|
| Issing: faced down criticisms |
On May 31, Otmar Issing, the European Central Banks first chief economist and the sole remaining founding member of its executive board, left his office in Frankfurts Eurotower for the last time. Architect and overseer of the ECBs monetary policy strategy, he had come to the end of his fixed, non-renewable, eight-year term.
A strong proponent of central bank openness and communication, some three weeks earlier Issing had submitted himself for the eighth time to an annual inquisition unique among central banks by outside observers: The ECB and its Watchers series of conferences, which he himself had initiated in 1979. All day he listens to and responds to presentations by academic and market economists and by central bankers from outside the euro zone, who challenge and probe aspects of the ECBs monetary policy performance and its...