The sham of ECB independence
Bill Mitchell - billy blog » Eurozone 2017-10-24
One of the major claims the founders of the EMU made was that by creating an independent ECB – by which they meant ‘independent’ of the influence from the Member States or other EU bodies (such as the Eurogroup) – they were laying the foundations of financial stability and disciplining the fiscal policy of the Member States. This so-called independence was embodied in the – Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union – where Article 123 prevents the ECB from giving “overdraft facilities or any other type of credit facility” to the Member State governments (and other EU bodies); Article 124 prohibits any Member State government (and other EU bodies) from having “privileged access” to the financial institutions; and Article 125 prohibits the ECB from assuming any liabilities or “commitments” of the Member State governments (etc) – the famous ‘no bailout’ clause. But a recent report from the Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) – Open doors for forces of finance – (published October 3, 2017) – suggests that the ECB feigns independence and is in fact captive of the largest profit-seeking financial institutions that sit on its advisory groups. In other words, the ECB has become a vehicle to advance private return and avoid regulative imposts when the TFEU outlines an entirely different role for the bank.
I have regularly noted that the ECB has, in fact, been violating the no bailout clause since May 2010 when it introduced the Securities Market Program, which involved it buying the bonds of many distressed Member State governments in order to bring down yields that had started to increase (dramatically in some cases).
It is also a fact that the only reason the Eurozone has survived and none of the 19 Member State governments have become insolvent is because the ECB has continued to systematically break the law as set out in the Articles of the TFEU noted in the Introduction.
Sure enough, the defenders of the system claim that Article 125 does not prohibit the ECB from buying Member State debt in the secondary market (once it has been issued).
But the reality is that the buyers of the debt in the primary issue market know full well that they can then onsell to the ECB at a higher price than they paid, which amounts to the same thing as the ECB funding the government deficits.
The charade is that the ECB is just buying massive amounts of government debt as a liquidity operation. But the amounts of government debt needed for these purposes are minuscule compared to the expansion of the ECB’s balance sheet since May 2010.
It is quite clear to any dispassionate observer what is going on and rather comical to hear and read the ECB pretending otherwise.
But the Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) report raises a separate and no less disturbing feature of ECB operations.
This is the front cover of the Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) Report – it is very stark.
There was also a very detailed analysis of the CEO Report in the French independent news service Mediapart (October 18, 2017) – La BCE «capturée» par le monde financier, accuse une ONG (“NGO accused ECB of being captured by private financial sector”).
If you read French, it is an excellent account of the problem.
It tells us that the:
ECB is arguably the most powerful institution in the euro zone. Its decisions have an impact on the lives of more than 400 million Europeans. Of course, there is its monetary policy, and all its consequences on the economy. But in the wake of the financial crisis, it has expanded its role far beyond its primary mission: to ensure price stability. The change was surreptitious, without anyone really appreciating the measure of the immense political powers now attributed to it. The ECB became a permanent member of the Troika and the European Stability Mechanism, deciding the austerity policies of European countries in difficulty. It is also responsible for ensuring the supervision of the European banking system, with the right to life and death over the banks and thus the depositors’ money. It is also the arena for financial regulation in Europe, which is Europe’s voice in international fora on all regulatory issues.
The ECB’s power is disturbing in the sense that its decision makers are unelected and largely unaccountable. It does have to provide reports to the European Parliament but it mostly does what it likes.
Which brings us to examining what ‘it’ means?
That is what the CEO Report brings into the spotlight.
The CEO Report says that:
It matters how the European Central Bank (ECB) makes its decisions, and it matters who it considers its experts and advisors. Especially if those advisors bear all the traits of lobbyists for the financial sector, and not least when the ECB is becoming a more and more powerful institution … Yet an incredible two thirds of the banks and financial entities under ECB supervision hold 346 seats in its own advisory groups, and this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to conflicts of interest between the role of the ECB and those whom it chooses to advise it.
The CEO Report also observed that:
There is an intense and troubling traffic in and out of the doors of the building in Frankfurt, of representatives from the biggest financial corporations in Europe, on their way to and from meetings with the ECB leadership …
… the ECB has undertaken no reforms whatsoever. The ECB seems to live in its own bubble, setting its own low standards on key ethical issues. We argue that situation is not sustainable and needs to be addressed.
