Coronavirus: the ECB releases 750 billion euros in emergency aid

The European Central Bank unveiled this historic March 18, 2020 emergency plan to support states facing the coronavirus. DANIEL ROLAND / AFP

Text by: RFI Follow

The European Central Bank (ECB) presented this Wednesday, March 18, an emergency plan of 750 billion euros to try to contain the repercussions on the economy of the coronavirus pandemic.

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The European Central Bank is drawing up a colossal plan. " Extraordinary times require extraordinary action ", tweeted the president of the Frankfurt Institute Christine Lagarde. She promises that " there are no limits to our commitment to the euro ". Other measures are still likely to follow, she suggests, even if it means using " the full potential of our tools ".

Extraordinary times require extraordinary action. There are no limits to our commitment to the euro. We are determined to use the full potential of our tools, within our mandate. https://t.co/RhxuVYPeVR

Christine Lagarde (@Lagarde) March 18, 2020

The first stock exchange to react to the ECB plan, the Tokyo market opened on Thursday March 19, up 2%. And oil prices in Asia have risen sharply. The " emergency buyback program in the face of the pandemic " via public and private debt buybacks for 750 billion euros will be completed by the end of the year, the institution said in a press release published in the outcome of a telephone meeting of the Board of Governors.

The guardians of the euro will end the program when it is judged that " the crisis phase of the coronavirus Covid-19 is over, but in any case not before the end of the year ", specifies the central bank.

Reviving the economic system

By massively buying up debt from eurozone governments and companies on the markets, the ECB hopes to relieve the banks and encourage them to maintain or even boost their loans to households and businesses, and thus support production and employment. .

This support should help revive a seized economic system, where many companies are forced to suspend their activity in the face of the virus and where some will soon find themselves threatened with bankruptcy.

For comparison, from March 2015 to December 2018, faced with the risks of deflation, the ECB had bought securities every month on the financial markets for a final total of € 2.6 trillion to support the euro zone. Its “QE” (“quantitative easing” or “quantitative easing”) had sailed at a rate increased to 80 billion euros per month.

117 billion euros committed per month

Today, the ECB is going even further with coronavirus. By adding its buyouts resumed at the end of 2019 at a rate of 20 billion euros per month, the envelope of 120 billion euros released on March 12 as the first response to the coronavirus crisis and that of this Wednesday, his interventions will raise to 1,050 billion euros over the remaining 9 months in 2020, or nearly 117 billion euros committed per month.

The ECB also wants to organize its shopping on the market in a "flexible way". This suggests that it could focus on certain sovereign securities in great difficulty to ease tensions on their debt. This could benefit Italy, the country most affected by the epidemic and which saw its rates rise, accentuating the crisis.

The buyback program decided on Wednesday, March 18 also includes for the first time securities issued by the Greek government, which had no place in the first "QE".

A applauded decision

The ECB's potion is finally even higher than that of the American central bank (Fed), which announced on Monday the purchase of 500 billion dollars of treasury bills and 200 billion dollars of mortgage securities, to " support the proper functioning of these markets, which are at the heart of credit flows to households and businesses .

French President Emmanuel Macron estimated six days ago that the first set of measures from the ECB did not go far enough. This mercreid, he expressed his " full support for the exceptional measures " of the ECB. "It is up to us European states to be there through our budgetary interventions and greater financial solidarity within the euro zone ," he added.

Full support for the exceptional measures taken this evening by the ECB. It is up to us European states to be there through our budgetary interventions and greater financial solidarity within the euro zone. Our people and our economies need it. https://t.co/dCV00uvmt5

Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) March 18, 2020

The response of the ECB is " massive at all levels, size, flexibility, scope and commitment to review the limits " of its purchases set to date at 33% of the debt stock by country, also judged the analyst Frederik Ducrozet, strategist at Pictet Wealth Management.

( With dispatches )

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