ECB's inflation objective should be symmetrical: Liikanen

Reuters  |  HELSINKI 

HELSINKI (Reuters) - The European Central should fight high and low with equal vigour, Finnish central chief Erkki said on Thursday, suggesting he had little tolerance for any eventual overshoot.

Liikanen's comments are in contrast with arguments from some doves who say that after a lengthy period of low inflation, the could accept a modest target overshoot as it should take a longer view and make up for 'lost'

Indeed, the has undershot its almost 2 percent objective for nearly five years and will continue to miss at least until the end of the decade, its September staff projections show.

"The ECB's target is symmetrical," Liikanen, who sits on the ECB's rate setting Governing Council, said in prepared remarks for a conference. "It is of equal importance to act effectively on levels that are above or below the price stability objective."

Rate-setters will decide this autumn, likely in October, whether to curb stimulus from next year with hawks, such as Germany, calling for a relatively quick end to asset purchases even as doves make the case for only incremental withdrawal of support.

said that given steady euro zone growth and a favourable outlook, will slowly return the ECB's target, even if price growth has so far been unsatisfactory.

"A very substantial degree of monetary accommodation is still needed in the euro area for underlying inflationary pressures to gradually build up," said, echoing President Mario Draghi's statement following the September rate meeting.

Singling out China among top risks, said that a bigger slowdown could have global repercussions.

"The global weight of the advanced economies has decreased," said. "A stronger-than-forecast deceleration in China's debt-driven growth would weaken confidence globally and significantly dampen growth."

(Reporting by Jussi Rosendahl; Writing by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Toby Chopra)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, September 28 2017. 13:45 IST