ECB Expects Worse Recession in Europe Than Global Economy

ECB Expects Worse Recession in Europe Than Global Economy
фото показано с : news.bitcoin.com

2020-4-16 05:35

The European Central Bank (ECB) expects the European economy to suffer a more severe recession than the global economy. Countries across the euro area will experience “a deep recession,” which entails unprecedented funding needs of more than €1 trillion ($1.1 trillion), explained ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos.

Also read: IMF Declares Global Recession, 80 Countries Request Help, Trillions of Dollars Needed

Deep Recession, Shrinking Economy

ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos answered some questions about the European economy in an interview published by the ECB on Sunday. Sharing his assessment of the global economic situation as the coronavirus crisis persists, he said:

The global economy will enter recession and so will the European economy, albeit an even more severe one. The ultimate fall in GDP will depend on how long the lockdown lasts.

He added: “International bodies have calculated that the economy will shrink by 2% to 3% for each month of lockdown. So one and a half months would be around 5%. Three months would be double that.”

ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos said that the European economy will suffer a more severe recession than the global economy.

He believes that in the most likely scenario, the euro area will show some signs of growth beginning in the third quarter. However, “we will have to wait until 2021 to see a genuine recovery in economic activity,” he emphasized. “In any case, 2021 will not be able to make up for all of the downturn in 2020.” The ECB vice president continued:

The banking sector is facing this situation from a much more robust position than ten years ago. It is true that it has profitability issues and the deep recession will affect its bottom line.

“But there are no solvency problems,” he claims. “The financial markets experienced some problems during the initial days of this crisis, but they were not caused by the banking sector. The situation has to a certain extent returned to normal, although not completely, while prices have partially recovered and volatility has eased.”

Impact of European Countries and ECB’s Tools

De Guindos explained that the ECB has intervened on three levels. “First, we have provided liquidity to the banks … and we have launched a package of temporary collateral easing measures,” he detailed. “And finally, we have expanded our monetary policy operations.”

Expecting a deeper recession in Europe than the global economy, the ECB has intervened on three levels. Funding of between €1 trillion and €1.5 trillion will be needed, which is “an amount the likes of which we’ve probably never seen before,” ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos said.

The ECB vice president added, “In 2020, asset purchases will reach €1.1 trillion (mainly of public debt) to avoid fragmentation of the euro area,” elaborating:

Countries will experience a deep recession that will have an impact on their public finances. This will entail greater funding needs, of between €1 trillion and €1.5 trillion, an amount the likes of which we’ve probably never seen before.

He further explained that the ECB currently has three main tools at its disposal. The first is the European Investment Bank guarantee, which has €25 billion available. The second is the European instrument for temporary Support to mitigate Unemployment Risks in an Emergency (SURE) program, which will provide lending of €100 billion to avoid job losses.

The third is the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), which “provides low-conditionality precautionary credit lines and already has €240 billion available, which can be increased up to €400 billion,” de Guindos described. “Following the agreement the Eurogroup reached on Thursday, governments will be able to use the ESM to access the equivalent of 2% of their GDP and thus finance healthcare spending related to the pandemic.”

Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank have already forecasted a severe global recession. Banks, such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Deutsche Bank have also predicted a major recession.

What do you think of the ECB’s methods in helping the European economy? Let us know in the comments section below.

The post ECB Expects Worse Recession in Europe Than Global Economy appeared first on Bitcoin News.

Similar to Notcoin - Blum - Airdrops In 2024

origin »

Global Currency Reserve (GCR) на Currencies.ru

$ 0.0005018 (+0.16%)
Объем 24H $0
Изменеия 24h: 4.80 %, 7d: 64.03 %
Cегодня L: $0.0005018 - H: $0.0005018
Капитализация $53.699k Rank 1984
Цена в час новости $ 0.0004813 (4.26%)

economy recession ecb global european expects deep

economy recession → Результатов: 125


Dr. Nouriel Roubini Estimates that a Global Recession is Underway

Nouriel Roubini foresees a global financial crisis. Different policies implemented to prevent a financial downturn will not help. Central banks around the world must stop printing money. Dr. Nouriel Roubini, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, estimates that a new recession could hit the global economy very soon.

2019-11-9 18:06


Dow Rises Defiantly as Dismal Manufacturing Data Threaten Economy

The Dow plodded toward a moderate gain on Thursday after the index emerged unscathed from another batch of third-quarter corporate earnings reports. The stable earnings helped fortify the Dow against more dismal manufacturing data, which could spur more Federal Reserve interest rate cuts but may also presage an economic slowdown or even a full-blown recession.

2019-10-24 16:38


Jamie Dimon Quashes Recession Fears — Here's Why He's Wrong

Despite worries of an impending global recession, Jamie Dimon is still feeling rather positive about the state of the U.S. economy — but his sentiment might be misguided. The J.P. Morgan Chase chairman says his gut feeling is that the American economy isn't nearing a turn for the worse — telling reporters at the Business […] The post Jamie Dimon Quashes Recession Fears — Here's Why He's Wrong appeared first on CCN.com

2019-9-19 23:03


Dow Jones in Trouble? Fund Managers Expect Full Blown Recession to Hit in 1 Year

A growing number of fund managers expect a recession to hit the global economy in the next 12 months, casting doubts over the Dow Jones and the stock market. “Recession concerns continue to temper investor risk appetite as 38% of Fund Managers in latest BofAML survey expect a recession over the next 12mths vs 59% […] The post Dow Jones in Trouble? Fund Managers Expect Full Blown Recession to Hit in 1 Year appeared first on CCN.com

2019-9-18 21:00


Dow Slithers Higher, But ‘Shallow Recession’ Lurks

The Dow crept higher on Monday, as the US stock market began its quest to record a third straight weekly gain amid rampant trade war optimism. However, the top economist at investment bank CLSA warns that the US economy is headed for an unavoidable “shallow recession” that could place the market in a precarious position […] The post Dow Slithers Higher, But ‘Shallow Recession’ Lurks appeared first on CCN.com

2019-9-10 16:36


Dow Staggers While World Economy Spirals Toward Brutal Recession

By CCN Markets: The Dow Jones took a hammering on thin liquidity on Wednesday as a blizzard of terrible news iced bulls and thrust the index into a 630 point tailspin. The bears were out in force as the mighty German economic machine contracted, Chinese data missed estimates, Hong Kong wallowed in chaos, and bond […] The post Dow Staggers While World Economy Spirals Toward Brutal Recession appeared first on CCN Markets

2019-8-14 19:39


Dow Runs on Hope & Fumes as Treasury Yields Spell Economic Doom

  The Dow and broader U.S. stock market advanced on Thursday, as trade-deal optimism offset the sickly feeling on Main Street that the economy was barrelling toward recession. Dow Extends Rally; S&P 500 and Nasdaq Follow Wall Street's major indexes traded higher for most of the session on Thursday despite mixed pre-market conditions for Dow […] The post Dow Runs on Hope & Fumes as Treasury Yields Spell Economic Doom appeared first on CCN Markets

2019-6-28 22:08