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10 October 2011

ECON Committee: Germany's Jörg Asmussen takes first steps towards joining ECB Executive Board


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MEPs overwhelmingly recommended Jörg Asmussen to become Jürgen Stark's successor on the ECB Executive Board. In discussion, Mr Assmussen insisted that the EU bailout fund should not call on ECB liquidity to enhance its firepower.


Mr Asmussen fielded questions from MEPs in three broad categories: ways out of the eurozone crisis, improving financial regulatory reform and enhancing communication.

Out of the crisis

To deal with the crisis, Mr Asmussen said a five-pronged strategy is needed: a credible way to reduce Greece's gaping budget deficit and improve its competitiveness; better use of the EU bailout fund (including allowing it to buy bonds direct from the countries issuing them); a recapitalisation of all Europe's "systemically important" banks and securing their access to funding; a stronger commitment by countries running deficits to fiscal consolidation; and better economic governance, including through treaty changes. 

Mr Asmussion did not reject the possibility of making private investors take a bigger hit to alleviate Greece's burden, but said that it was necessary first to wait for the results of the latest monitoring report  by the ECB, IMF and Commission officials, due out next week.

Regulatory reform - restoring the momentum

Picking up on MEPs' comments that countries had blocked the G20 agenda, Mr Asmussen sounded the alarm on financial services reform, saying that the momentum had, "for some reason or another", been lost. "We cannot afford to go back to a pre-Lehman world", he told MEPs. 

Apart from passing new regulatory legislation, it was also necessary to improve the implementation rate of rules already drawn up, he added.

Communication is the key

Mr Asmussen stressed several times that communicating well is the "key" to maintaining the ECB's credibility and legitimacy. This would be a growing challenge due to the excessively high speed at which markets demand information, which often risks crowding out communication efforts to explain the ECB's actions, he said. 

Press release



© European Parliament


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