Germany’s constitutional court rejected on Tuesday (18 May) a complaint against the European Central Bank’s (ECB) flagship bond-buying scheme, in a ruling that primes the eurozone economy for more stimulus once the bank’s pandemic-related emergency measures end. EURACTIV Germany reports.
The plaintiffs, Bernd Lucke, a former member of the right-wing AfD
party, and Peter Gauweiler, a former member of the ruling CSU, together
with a handful of prominent and long-standing German critics of the
ECB’s money-printing programmes, claimed the institution had not yet met
the requirements set in the court’s previous judgement in May 2020. The
Karlsruhe-based court ruled that lawmakers had failed to exercise
sufficient control over the Bundesbank, which buys bonds on behalf of
the ECB, and ordered Germany’s central bank to quit the scheme unless
the ECB provided proof that it was necessary and appropriate.
The ruling on the ECB’s quantitative easing programme to purchase
public sector securities on the secondary markets (Public Sector
Purchase Programme – PSPP), launched in 2015 to fight off deflation, had
caused unrest in Brussels and Frankfurt since EU law, which was the
basis for the adoption of the PSPP, is superior to national law and thus
also applies to Germany’s top court.
Germany’s central bank (Bundesbank) should suspend the implementation
of the European Central Bank’s critical bond-buying programme unless
the ECB proves the proportionality of its monetary stimulus, aimed at
shoring up the eurozone’s economies, Germany’s Constitutional Court
ruled on Tuesday (5 May).
With the new ruling, the Constitutional Court affirmed that the
government and Bundestag’s conducted a sufficiently rigorous appraisal
of the proportionality of the PSPP in accordance with its earlier
judgement.
“The Constitutional Court’s original May 2020 ruling was strong
stuff. The Bundestag and the government have made a credible case that
they have effectively fulfilled their control duties and wisely
implemented a difficult ruling of the Constitutional Court,” Markus
Ferber, economic policy spokesperson of the European People’s Party
(EPP), said on Tuesday.
“Today’s ruling should now also be accepted by all parties in this form,” he added.
Friedrich Heinemann of the Leibniz Centre for European Economic
Research warned, however, that the decision “by no means permanently
ends the European and constitutional dispute over bond purchases.”
“In the pandemic, the ECB Governing Council overturned many of the
safeguards designed to prevent prohibited monetary government
financing,” he said, adding that the ECB was entitled to “this key role
for state financing” in pandemic times “but certainly not afterwards”,
warning that the Constitutional Court will continue playing its role as
watchdog in the future.
German ECB ruling should 'spur' more eurozone integration: Merkel
Chancellor Angela Merkel said Wednesday (13 May) that a bombshell
ruling on the European Central Bank by Germany’s top court should “spur”
efforts toward greater eurozone integration.
The fight continues
“By now declaring the applications for an enforcement order
inadmissible and not carrying out its own factual examination, the
Constitutional Court is leaving unchallenged the failure of the ECB, the
government and the Bundestag to comply with its judgement,” said
Gauweiler, whose application was dismissed.
Gauweiler also announced that he would not be discouraged by this
decision and would continue to fight against the “insolence of the EU
institutions”.
According to Lucke, the second complainant whose request was
dismissed, “it is hard to see why the negative effects of the ECB’s
super-expansive monetary policy have to remain secret.”
“Unfortunately, the Constitutional Court did not even have the
courage to demand transparency for the citizen. If the ECB’s monetary
policy does not cause any damage, the ECB could publish its assessment
after all,” he added.
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