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ECB breaks rank and raises interest rates

Geoff Riley

7th April 2011

The European Central Bank has become the first of the four major central banks to lift policy interest rates since the start of the global financial crisis. This decision came on the same day as Portugal applying for emergency support in a bail out that might be worth Euro 80 billion. David Blanchflower, a former member of the Monetary Policy Committee has called the move “a big mistake” hinting that Spain - where more than 80% of mortgages are on variable interest rates - is more vulnerably to financial distress than many are prepared to admit.

The ECB is starting to move their policy interest rates towards normal levels - but this tightening of monetary policy starts with the Euro Area suffering 10 per cent unemployment - it takes a hawkish central bank to start increasing the cost of borrowing money when one in ten people in the currency union is out of work and when the Euro has already been appreciating against the US dollar threatening the strength of an export-led recovery for the currency union. The ECB was forced to reverse a rate rise in the autumn of 2008 when the financial crisis took hold. Might they have to do the same sometime this summer?

It seems that the ECB has confirmed that the Euro Area will now experience a two-speed currency union for the next few years with Germany leading a group of fast-growing countries and the debt-ridden periphery (the PIIGS) condemned to grow more slowly and suffer the impact of a period of painful fiscal austerity.

Eurozone interest rate rise explained (BBC news)

Guardian: Portugal bailout analysis: Is Spain next for EU help? - video

Euro Area Inflation and Unemployment

Data from Timetric.

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Bank of England Target 2.0 from Timetric

Geoff Riley

Geoff Riley FRSA has been teaching Economics for over thirty years. He has over twenty years experience as Head of Economics at leading schools. He writes extensively and is a contributor and presenter on CPD conferences in the UK and overseas.

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