Lagarde Can Read A Script, But Questions Linger Over Ability Of New ECB Head

 | Dec 16, 2019 22:37

When former European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi uttered his famous “whatever it takes” to defend the euro declaration, what mattered was not only the words he used, or where he said it—in London—but that it was Draghi himself who said it. He had all the credibility and authority a career in monetary policy gave him. So when he added, “And believe me, it will be enough,” people took him at his word.

Unfortunately that's not quite the case at the moment for Christine Lagarde, Mario Draghi's successor. In her debut appearance this past Thursday to explain ECB governing council policy, Lagarde read the script well enough. However, during the question and answer period, she was more tentative, veering whenever possible back to her comfort zone of economic policy and politics, rather than monetary policy.

Draghi had already set the controls on eurozone monetary policy for the next six to 18 months. That's left Lagarde free to host dinners in luxury hotels to make governing council members feel better and to talk about undertaking a thorough review of ECB strategy that will take at least a year (no details on that, please, until further consultation with council members).

However, there has been nothing in Lagarde’s early appearances to dispel the reservations that greeted her nomination in July that for all her polish on the international stage, the trained lawyer and former French finance minister has only a rudimentary acquaintance with monetary policy.

It’s not likely that she will be called upon in the next few months to say anything like “whatever it takes,” but if she did, why would anyone believe her? Why would anyone think she even knew what it would take?