Pity for Draghi mounts in despair at Europe’s growth inertia

Bloomberg

Economists gathered at an epicenter of Europe’s slowdown said there’s increasing urgency for political action to foster growth and shift the burden from the region’s
monetary officials.
At a meeting by Lake Como in Northern Italy, there was an outpouring of sympathy for European Central Bank President Mario Draghi and the onus his institution has faced to deliver incessant stimulus. With Italy itself in a renewed slump and Germany, the region’s motor, in a funk too, patience over the corresponding inaction of politicians was running thin.
“The ECB has done a great job — it’s rescued the euro, it’s doing whatever it can, on top of whatever it takes,” Laurence Boone, chief economist of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, said in an interview at the European House-Ambrosetti forum. “Now it’s the turn of fiscal and structural policy.”
Europe’s re-emergence as the weak spot of the global economy in recent months — and the longer-held perception of its failure to foster growth-friendly policies — provides a foretaste of the message its finance chiefs may face next week at the International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington. Officials there are poised to release a new outlook for the world economy on Tuesday.
“We’re in the middle of a global slowdown, and this slowdown is particularly more severe in Europe and the euro zone,” Nouriel Roubini, chief executive officer of Roubini Macro Associates Inc., told Francine Lacqua and Tom Keene on Bloomberg Televi-sion. “Europe is on the verge of a recession.”
While an official leading indicator suggests Italy’s current slump might be about to end, forecasts by the populist coalition government are still set to show almost no growth at all this year. Combined with an industrial-led slowdown in Germany, the region’s prospects have dwindled enough to alarm ECB policy makers.
That institution has already cut interest rates to unprecedented lows and delivered repeated rounds of quantitative easing, as the primary actor in stimulating an economy formerly threatened by deflation and crippled by years of crisis.
Policy makers’ own calls for a shift in the burden have got louder in recent months as they confronted an intensifying growth slowdown with a much emptier toolbox than before to tackle it.
“What’s key — and the ECB and Mario Draghi have been very good — is to stress, it’s not about central banks, it’s about the response of other policy makers with better tools,” Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz SE and a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. “Now it’s become even more urgent.”
That sentiment was echoed with feeling by a former central banker — Jacob Frenkel, chairman of JPMorgan Chase International. “Governments need to wake up,” he said. “Since the crisis, the only game in town has been central banks. They have been overburdened.”
Yves Mersch, a member of the ECB’s Executive Board, was on hand to emphasise the lack of progress by governments in fostering growth. Only France and Greece have taken far-reaching measures in recent years, and the dearth of action has consequences, he warned.

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