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			 "Further monetary policy measures will be communicated by the 
			President of the ECB at a press conference starting at 2.30 p.m. CET 
			today," the ECB said in a statement after announcing the rate 
			decision. 
 Expectations are high for the ECB to unveil large-scale quantitative 
			easing (QE) despite opposition from Germany's Bundesbank and 
			concerns in Berlin that it could allow spendthrift countries to 
			slacken economic reforms.
 
 That prospect has already prompted the Swiss central bank to abandon 
			its cap on the franc while Denmark, whose currency is pegged to the 
			euro, was forced to cut interest rates in anticipation of the flood 
			of money.
 
 A euro zone source said the ECB's Executive Board proposed buying 50 
			billion euros ($58 billion) of bonds per month from March.
 
 The broader, 25-member policymaking Governing Council began meeting 
			at 0800 GMT. ECB President Mario Draghi holds a news conference at 
			1330 GMT.
 
			
			 
			Former ECB policymaker Athanasios Orphanides said action was long 
			overdue. "The ECB should have already embarked on QE," he said. "Now 
			that the situation has deteriorated, the ECB will have to do much 
			more."
 There is uncertainty, however, about the length of the programme. 
			While some media predicted it would run until the end of next year, 
			it could possibly be cut short or extended depending on its impact 
			and how much opposition it faces.
 
 The duration is significant. A programme starting in March and 
			running for a year would total about 600 billion euros, based on a 
			purchase rate of 50 billion per month. If it ran until the end of 
			2016, it could surpass 1 trillion euros.
 
 At Thursday's meeting, the ECB left its main refinancing rate, which 
			determines the cost of credit in the economy, at 0.05 percent.
 
 Euro zone inflation turned negative last month; consumer prices fell 
			0.2 percent, far below the ECB's target that they should rise just 
			under 2 percent annually.
 
 But there are doubts, and not only in Germany, over whether printing 
			fresh money will work.
 
 "It is a mistake to suppose that QE is a panacea in Europe or that 
			it will be sufficient," former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers 
			said at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.
 
 "There is every reason to expect that QE will be less impactful in a 
			context like the present one in Europe than it was in the context of 
			the United States."
 
 Scepticism runs deep among Germans and their Dutch neighbours, who 
			fear that it will see their strong economic standing used to sponsor 
			weaker southern states such as Portugal with cheap finance via the 
			ECB.
 
 Earlier this week, tensions boiled over in the Dutch parliament, 
			where a majority of parties said they opposed quantitative easing if 
			it would "lead to an increased risk of redistributing financial 
			risks between euro member states".
 
			
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			GLOBAL FALLOUT
 The ECB has already cut interest rates to record lows, begun buying 
			debt and funnelled hundreds of billions of euros in cheap loans to 
			banks, in the hope that they would lend the money on into the 
			economy and stimulate growth.
 
 By buying launching into QE - as the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of 
			Japan and Bank of England have before it - the ECB would show its 
			commitment to pushing up inflation while also generating a 
			"portfolio effect" whereby investors snap up other debt and 
			securities, some outside the euro zone, thereby depressing the euro.
 
 Expectations that the ECB will opt for QE are high, with the euro 
			diving against the dollar in anticipation.
 
 Germany is worried about the announcement, which will come just 
			three days before an election in Greece where anti-bailout 
			opposition party Syriza is on track to gain roughly a third of the 
			vote.
 
			German Chancellor Angela Merkel repeated on the eve of the meeting 
			that any move by the ECB to buy government bonds with new money 
			should not be used as an excuse to put economic reforms on the back 
			burner.
 Greece's finance minister urged the ECB not to exclude it from QE: 
			"No country needs quantitative easing as much as Greece," Gikas 
			Hardouvelis told German business daily Handelsblatt.
 
 Draghi must balance intense market pressure to act and a need to 
			buoy inflation with a desire to minimise German dissent on the 
			other.
 
 One option is for the euro zone's national central banks to bear the 
			brunt of the risk of bond purchases, rather than the ECB itself.
 
			
			 
			Ireland's finance minister said on Monday such a ploy would make a 
			QE plan "ineffective", yet this scenario may nonetheless be part of 
			the final plan, sources have told Reuters.
 ($1 = 0.8627 euros)
 
 (Writing by Paul Carrel; Additional reporting by Noah Barkin in 
			Davos; Editing by David Stamp and Pravin Char)
 
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