The German Press Responds To Draghi
And, as expected,
it's not happy. The punchline:
The central bank is to become subordinate to finance ministers in
crisis-stricken countries. In Draghi's homeland Italy,
such a situation was the norm for decades -- and the result was chronic
inflation. Now, he is accepting a repeat of history. On the short term, it will
create relief in the debt crisis. On the long term, vengeance will
be bitter."
Germany has long been wary of ECB bond purchases and opposition has only grown since the Frankfurt-based central bank largely ceased buying sovereign bonds last year. Jens Weidmann, head of Germany's central bank, the Bundesbank, has been particularly vociferous in his criticism of bond purchases, saying they rewarded debt-ridden countries without demanding reforms in return. Draghi even mentioned Weidmann's opposition to the program in his Thursday press conference.
Still, the
widespread resistance in Germany to ECB action, and to many other euro-crisis
proposals that could increase German taxpayer liability, has painted Merkel
into a corner. With the opposition in Berlin showing a decreased willingness to
rubber stamp her euro-crisis measures and a growing rebellion within the ranks
of her own government, her ability to respond to the worsening crisis may
become increasingly limited.
German media
commentators take a closer look at the ECB's approach to the crisis on Friday.
Center-left Süddeutsche
Zeitung writes:
"The greatest challenge for ECB head Mario Draghi is to make it clear to the people of southern Europe that he will only help if they continue to make radical reforms to their economy. On Thursday he chose a clever dual strategy. He spoke of the possibility of bond purchases and other measures, but only if the governments in question fulfill certain conditions. In other words: there is no free money."
"It is not a problem that investors have reacted with disappointment due to their hopes for something more concrete. It is even helpful. Draghi's insistence on conditions shows that he is aware of the risks to taxpayers. It is also helpful that, in Jens Weidmann, he has a man in the ECB's Governing Council who is seen as a representative of the people in donor countries."
"The ECB Governing Council enjoys even less democratic legitimization than the European Council, which is why the ECB really should only offer temporary help. But it must offer help nonetheless as long as the euro zone is unfinished. If the government and the Fed in the US debated for months … following the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008, the global financial system would have collapsed."







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