President of the European Central Bank

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President of the European Central Bank
Logo European Central Bank.svg
Emblem
Incumbent
Mario Draghi
Term length Eight years, non-renewable
Inaugural holder Wim Duisenberg

The President of the European Central Bank is the head of the European Central Bank (ECB), the institution responsible for the management of the euro and monetary policy in the Eurozone of the European Union (EU).

Role and appointment

The President heads the executive board, governing council and general council of the ECB. He is not elected by popular vote. He also represents the bank abroad, for example at the G20. The President is appointed by majority in the European Council, de facto by those who have adopted the euro, for an eight-year non-renewable term.[1] However the first President, Duisenberg, did not serve his full term (see below)

History

Duisenberg

Wim Duisenberg was the President of the European Monetary Institute (EMI) when it became the ECB, just prior to the launch of the euro, on 1 June 1998. Duisenberg then became the first President of the ECB.

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The French interpretation of the agreement made with the installation of Wim Duisenberg as ECB President was that Duisenberg would resign after just four years of his eight-year term, and would be replaced by the Frenchman Jean-Claude Trichet.[2] Duisenberg always strongly denied that such an agreement was made and stated in February 2002 that he would stay in office until his 68th birthday on 9 July 2003.

In the meanwhile Jean-Claude Trichet was not cleared of legal accusations before 1 June 2002, so he was not able to begin his term after Duisenberg's first four years. Even on 9 July 2003 Trichet was not cleared, and therefore Duisenberg remained in office until 1 November 2003. Duisenberg died on 31 July 2005.

Trichet

Jean-Claude Trichet became President in 2003 and served during the European sovereign debt crisis. Trichet's strengths lay in keeping consensus and visible calm in the ECB. During his tenure, Trichet has had to fend off criticism from French President Nicolas Sarkozy who demanded a more growth-orientated policy at the ECB. Germany supported Trichet in demanding the bank's independence be respected.[3]

However, he was also criticised from straying from his mandate during the crisis by buying the government bonds of eurozone member states. ECB board members Axel A. Weber and Jürgen Stark resigned in protest at this policy, even if it helped prevent states from defaulting. IMF economist Pau Rabanal argued that Trichet "maintained a relatively expansionary monetary policy," but even "sacrificed the ECB's inflation target for the sake of greater economic growth and jobs creation, and not the other way round." While straying from his mandate, he has however still kept interest rates under control and maintained greater price stability than the Deutsche Bundesbank did before the euro.[4][5]

As well as defending the ECB's independence and balancing its commitment to interest rates and economic stability, Trichet also fought Sarkozy for automatic sanctions in the EU fiscal reforms and against Angela Merkel against private sector involvement in bail outs so as not to scare the markets. He had however made some mistakes during the crisis, for example by: raising interest rates just after inflation topped out and just prior to the recession triggered by the Lehman Brothers collapse; also by its early timidity in buying eurozone state bonds.[4][5]

In his final appearance (his 35th) before the European Parliament, Trichet called for more political unity, including; significant new powers to be granted to the ECB, the establishment of an executive branch with a European Finance Ministry and greater oversight powers for the European Parliament. He also asserted that the ECB's role in maintaining price stability throughout the financial crisis and the oil price rises should not be overlooked.[6] He stated, in response to a question from a German newspaper attacking the ECB's credibility following its bond-buying;

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...first, we were called to deliver price stability! ... We have delivered price stability over the first 12-13 years of the euro! Impeccably! I would like very much to hear some congratulations for this institution, which has delivered price stability in Germany over almost 13 years at approximately 1.55% - as the yearly average of inflation - we will recalculate the figure to the second decimal. This figure is better than any ever obtained in this country over a period of 13 years in the past 50 years. So, my first remark is this: we have a mandate and we deliver on our mandate! And we deliver in a way that is not only numerically convincing, but which is better than anything achieved in the past.

— Jean Claude Trichet at the European Parliament, 8 September 2011[7]

Draghi

Although Axel Weber was tipped as one of the possible successors,[8] he resigned from the ECB in protest at the bail out policies. Mario Draghi was chosen to become the next President of the ECB on 24 June 2011.[9] He is President as of 1 November 2011.

Pascal Canfin, Member of the European Parliament, asserted that Draghi had been involved in swaps for European governments, namely Greece, trying to disguise their countries' economic status. Draghi responded that the deals were "undertaken before my joining Goldman Sachs [and] I had nothing to do with" them, in the 2011 European Parliament nomination hearings.

A real and complete inquiry from EU bodies, including the European Parliament, could still be needed to be fully and definitely conclusive about Draghi's exact role and responsibilities in Goldman Sachs, with adequate responses if required.

List

List of presidents since the establishment of the bank on 1 June 1998.

# Portrait President State Took office Left office
1 Wim Duisenberg.jpg Wim Duisenberg  Netherlands 1 June 1998 31 October 2003
Previously the Dutch Minister of Finance, President of De Nederlandsche Bank and President of the European Monetary Institute.
2 70px Jean-Claude Trichet  France 1 November 2003 31 October 2011
Previously a member of the Group of Thirty and the Governor of the Banque de France.
3 70px Mario Draghi  Italy 1 November 2011 Incumbent
Term expires in 2019
Previously a managing director of Goldman Sachs, executive Director of the World Bank and Governor of the Banca d'Italia.

Vice Presidents

Vice President Christian Noyer was only appointed for four years so that his resignation would coincide with the expected resignation of Duisenberg. His successors, starting with Lucas Papademos, are granted eight-year terms.

Vice President State Took office Left Office
1 Christian Noyer  France 1 June 1998 31 May 2002
Previously a civil servant, advisor and head of the treasury at the French Ministry of Finance.
2 Lucas Papademos  Greece 1 June 2002 31 May 2010
Previously the senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston chief economist and then Governor of the Bank of Greece.
3 Vítor Constâncio  Portugal 1 June 2010 Incumbent
Term expires in 2018
Previously secretary-general of the Socialist Party and Governor of the Banco de Portugal.

References

  1. Protocol 4 of the consolidated European treaties
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  4. 4.0 4.1 By Xavier Vidal-Folch (translated by Anton Baer) 6 October 2011 What it would have cost without Trichet, EL PAÍS, on Presseurop
  5. 5.0 5.1 The euro crisis: Is anyone in charge?, The Economist 1 October 2011
  6. Martin Banks - 4 October 2011 ECB chief calls for 'significant' new powers for EU, the Parliament Magazine
  7. Introductory statement to the press conference (with Q&A), ECB
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External links