The IMF is urging the European Central Bank to keep its money presses rolling, perhaps beyond the target late next year. Photo: ReutersThe IMF is urging the European Central Bank to keep its money presses rolling, perhaps beyond the target late next year. Photo: Reuters

The International Monetary Fund warned yesterday that the eurozone’s prospects were modest and that more money printing than planned may be needed.

Contrasting the IMF’s relative gloom, however, German think tank Ifo reported improving confidence the 19-country bloc’s largest economy.

The IMF, saying medium-term growth would be subdued, urged the European Central Bank to keep its money presses rolling, perhaps beyond the target late next year.

“The important thing is that the ECB intends to stay the course until September 2016 and that, we think, will be necessary,” said Mahmood Pradhan, deputy director of the IMF’s European department, referring to quantitative easing (QE).

Letting the one trillion euro plus scheme to buy chiefly government bonds run longer could be better still, he suggested. “It may need to go beyond that,” he said. Worries about the global economy, prompted by a slowdown in China where shares slid more than eight per cent yesterday, are weighing on many countries in Europe. Manufacturing confidence in the Netherlands, with huge exposure to international trade though several of Europe’s largest ports, slipped back in July, reflecting pessimism among companies over the prospects for the coming three months.

Finnish consumer and industry confidence also weakened in July compared to the previous month.

But the data was mixed, with the positive Ifo report on German business confidence after two monthly drops and the ECB reporting a boom in lending for home buyers, which could bolster the bloc’s economy.

The ECB also said its measure of money circulating in the eurozone, which is often an early indicator of future economic activity, grew by 5.0 per cent in June, in line with the previous month. But lending to companies fell by 0.2 per cent in June. This was a slower pace of decline for the 11th month in a row, but still suggested most of the ECB’s largest is going to consumers not companies.

In its report on the eurozone, the IMF said that the bloc was getting stronger thanks to lower oil prices, a weaker euro and central bank action, but that medium-term prospects were for an average potential growth of just one per cent.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.