1.1 Intermediate strategies for monetary policy The launch of a single
European currency in January 1999 has been sparking a heated debate over
what strategy the European Central Bank's policy should be based on so
as to distribute and maintain monetary stability in Europe. In order to
pass the Bundesbank's reputation as a tough inflation fighter on to the
European Central Bank there have been strong efforts to make the ECB a
close copy of the Bundesbank. It might be surmised that there will be a
lot of similarities in its intermediate strategies. Among other
indicators, the ECB's policy will be based on the growth rate of a broad
monetary aggregate consistent with its definition of price stability. As
a key instrument in the new central bank's instruments, REPO operations
will constitute the main refinancing source of private banks and, in
addition, minimum reserve requirements have been introduced to
facilitate the authority's command over the banking sector's liquidity
by means of stabilising the demand for central bank money. After having
introduced monetary targeting in the 1970s, in the 1980s, the Bank of
England and the Fed soon abandoned it again, because of distor- tions
from financial innovations and currency substitution. But the Bundes-
bank strongly defended its intermediate strategy of monetary targeting
and advocated its implementation in the European System of Central
Banks.