YouTube home Comedy Week on YouTube
Upload

Euro slumps on ECB Draghi's comments

Euronews Euronews·17,031 videos
37,537
335 views
Like     Dislike 2

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to like Euronews's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to dislike Euronews's video.

Sign in to YouTube

Sign in with your Google Account (YouTube, Google+, Gmail, Orkut, Picasa, or Chrome) to add Euronews's video to your playlist.

Published on Feb 7, 2013

http://www.euronews.com/ The European Central Bank has said it will monitor what impact the stronger euro is having on the region's economy to make sure it does not derail the recovery.

After the ECB left its main interest rate at 0.75 percent at the monthly policy meeting, Bank chief Mario Draghi said the euro was actually near its long-term average: "The (euro's) appreciation is, in a sense, a sign of return of confidence in the euro."

He added: "The exchange rate is not a policy target, but it is important for growth and price stability and we will certainly want to see whether the appreciation - if sustained - will alter our risk assessment as far as price stability is concerned."

A stronger euro makes the bloc's exports less competitive. The euro hit a 15-month peak of $1.3711 on February 1.

Economists say the problem for the ECB is that it is not really equipped to fight a currency war in which other countries are devaluing, to boost exports and so grow their economies.

After Draghi spoke the euro fell to its lowest level in a week against the dollar - under $1.34 - and sank against the yen.

That was a reaction to the ECB's views on the state of the eurozone economy.


Draghi spoke of negative risks as he said economic weakness was "expected to prevail in the early part of 2013" but later in the year, activity should gradually recover.

On that basis, economists continue to believe the ECB is not likely to change interest rates until at least July next year.

Find us on:
Youtube http://bit.ly/zr3upY
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/euronews.fans
Twitter http://twitter.com/euronews

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Loading icon Loading...

Ratings have been disabled for this video.
Rating is available when the video has been rented.
This feature is not available right now. Please try again later.

All Comments (0)

Sign in now to post a comment!
  • Loading comment...
Loading...
Advertisement
Loading...
Working...
Sign in to add this to Watch Later