Germany moves closer to naming next ECB president
(FRANKFURT) - Germany was set to step up its campaign to name central bank chief Axel Weber as the next European Central Bank president Monday as eurozone ministers met to decide on the next ECB vice president.
In talks still primarily focused on the Greek debt crisis, euro area finance ministers must also choose between Portugal's Vitor Constancio and Luxembourg's Yves Mersch to replace Lucas Papademos when he steps down in May.
Although ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet's term runs until October 2011, nominations for the top job and the deputy are closely linked.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's government has officially termed the debate "premature."
Press rumours, however, say that Berlin has pressed hard for Constancio, currently the Portuguese central bank governor, to be named vice president, with the goal of getting the top spot for Weber.
European Union horsetrading usually results in geographical balance when major positions are handed out.
Countries that lie along the Mediterranean basin also have a candidate for ECB president in the person of Italian central bank president Mario Draghi, according to an Italian finance ministry document leaked to the press.
The choice of vice president thus gives a good idea of who will be the front runner for the top job.
The German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung said in an editorial: "These political manoeuvres should not come at the detriment of Europe.
"Weber is an excellent economist, a recognised central banker who has also shown he can resist political pressure."
The daily acknowledged that Draghi has similar qualities.
"It is a political game, it's no beauty contest," ING senior economist Carsten Brzeski told AFP.
Weber, who will turn 53 in March, has the solid backing of German politicians and economic experts, though he is not particularly well known by the public.
Placing him at the ECB's helm would be a guarantee of the euro's stability and a merciless fight against inflation, which for Germans is the absolute target since the country's devastating financial crisis in 1923.
A well-dressed former economics professor, Weber's manner is sometimes abrupt but he has won widespread respect for his rescue of the German financial sector since September 2008.
Being named head of the ECB would be a peak in a rapid career that saw the native of Kusel, western Germany, being named professor at the age of 37.
At 45 he was already a member of the "Five Wise People," a panel of government economic advisors.
Two years later he was named head of the Bundesbank as it faced a crisis brought on by the resignation of Ernst Welteke, who had accepted a luxury stay in Berlin paid for by Dresdner Bank.
Tasked with restoring the central bank's reputation, Weber gave himself another job as well, watching over the banking sector.
To do that, he brought in a close circle of aides, a move that irritated long-time "Buba" workers who form a tight group of their own.
A string of regional Bundesbank offices were then restructured or closed, leading to the central bank's first demonstration by Frankfurt staff in October.
Text and Picture Copyright 2010 AFP. All other Copyright 2010 EUbusiness Ltd. All rights reserved. This material is intended solely for personal use. Any other reproduction, publication or redistribution of this material without the written agreement of the copyright owner is strictly forbidden and any breach of copyright will be considered actionable.

ECB President
Read more at: http://www.project-syndicate.org/[…]/English