Factbox: Potential candidates to replace hawk Lautenschlaeger on ECB
board
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[September 27, 2019] BERLIN
(Reuters) - The shock resignation of outspoken policy hawk Sabine
Lautenschlaeger from the European Central Bank's Executive Board vacates
a seat at the ECB's top table just as Mario Draghi prepares to hand over
the presidency to Christine Lagarde.
By convention Germany, France and Italy, the biggest euro zone
economies, always have a seat on the six-member Executive Board that
runs the central bank's day-to-day operations, which means Berlin is
likely to propose a new candidate.
Lautenschlaeger's background was in banking supervision. By replacing
her with an economist, Berlin could seek to exercise greater influence
over ECB policy, which Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann, an arch-critic of
the ECB's crisis-fighting monetary easing, has struggled to influence
under Draghi.
Following are potential candidates to take Lautenschlaeger's seat on the
board.
ISABEL SCHNABEL (48)
A German academic and member of the prominent German Council of Economic
Experts, she is an economist with knowledge of monetary policy but has
no executive experience at a major institution. In July, she questioned
the effectiveness of Draghi's strategy, saying: "Although monetary
policy is already very expansive, the ECB is preparing a further
loosening ... It is doubtful that it will succeed in bringing the
inflation rate in the euro zone close to 2 percent. At the same time,
the risks to financial stability rise further." She declined to comment
when asked about replacing Lautenschlaeger.
CLAUDIA BUCH (53)
A respected economist and now deputy governor of the German central
bank, she has also served as a member of the German Council of Economic
Experts. Buch has kept a relatively low profile at the Bundesbank and
made a point of steering clear of monetary policy issues, leaving the
topic to Weidmann. But her experience working closely with him could
allow them to give more voice to hawkish positions on the 25-member ECB
Governing Council, which comprises the Executive Board and euro zone
national central bank chiefs. She declined to comment when asked about
replacing Lautenschlaeger.
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The new German central bank (Bundesbank) vice-president Claudia Buch
looks on during a photocall at the Bundesbank headquarters in
Frankfurt, May 20, 2014. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo
MARCEL FRATZSCHER (48)
President of the Berlin-based DIW economic research institute, Fratzscher is a
high-profile economist, and a professor at Humboldt University. Fratzscher knows
the ECB better than other potential candidates, having worked at the bank from
2001 to 2012, rising to department head for the last four years. With degrees
from Oxford and Harvard universities, his outlook is international and less
hawkish than other leading German economists. When the ECB in July all but
pledged to ease policy further, Fratzscher said: "The economic slowdown in the
euro area leaves the ECB no other choice than to implement a more expansive
monetary policy."
JOERG KUKIES (51)
A former Goldman Sachs banker, Kukies has worked at the German Finance Ministry
since April 2018 as state secretary for financial market policy and European
policy. A lieutenant of Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, he would bring inside
knowledge of economic thinking in Berlin, but could risk looking like a
political appointment.
VOLKER WIELAND (53)
Another member of the German Council of Economic Experts, Wieland has defended
the ECB's stimulus program before Germany's top court. An economics professor at
the Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability at Frankfurt's Goethe
University, he has served as a consultant to the ECB.
(Compiled by Paul Carrel and Rene Wagner; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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