The major issue that the CEO Report highlights is the 22 “advisory groups” that the ECB maintains. They have “517 representatives from 144 different entities: either corporations, companies or associations, mainly trade associations.”
According the ECB, these groups help it to “discharge its mandate” and “explain its policy decisions to citizens”.
The ECB claims they access these ‘indepedendent specialists” in order “to maintain the necessary dialogue with representative associations and civil society”.
The CEO Report notes that the idea of external consultatation is unproblematic but they question the ECB’s construction of “civil society”:
Would anyone be against engagement with the public per se? Hardly. But the message from the ECB is misleading if we agree that “civil society” implies a variety of interests, some economic, some non-economic, some with links to companies and corporations, some that represent other interests. When looking at the advisory groups of the ECB, it quickly becomes clear that the composition of these groups are not representative of the public, and digging a bit deeper, reveals no attempt is made to ensure representation of interests outside the private financial sector, nor is the ECB interested in gathering inspiration from independent academics. All groups but one are completely dominated by financial corporations, and the number of seats taken by the private nancial sector is an astonishing 98 per cent (508 out of 517).
Does this mean the ECB is captive of the big financial institutions?
The CEO concludes that the way that the ECB has handled some “financial scandals and serious reform proposals” suggests it has been captured by these lobbyists.
The ECB has ignored the criticism that it is being advised by the very sector it helps to regulate.
This graphic taken from the Report shows the Top 10 seats (held by 16 financial companies) on the advisory groups.
The CEO Report concludes “that the ECB is making no attempt to secure participation from groups outside the private financial community”.
We learn that these advisory groups are not intended to have “expertise” – they are constructed to represent “seniority” and the interests of the firms involved.
The CEO Report provides several examples of how these groups have captured ECB decision making.
1. Financial Transactions Tax – where the ECB took a soft line.
2. The Libor Scandal – where the ECB promote self-regulation – the crooks regulating the crooks.
3. Foreign Exchange Scandal – “world’s biggest banks were manipulating currency exchange rates in order to make a solid profit from clients” – the ECB created the “Foreign Exchange Contact Group to handle the European side of the scandal and develop an ac- tion plan” but stacked it with representatives from the “banks involved in the scandal”.
4. Banking supervision – “The advisory groups indicate a very close interaction between supervised corporations and the ECB, and absolutely no arms-length principle is applied in that regard.”
5, Asset purchases – the QE program has delivered “billions of euros” into the hands of the institutions represented on the Advisory Groups.
In the case of the latter, the CEO Report provides a little case study about Volkswagen:
Volkswagen and Ford joined a working group in 2010 to help develop a template for reporting on car loans, in order to increase transparency and improve risk assessment. In the following years, Volkswagen enjoyed the support of the ECB for its financial arm, including through ECB purchases of ‘auto ABS’, securities backed by auto loans. So, first the ECB allows VW to help standardise its financial products, then it buys the same products on markets. These purchases were so extensive that it became a liability for the ECB when the Dieselgate scandal broke – with the discovery of fraudulent software in Volkswagen vehicles to hide the scale of vehicle emissions.
The CEO Report also concludes that the ECB demonstrates “No broad commitment to transparency”.
The European Commission’s Transparency Register was established because in the ECs own words:
Citizens can, and indeed should, expect the EU decision-making process to be as transparent and open as possible.
However, the ECB “is not formally involved in the register” and has adopted none of the procedures laid out by the Register. A large proportion of the “experts involved in its groups … are not registered”.
Further the ECB does not recruit members of its advisory groups “in an open, inclusive manner”.
Conclusion
As the French Mediapart story concludes “La BCE est indépendante de tous sauf du monde de la finance” – the ECB is independent of all but the financial sector!
That should not surprise us.
The ECB has consistently operated to advance the interest of the wealthy and at the same time has been party (via the Troika) to the destruction of the well-being of the ordinary citizens of the Eurozone.
Its expert groups are dominated by the corporate sector – in particular, banks – which the CEO Report describes as being “outrageous”.
The ECB “shows no concern for other interest groups in society, and seems utterly uninterested in getting independent academic expertise involved”.
Who would want to be part of this type of system?
That is enough for today!
(c) Copyright 2017 William Mitchell. All Rights Reserved.