i have had a hard time understanding whenever someone points to the lack of a euro bond market as a reason the ecb can't monetize. of course there is a euro bond market- bonds denominated in euros trade all the time, private bonds and sovereign bonds issued by germany, spain, and so on.
so, theoretically, the ecb could monetize by buying these sovereign bonds. but the political issues that arise are momentous- which country's bonds should be bought and in what quantities? should the purchases be proportional to population, gdp, deficits?
spreads between sovereign bonds have increased, btw, as traders have begun to price in the fact that the various eurozone governments really do have different risk profiles, but those spreads are still not that great.
so it seems to me that, for the purpose of clarity, we would be better off saying that the problem with monetization for the ecb, should it wish to monetize [another discussion entirely], is the lack of a central, federal euro TREASURY, to offer eurozone treasury bonds not associated with any particular eurozone member.
so, theoretically, the ecb could monetize by buying these sovereign bonds. but the political issues that arise are momentous- which country's bonds should be bought and in what quantities? should the purchases be proportional to population, gdp, deficits?
spreads between sovereign bonds have increased, btw, as traders have begun to price in the fact that the various eurozone governments really do have different risk profiles, but those spreads are still not that great.
so it seems to me that, for the purpose of clarity, we would be better off saying that the problem with monetization for the ecb, should it wish to monetize [another discussion entirely], is the lack of a central, federal euro TREASURY, to offer eurozone treasury bonds not associated with any particular eurozone member.
Comment