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New Central Bank Trims European Interest Rates

Economy: Surprisingly bold half-point cut to 2.5% is designed to boost investment, staunch Continent's slowdown.

April 09, 1999|CHRIS KRAUL, TIMES STAFF WRITER

BRUSSELS — In an aggressive move designed to provide an economic fillip to a beleaguered region, the fledgling European Central Bank lowered interest rates Thursday by half a point to 2.5%.

The first major policy dictate of the bank's short life reflects growing concern over a broad slowdown in economic activity across Europe. The intention is to increase investment and spur growth.


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"The European economy overall has been underperforming," said Jeffrey Schott, senior fellow at the Institute for International Economics in Washington. "This cut should be very welcome."

Aside from the U.S., Europe has been the world's only regionwide bastion of economic growth. But flagging strength here increases the pressure on the U.S. to carry the fragile global economy as the world's only healthy market for other countries' products. And the health of Europe, as the largest regional market for U.S. exports, is important to sustaining the U.S. economic boom.

"The concern of industrialized nations is that the U.S. economy will slow before Europe, Japan and the rest of Asia pick up," said Eckhart Schulte, senior economist at the Frankfurt office of the Industrial Bank of Japan. He hailed the move: "In a sense, the rate cut could be part of a global strategy."

The size of Thursday's reduction surprised observers; it was twice the quarter-point cut many had expected. Others, however, were surprised the bank board acted at all.

Some skeptics have doubted all along that board members could act in concert for the benefit of all 11 European nations that formed the monetary union. Thursday's action was the first the central bank has taken on the highly politicized issue of interest rates. The bank was formed in conjunction with the Jan. 4 launch of a common currency, the euro.

The central bank, Europe's equivalent of the U.S. Federal Reserve, regulates monetary policy, sets interest rates and makes short-term money available to big commercial banks.

A decision on cutting the refinancing rate--comparable to the U.S. federal funds rate, the overnight loan rate among banks--had become a political football and was loudly favored by former German Finance Minister Oskar LaFontaine before he resigned in February, partly over monetary policy differences with Chancellor Gerhard Schroder.

Now that that action has been taken, Jens Dallmeyer, senior economist at Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, cautioned that the effect on consumers could be more psychological than practical since mortgage and consumer credit rates won't immediately be affected.

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