actors from this long, complacent amnesia.
The
external deficits, budget deficits and levels of public debt of the countries
in the second group fast became unsustainable once they were no longer financed
externally and in particular by the rest of the Union, the inadequate
governance of which was then laid bare.
This brief
scrutiny of the origins of the crisis in the euro area shows how the response
of economic policy cannot be other than composite: in it, monetary policy plays
an important but by no means exclusive role.
The crisis
and the ECB’s monetary policy
The
epicentre of the crisis in the initial phase was liquidity, an economic measure
that had been neglected by the theory for many years since a lack thereof
seemed so unlikely. The day after Lehman Brothers collapsed, the money markets
stopped functioning. The liquidity required by banks to refinance their
maturing assets suddenly became extremely scarce.
Generally
speaking, banks borrow at short-term or very short-term from savers with a
strong preference for the immediate availability of funds, or for “liquidity”.
If savers suddenly refuse to roll over their deposits with the banks, the banks
then attempt to discontinue the credit that they supply to the economy. If this
is not possible owing to long maturities, banks seek to liquidate first of all
those assets in their portfolio that are traded on the market at known and
verifiable exchange prices, in an effort to avoid insolvency. But a sudden
financial retreat by many financial institutions simultaneously cannot occur
without generalised financial suffering, and without banks incurring
substantial capital losses.
Asset
prices fall rapidly and bank capital declines. The interbank markets dry up.
The economy loses an indispensable mechanism for generating income and
allocating resources, namely the intermediation of savings.
In a second
phase beginning in 2011, the lack of credit to the more vulnerable sovereign
issuers became the centre point of the crisis. The euro area governments
responded with actions that, while individually effective, revealed the
political unsustainability of a Union in which the countries that pay and the
countries that receive are always the same. Sovereign debt in the euro area is
no longer risk-free: it depends on the sovereign and the quality of its policies.
This process, beneficial in and of itself, revolutionised the risk structure on
which the functioning of the European financial markets was based for so many
years. In addition, without a single Union government and economic policy, it
led to an abnormal increase in risk premia, which reached systemic proportions.
Premia were no longer based on the creditworthiness of borrowers, which was
admittedly shaky for reasons already mentioned, but rather could only be
explained by the manifestation of expectations regarding the end of the euro.
Risk premia
and non-standard measures
But what
are risk premia?
The
compensation required on a long-term financial contract must be at least equal
to what could be obtained with a short-term contract that is continuously
renewed until the end of the term. Long-term investors require a return that,
at the very least, establishes financial equivalence between the two
strategies. But, in general, equivalence is not enough. Creditors expect
additional compensation for the risks they take on relating to not being paid
back promptly. These risks are varied and the markets attach a price – or risk
premium – to each one. The pure risk relating to postponing the availability of
capital for a period of time is compensated by a term risk premium. The risk
that a creditor is forced to liquidate a long-term financial investment before
maturity in difficult market circumstances is compensated by a liquidity risk
premium. Finally, the risk that the borrower does not meet his/her repayment
obligations at the end of the contractually-agreed term is compensated by a
credit risk premium.
In a period
of deep financial crisis, the increase in all risk premia is, as I mentioned,
out of proportion because market participants are no longer willing or able to
bear them.
The
non-standard measures adopted by the central banks in the larger countries in
the five years since the start of the financial crisis can be identified
according to the type of risk premia they were intended to tackle.
For example,
the large-scale purchasing of assets, or quantitative easing, carried out by
the Federal Reserve System affects the term risk premium. The main aim of
quantitative easing is to reabsorb the quantity of term risk held in the
economy as a whole and thereby compress its price – the corresponding risk
premium.
