It has been over a year since Mr Axel Weber made his surprise
decision not to seek the top post at the European Central Bank, which
led soon thereafter to his resignation as president of the Bundesbank.
These events transpired at a critical moment for the euro. The Greek
crisis was still simmering, and borrowing costs across southern Europe
were rising, raising fears that other countries might follow the path of
Greece, Ireland and Portugal in needing bailouts.
The Wall Street Journal reported at the time that Mr
Weber’s announcement “undermined a key plank” of Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s “strategy to restore Germans' confidence in the euro.” It went
on to say that she “had hoped to win back Germans' trust in the single
currency by installing a German as head of the ECB.”
It was a logical strategy, given the confidence the German people
place in the leaders of the Bundesbank, and indeed, in that venerated
institution itself. It is a trust well-deserved given that for 50 years
the Bundesbank guided the Deutschemark to a record of stability
unmatched by any other central bank, except Switzerland, which was
pursuing a similar policy based upon German monetary discipline.
A German appointee to the all-important ECB role was, however, not
to be. Germany would have to wait for one of their own to assume the
ECB’s top spot because Mario Draghi was appointed to head up the single
currency’s central bank. As a consequence, Ms Merkel has resorted to
other measures to bolster confidence in the euro.
It has been an ongoing effort for Ms Merkel because the euro has
seemingly lurched from crisis to crisis since Weber’s decision. Numerous
measures have already been taken, with more to come, like the proposed
European Stability Mechanism due to launch in July. But a simple,
obvious step is being overlooked by senior eurozone politicians. An
accurate accounting and reporting of central bank gold reserves would go a long way to reassuring Germans and Europeans generally about the future of the euro.
If the single currency experiment succeeds, an accurate gold
accounting will just be “icing on the cake”. It will add little to
bolster confidence in a currency that over time proves successful. But
many still have doubts whether the euro will survive given two
interlinked, ongoing crises – sovereign debt and bank solvency. For
people worried about the future of the euro – and indeed, the European
banking system as a whole – their concerns can be allayed with the
knowledge that the aggregate weight of gold owned and safely stored
within each European central bank is sufficient to provide a sound base
to establish a successor to t
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