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						ECB's chief economist warns of risks of easy policy
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		 [August 28, 2018] 
		 COLOGNE, Germany (Reuters) - 
		The risks associated with the European Central Bank's ultra-easy 
		monetary policy have to be "closely monitored" after years of economic 
		expansion, the ECB's chief economist Peter Praet said on Tuesday. 
 Praet's warning was likely to be taken as a sign the ECB was becoming 
		increasingly aware of the side effects of its policy of massive bond 
		purchases and ultra-low interest rates, which it is expected to slowly 
		dismantle in the coming months.
 
 This would be a victory for policymakers from Germany and other richer 
		euro zone countries, who have long complained about inflated property 
		and bond prices as a result of the ECB's policy.
 
 "Patient, prudent and persistent monetary policy is still needed," Praet 
		said. "At the same time, and in particular at this stage of the monetary 
		policy cycle, the risk channel of our policy has to be closely 
		monitored."
 
		 
		Purchasing 2.6 trillion euros worth of debt over nearly four years, the 
		ECB has brought down borrowing costs to stimulate lending in the euro 
		zone, which grew at its fastest pace since 2009 last month.
 But economic growth has softened this year and the expansion in lending 
		has also appeared to level off, suggesting that the bloc's growth cycle 
		has peaked just as the central bank begins to wind down its stimulus 
		measures.
 
		
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			European Central Bank (ECB) executive board member Peter Praet 
			speaks during an interview with Reuters in Frankfurt, Germany, March 
			14, 2018. Picture taken March 14, 2018. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski 
            
			 
Still, Praet warned as the euro zone economic cycle matures and monetary policy 
remains easy, more countries could implement national or localized tools to 
fight against the build up of financial stress. 
"Macroprudential instruments have been rightly activated in a number of cases 
and probably more are likely to be activated and increasingly used in a number 
of cases given where we are in the cycle and because of necessity," he added.
 The central bank has said it expects to stop buying bonds at the end of this 
year but would keep interest rates at their current, record low "through the 
summer" of next year.
 
 Money-markets investors currently expect the first ECB rate hike since 2011 to 
come in October or December of next year.
 
 (Reporting by Balazs Korany; Writing by Francesco Canepa in Frankfurt; Editing 
by Alexandra Hudson)
 
 
				 
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