ECB Warns Against 'Abrupt' End To Pandemic Aid
 
 
The European Central Bank warned Wednesday that a
premature withdrawal of government support to the eurozone's pandemic-hit
economies could derail the recovery and trigger a wave of bankruptcies.
An "abrupt" end to the measures could
"result in a more severe economic contraction than during the first wave
of the pandemic," the ECB said in its twice-yearly financial stability
report.
Eurozone governments have taken unprecedented steps
to shield companies and workers from the pandemic fallout, including through
guarantees on bank loans and repayment moratoriums, massive short-time working
schemes and aid for businesses hit by shutdowns.
Despite recent optimism about Covid-19 vaccines,
"there is a long road ahead," ECB vice president Luis de Guindos said
in a statement.
"Authorities will have to make difficult
decisions on whether and how to extend policy measures and, eventually, deal
with the debt they create," he said.
If fiscal support is not maintained for the full
length of the crisis, firms most affected by social distancing restrictions
"may face severe solvency issues or a more permanent disruption to their
business models", even as other sections of the economy recover, according
to the ECB report.
Concerns over a slew of bankruptcies are already
high due to the levels of debt incurred by companies and households during the
first wave of the pandemic.
ECB President Christine Lagarde has previously said
her biggest concern was governments creating a "cliff effect" by
taking away fiscal support before a full-fledged recovery was under way.
However, while government support schemes continue
to be essential, they should "remain targeted towards pandemic-related
economic support and avoid giving rise to debt sustainability concerns in the
medium term," De Guindos said.
The ECB has said that its own pandemic stimulus
package, which includes a 1.35-trillion-euro emergency bond-buying scheme ($1.6
trillion) to help keep credit flowing, will continue until the "crisis
phase is over".
In the previous edition of its report in May, the
Frankfurt-based institution said the risk of the eurozone collapsing could
re-emerge as public debt in some countries explodes to cope with the
coronavirus shock.
Lagarde at the time however said she was "not
overly concerned", and the risk is no longer mentioned in the latest
report despite EU leaders bickering over a 750-billion-euro recovery plan
agreed in July.
Lagarde last week called for the Next Generation EU
fund to become available "without delay".
 
          
     
                                
 
 


