Euro – It looks like the Bundesbank will lose its permanent vote on the ECB

The current voting arrangement at the European Central Bank is that each of the current 24 governing council members–18 national central bank governors and six executive board members–gets a vote.

BUT …

  • That will change if Lithuania joins the euro next year as the Baltic country hopes (and looks likely)
  • The ECB’s “rotation system” will be triggered if (when) the euro zone adds one more member

When the number of euro-zone countries hits 19, the five largest economies in the bloc—Germany, France, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands—will be pooled together and will have a total of four votes between them, on a rotating basis. The other central bank governors from Greece to Portugal to Ireland will share 11 votes, meaning they will have a vote even less frequently

Non-voters are “still allowed to present their arguments – on interest rate decisions or non-standard measures, for instance – at every Governing Council meeting and thus to influence the decisions of the voting Governing Council members”

Bundesbank Explains How Lithuania Affects Its ECB Vote

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