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Following the recent market turmoil, there is "little chance" that the ECB will reduce interest rates in September, and indeed they may remain at the 4% level for a "long time", argues a 27 August article from EuroIntelligence.
EuroIntelligence believe that the argument in favour of the ECB deciding to 'wait and see' before acting is "overwhelming" for three main reasons:
Financial institutions in the US and Germany have been most affected so far, but "serious turbulence" should also be expected in China, argues the article – claiming that the crisis will take "months", possibly "much longer", to unwind.
EuroIntelligence believe that interest rates may have "peaked" at 4%, but that the short-term interest corridor will be "narrow" with an "extremely cautious" ECB strategy for the way down, with rates unlikely to settle at 2% or even 3%.
The article argues that this crisis is largely "Alan Greenspan's legacy", and assumes that Ben Bernake will be just as "irresponsible". It recommends that Europe should not follow the policy of a "discredited" Federal Reserve.
EuroIntelligence believe that the most important policy lessons of the crisis are:
The article concludes that there is a lot to be done, most of which "is little more than a return to time-honoured central banking practices". The crisis will be "more severe" than markets have shown thus far and the ECB is "right" to be "cautious", it adds.