Lagarde Says Coronavirus Doesn’t Yet Require ECB Policy Response

Feb 27, 2020

Share

(Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said officials are watching closely the spread of the coronavirus but don’t currently see the need for a monetary-policy response.

Policy makers are monitoring the situation “very carefully” though they don’t yet judge that the outbreak will have a lasting impact on inflation, Lagarde told the Financial Times on Thursday. Echoing that view, Vice President Luis de Guindos said that it’s “important not to overreact.”

Pandemic Scenario May Mean Revisiting ECB’s Maxed-Out Tools

The central bank will have to determine if it will be a “long-lasting shock” affecting supply and demand as well as price growth, Lagarde said. The next chance for officials to make that assessment is in two weeks at the Governing Council’s policy gathering, where officials will be presented with updated projections for growth and inflation.

The region has suffered a protracted manufacturing downturn that now seems at risk of worsening, as businesses across the globe suffer from virus-related supply chain and trade disruptions. Large swathes of Italy’s industrial heartland have been shuttered by an outbreak there.

European Companies in China See ‘Severe’ Impact From Outbreak

In its last forecast round in December, the ECB expected the euro-area economy to recover in the course of 2020. Lagarde said the central bank’s base-case scenario still assumes a virus “containment in reasonably short order.”

“I was very pleased to see that the numbers in China on deaths relative to contagion seem to have declined for the third or fourth day, which seems to indicate that there is a degree of improvement,” she said.

Guindos, speaking at an event in Seville in southern Spain, said he currently sees a short-term impact in China. In Europe, the “central scenario” is a “V-shaped” trajectory with a recovery, he said.

“Overreactions in such events that generate uncertainty have sometimes a bigger impact than the event itself,” he said. “The only thing we need to be afraid of is unjustified alarm.”

Earlier on Thursday, Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel said very little is yet known about the potential medium-term implications of the outbreak, and urged that policy makers should be patient in reaching their inflation aims amid heightened shocks to the economy.

To contact the reporters on this story: Carolynn Look in Frankfurt at clook4@bloomberg.net;Laura Millan Lombrana in Madrid at lmillan4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Gordon at pgordon6@bloomberg.net, Craig Stirling, Jana Randow

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.