The ECB
initially adopted non-standard measures primarily aimed at cutting the
financial premium linked to liquidity risk. At the dawn of the crisis, shortly
after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, the liquidity risk in the
interbank market shook to its foundations the very structure of the payment
system. This catastrophic risk led to an exceptional reassessment of the
liquidity risk premium on credit between transactors. In this context, the ECB
took the place of the interbank market, which had cut off its supply of
short-term and very short-term credit to banks. The ECB subsequently changed
its own instrument for providing banks with liquidity, adopting a system
whereby it supplied unlimited credit at a fixed interest rate – known as the
fixed rate full allotment policy. In this way, the ECB allowed banks to
refinance their assets using its own credit, rather than through asset fire
sales in the market. A situation in which sound and solvent banks became
insolvent was thus avoided.
In order to
reassure banks that access to central bank liquidity would indeed be extended
in line with their refinancing needs in the medium term, we extended the
maturity of our credit lending from the standard three months pre-crisis, to
six months after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, to one year by mid-2009 and,
finally, to three years at the end of 2011.
From the
second half of 2011, we witnessed the emergence of a new source of stress,
which has been defined as the risk of “redenomination”, resulting from the
potential exit of a country from the euro or even from the potential collapse
of the single currency. A particular form of credit risk premium was associated
with these possibilities, which was unrelated to the assessment of a borrower’s
solvency but which, in fact, came about owing to unfounded concerns regarding a
systemic breakdown in the euro area. The ECB therefore launched the OMTs
(Outright Monetary Transactions), a monetary policy instrument aimed at
eliminating the financial risk premium caused by this specific systemic risk.
OMTs allow
the ECB to buy sovereign bonds with a remaining maturity of up to three years
in the secondary market, where necessary in order to remove the risk of
“redenomination” (i.e. the risk related to concerns about the end of the euro)
from the financial markets. The bond-issuing governments which request the
activation of OMTs agree, in conjunction with the European authorities and, if
possible, with the International Monetary Fund, on a recovery programme to address
macroeconomic and structural weaknesses. This is a necessary, but not
sufficient, condition as the ECB has full discretion to decide on the start,
continuation or suspension of OMTs. Furthermore, the excess liquidity created
by these purchases will be reabsorbed by the ECB.
The
conditionality associated with the programme to which governments and the
European authorities agree is a crucial element in being able to preserve
monetary policy independence. It is important in providing the ECB with adequate
assurance that interventions supporting sovereign debt bond prices do not
mutate into financial subsidies for unsustainable national policies in the
medium term.
By way of
drawing a parallel, as with the credit provided to banking counterparties
through liquidity operations, OMTs cannot be, and must not be, interpreted as
an injection of capital into failing banks; in the same vein, in compressing
the premium for the risk of “redenomination”, the ECB cannot and does not
intend to provide financial support to governments which reinstate solvency
conditions which have not already been approved ex ante.
In both
cases, the ECB’s non-standard measures were triggered by the need to restore
the functioning of monetary policy transmission channels, first by reducing
liquidity premia and then by reducing the redenomination risk premium.
Diverging
financing conditions in the euro area
Throughout
the two phases of the crisis – the banking crisis and the sovereign debt crisis
– our approach to liquidity provision was elastic, with adjustments made in
response to demand for support from banks more severely affected by market
pressures. At first, this demand was widespread across large parts of the euro
area. In 2008 and 2009, those banks more exposed to sectors and activities
under stress were ostracised by the market, no matter where they were based.
Then, in the second phase of the crisis, the obstacles to liquidity provision
became linked to territory. The banking sector and financial market in the euro
area gradually fragmented along national borders. These borders separate
banking sectors which, irrespective of the intrinsic quality of their
intermediaries, are considered robust, because the country in which they are
based is able to cope with a banking crisis, from those considered to be
fragile, where the markets consider this capacity to be lacking. These borders
thus separate countries that are competitive and have sound balance sheets from
those characterised by fragile balance sheets and a lack of capacity for
growth.
The
measures decided on by the ECB (fixed rate full allotment, LTROs, OMTs,
assessment and quality of collateral, guidance on the duration of fixed rate
full allotment) helped to overcome, to a large extent, this fragmentation that
characterised the funding of the banking system until mid-2012. The dispersion
in the growth rate of bank deposits has now returned to 2007 levels.
