TALLINN (Reuters) – The European Central Bank should limit how much its bond purchases deviate from each country’s shareholding in the bank to ensure its policies remain proportional and benefit all euro zone members, Governing Council member Madis Muller said.
Muller’s comments suggest limits to the flexibility that the ECB maintains its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) includes and allows it to deviate from this “capital key”.
The ECB scooped up all of Italy’s new debt in April and May, buying well above the country’s capital key quota, even if it merely managed to keep borrowing costs from rising.
Muller’s specific reference to proportionality may also indicate increased caution by ECB policymakers after Germany’s top court ruled it exceeded its powers with another purchase scheme because it failed to prove it was proportional.
“It’s important that the agreed flexibility in the programme is somewhat larger than in other asset purchase programmes but the limit in the capital key has a reason,” Muller said.
“In the end, we have to make sure that we create policy for all euro zone countries and it should have a proportional effect,” the Estonian central bank chief told a news conference.
The ECB last week increased PEPP by 600 billion euros but Muller said the scheme must be temporary and unless growth deteriorates further, another may not be necessary.
“If the economic growth recovers in the second half as ECB forecasts and the inflation outlook does not significantly weaken, then probably an additional increase in asset purchases is not needed,” Muller added.
(Reporting by Tarmo Virki; Writing by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Alison Williams and Alexander Smith)