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Home Publications Blogs Beat the Press The European Central Bank Is Accountable to Governments

The European Central Bank Is Accountable to Governments

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Wednesday, 09 May 2012 04:31

That fact should have been mentioned in a NYT article that told readers, "few options if Europe turns from austerity." If there were a political consensus within Europe to reject austerity, the euro zone countries could call Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank (ECB) president, and tell him that he must guarantee debt and run expansionary policy or look for a new job and surrender his pension. (Which is far more generous than the ones that were cut in Greece.)

This piece might wrongly lead readers to believe that the ECB could pursue policies that all the governments in the euro oppose. That is not true. If the governments all agreed that they wanted to reject austerity then they could require that the ECB support this position.

That would mean abandoning its obsession with defending its Maginot line (its 2.0 percent inflation target), but such is life.

Comments (2)Add Comment
New Maginot Line?
written by Frank Moraes, May 09, 2012 11:56
The new Maginot Line is a brilliant concept. I wonder that I haven't heard it before.
Moraes: Because Dean's commentary
written by fairleft, May 11, 2012 2:40
unfortunately doesn't reach much into the mainstream economic punditry world and in fact is 'beyond the pale' in the highest rent neighborhoods. Why that is the case is probably what really matters. Cuz it's not exactly a battle of ideas or Dean and similar would've won this one years ago.

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About Beat the Press

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books, his latest being The End of Loser Liberalism: Making Markets Progressive. Read more about Dean.

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