Progress on
the lending front has been much slower. In the first group of countries, we are
generally seeing normal or accommodative financing conditions for firms and
households. In the second group, we are seeing a persistent tightening of
credit, possibly decreasing in intensity in some countries, with retail bank
loan rates that are much higher than those applied by banks located in the
first group of countries and more stringent collateral requirements for loans.
The ECB’s
recently published “Survey on the access to finance of SMEs in the euro area”
[1] provides a clear picture of the difficulties this sector, so crucial for
the euro area economy, finds itself in. Among the principal causes for concern
cited by the SMEs interviewed, access to credit was second only to the
difficulties encountered in finding customers for their products. The obstacles
to obtaining credit (linked to the refusal to grant credit) persist, and
represent one of the main factors of heterogeneity between countries in the
euro area, though they are not confined to those countries under stress. In
fact, in addition to SMEs in Greece, Ireland and Spain, a large number of SMEs
operating in the Low Countries are encountering significant obstacles (around
45% of the firms surveyed). These figures reflect the considerable
heterogeneity in borrowing conditions, as also shown by the most recent bank lending
survey.
This
fragmentation is all the more troublesome in an economy such as that of the
euro area, in which financial intermediation is bank-based for at least
three-quarters of firms’ financing. And it penalises all the more those
enterprises, often of a small or medium size, which depend more heavily on the
banking system. This is particularly serious considering that this sector
employs around two-thirds of workers in the euro area. [2]
Banks are
not lending for a number of reasons: lack of funding, investment alternatives,
lack of capital, risk aversion. The ECB has done a great deal on the first two
fronts, providing liquidity and reducing the redenomination risk premium on
government bonds. We cannot subsidise governments by buying their bonds, and we
cannot subsidise bank shareholders by removing the need for them to strengthen
their balance sheets by means of necessary recapitalisation measures. We can do
little directly to reduce the risk aversion which is holding back bank lending.
In other financial systems, a large share of credit is transmitted to the
economy via capital markets; financial assets are traded on the basis of known,
verifiable prices and are often subject to ratings. A central bank that wished
to try to reduce the risk premia on such assets would not face great
operational obstacles. In the euro area, the capital market is much smaller,
and a central bank that wished to intervene would have to purchase from the
banking system the loans the latter had made to the economy, for which there is
only a very limited market. This would be a very complex undertaking, even
without taking into account the institutional context which would necessarily
involve intervention in 17 countries.
But the ECB
has taken a number of measures on this front too. Banks have for some time been
able to use credit claims as collateral when obtaining funding from the ECB.
And we should not underestimate the effectiveness of traditional monetary
policy when general conditions change. As mentioned, the Governing Council of
the ECB cut interest rates to 0.5% at its last meeting, bringing them to a
historic low after eight months in which they had been unchanged at 0.75%. This
is because macroeconomic weakness is now also affecting parts of the euro area
in which the transmission of monetary policy had never been an issue, and also
because we are seeing some signs that fragmentation is receding with regard to
lending in some of the euro area countries experiencing stress.
In this
regard, national measures can also be effective, as already put into practice
in some countries, with the involvement of governments, public banks and
development agencies. The ECB has launched initiatives with the EIB and the
European Commission with the aim of reducing the fragmentation of lending in
the euro area.
We must not
forget the extraordinary progress made on this front by the European Council in
bringing together the national supervisory systems in a single European
mechanism – the management of which has been assigned to the ECB – and in
creating a European mechanism for the resolution of banks. These initiatives
will go the furthest in breaking the link between banks and sovereign debt
which is behind the current fragmentation.
But we
should not forget that growth is currently weaker in some countries than in
others, and not just because credit is scarce. It was weaker even before the
crisis, notwithstanding often turbulent growth in public spending, because
structural weaknesses were not tackled. In the wake of the crisis, the burden
of this failure is now being felt by all of us.
Structural
reforms for growth and more solidarity in society
The reforms
aim to untie the knots that curb competitiveness and suffocate growth.
