ECB models need to include climate change, says Lagarde

Christine Lagarde – Photo © European Union 2019 – Source EP

(BRUSSELS) – Climate change should be included in the European Central Bank’s macroeconomic models, the ECB’s new head Christine Lagarde said Monday in her first appearance in her role at the European Parliament.

Questions on how the ECB is responding to the threat of climate change were a recurring theme of the the new Central Bank President’s first hearing before Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee.

MEPs across the political spectrum wanted to know how the ECB can include action on climate change in its monetary policy and whether it would stop supporting unsustainable companies through its asset purchase programme.

Ms Lagarde pointed out that the climate issue, while secondary to protecting price stability, would be included in the ECB’s macroeconomic models and taken into account when assessing risks and supervising EU banks.

She also took the opportunity to remind MEPs that the ECB is the main buyer of European Investment Bank bonds, which committed to phase out investment in fossil fuels.

With the planned strategic review of the ECB monetary policy in mind, MEPs asked about inflation forecasts, limits to the asset purchase programme and the prospects for the Eurozone budget.

President Lagarde agreed that, during the strategic review, all the above-mentioned issues should be looked into, including the present inflation target of close to 2%, as well as the fiscal capacity of the euro area.

MEPs were also concerned with the ECB’s slow reaction to disruptive global technological developments, such as ‘stablecoins’, which present an opportunity to make cheap and fast cross-border payments, but at the same time pose risks to consumer protection.

Ms Lagarde’s response was that the ECB is attentive to technological developments, conducting research projects into digital coins, including the risks they might pose to stability, safety and the security of the monetary system and individual customers.

Finally, Ms Lagarde reiterated her commitment to dialogue with the European Parliament, and the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee in particular, stating that such two-way communication brings her closer to understanding how the ECB’s policy decisions affect ordinary citizens that MEPs represent.

European Parliament: watch video recordings of Ms Lagarde’s opening statements, MEPs’ questions and her answers

EP Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs

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