“Draghi: Yields disrupting policy transmission are in ECB remit.” Huh?
According to Ezra Klein, guest host of Thursday’s The Rachel Maddow Show, that was the most important sentence in the day’s news.
This one sentence—received by financial institutions around the world—has huge implications for the future of European debt crisis. But it’s also, at least to the layman, completely incomprehensible. Fortunately, Ezra was on hand to explain what it means.
First off, the proper nouns: the ECB in that sentence is the European Central Bank, essentially the European Union’s equivalent to the Federal Reserve. “Draghi” means Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank. So Draghi, head of the ECB, was saying that “yields disrupting policy transmission” are in his bank’s “remit.” And, as Ezra says, that’s huge.
Ezra started by laying out the basics of the European debt crisis, an issue he has explained on air before. “The simplest way to understand the euro crisis is that Greece, and Spain, and Italy, and Portugal, and Ireland are having trouble borrowing money,” he said. “If they can’t borrow money, they collapse. If they collapse, the eurozone collapses. If the eurozone goes down, the world economy is going to get hurt very badly.”
The eurozone is the network of European Union member states who use the euro as their official currency. Because those countries use an international currency, none of them have a national central bank with the ability to print more of that money. The only bank with the power to print more euros is the European Central Bank.