Effective promotion and safeguarding of competition; an adequate degree of
flexibility in the labour market that is properly distributed across the
generations; the cutting of government red tape that is an obstacle to growth;
human capital that is equipped to face the challenges posed by global
competition; and a better environment – these are all fronts on which, despite
recent progress, much remains to be done, albeit to varying degrees across
individual countries.
Fiscal
policies must follow a sustainable path, separate and distinct from cyclical
fluctuations. Without this prerequisite, lasting growth is not possible.
Particularly for countries with structurally high levels of public debt, rather
than temporarily high levels as a result of the current crisis, this means not
slipping back from the goals already achieved. Let us not forget that, in an
institutional context in which the solvency of sovereign states is no longer an
established fact and the governance of the Union is still incomplete, when a
country’s public finances lack credibility its banks are quickly cut off from
the rest of the euro financial market in the absence of private sector credit
in that country: this is what we are now seeing.
However, to
mitigate the inevitable recessionary effects of fiscal consolidation, the
composition of such measures must favour the reduction of current public
spending and of taxes, particularly in a context such as in Europe where
taxation is already high by international standards.
There is no
doubt that lasting growth is essential for reducing unemployment, particularly
among young people. In some European countries youth unemployment has reached
levels that damage people’s faith in prospects for a decent life and which risk
giving rise to extreme and destructive forms of protest.
Output
growth was essential for the success of the European social model. The
extraordinary economic growth during the so-called “Golden Age” – namely the
thirty years that followed the Second World War – allowed a significant
improvement in the material wealth of a large portion of the European
population.
At the same
time, this wealth strengthened the growth process. At that time the foundations
were laid in Europe for modern welfare systems aimed at protecting individuals
against the risk that unemployment, illness or old age could lead to a
deterioration in their living standards. It is in part thanks to these
instruments that the financial crisis and the recession have not had the same
devastating social effects as the Great Depression.
Many years
ago Rudi Dornbusch said, exaggerating rather, that Europeans were so rich they
could afford to pay everybody for not working. This is no longer the case, but
we do not wish to lose the solidarity which inspired that model in such very
different times. Therefore, today we must adapt that model in line with the
changes that demographic dynamics and the new environment of global competition
demand. This must be done to reduce youth unemployment, increase consumption
and preserve the very essence of welfare.
Another
aspect of growth sustainability, in a European context, that I would like to
draw your attention to today is that of income distribution.
For almost
twenty years there has been a trend towards a higher concentration of family
income in Europe to the detriment of the poorest households, as statistics
published by Eurostat show.
A more
equal share in the fruits of the production of national wealth helps foster a
culture of saving and, therefore, of collective involvement. A sense of being
an integral part of a country and of having a stake in its economic future
strengthens social cohesion and encourages individual economic behaviour that
leads, in the aggregate, to economic prosperity for all.
There are a
number of tools governments can use to achieve this aim, but first of all
social cohesion must be sought by removing the barriers which limit
individuals’ opportunity to pursue their goals and which allow family
background to dictate life choices. In eliminating vested interests in a
non-competitive system, structural reforms are more than just a tool for growth
creation. By encouraging everyone to be involved in the process of production,
they ensure that the drive for a more equal income allocation is not the task
of state-led redistribution alone. In this way, reforms aim to harness
individual potential to the growth of the economy.
Nevertheless,
looking to the not-too-distant future, national virtues – while indispensable
for strengthening solidarity among Member States along the way – won’t be
enough to make Europe a goal all its citizens can consider their own.
It will
also be necessary to introduce reforms that further reduce the barriers between
individual Member States, in particular to the development of a single European
labour market, and that affirm the principle of solidarity, as proposed
recently in the “Four Presidents’ Report”
[3].
To build,
with passion and vigour, a shared future in which the conditions for growth are
more favourable, in which all citizens feel that their skills are fully valued,
in which individual well-being goes hand in hand with collective well-being. We
are all working today, each within our own mandate, to achieve that goal.
Thank you
for your attention.
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