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15 June 2011

ECON committee: Mario Draghi recommended as candidate for next ECB president


Mario Draghi was recommended to succeed Jean-Claude Trichet as ECB President in an ECON vote. The committee opinion - 33 in favour, 2 against and 4 abstentions - now needs to be confirmed by a vote of Parliament as a whole, scheduled for 23 June.


The way forward for the ECB

Mr Draghi repeatedly defended the ECB's hawkish attitude towards inflation, saying that nothing, not even a sovereign debt crisis, should divert its attention from this. On the other hand he also recognised that the ECB's role in assessing risk and participating in monetary policy had grown. Asked by MEPs about this role, he insisted that the ECB had neither lost its independence, nor was overstepping its mandate, provided it did not enter the field of politics.

Greece

MEPs focused many of their questions on the most immediate issue of the day: Greece. Mr Draghi stuck to Mr Trichet's stance of "no default", but nonetheless accepted that private investors could be included in the picture of a solution for Greece provided that this was "entirely voluntary", as had been the case in 2009 for some central and eastern European countries. "The cost of a real default will exceed the benefits and will not address the root causes. Moreover we do not know what contagion effects it will have", said Mr Draghi, quashing arguments that the main reason for his stance was that the ECB was too exposed to Greece's debt.

New economic governance

On economic governance, Mr Draghi called for efforts to strengthen and build upon what already existed rather than look too far ahead. "The economic governance legislative package can be more ambitious. We need more automaticity, as Parliament is rightly pushing for, and more sanctions."  To a question about a possible EU finance minister, Mr Draghi replied that there was not enough integration for this step. For the same reason, he also said that Eurobonds were currently "a step too far".

Goldman Sachs

A few MEPs asked Mr Draghi about his past involvement with Goldman Sachs and whether this could negatively affect his perceived integrity as ECB president. Mr Draghi vehemently defended himself, saying that he was not involved in the bank's work with governments, and that his track record since then in clamping down on the banking sector and warning about the build up of risk proved that he would not be in the pocket of the financial industry.

Press release


© European Parliament


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