By Balazs Koranyi
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - No viable argument remains for the European Central Bank to backtrack on its plan to end quantitative easing in December, even if euro zone growth fails to rebound after a dismal third quarter.
After four years and 2.6 trillion euros ($2.95 trillion) spent, the stimulus-generating scheme has run its course and more bond buying would do little other than exhaust the ECB's already close-to-depleted policy arsenal.
Technical constraints are already biting and much of the euro zone's economic pain is being inflicted by politics, an area the ECB wants to steer clear of.
Moreover inflation, the ECB's primary mandate, is now hovering around target, leaving no clear policy rationale for more stimulus.
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Indeed, policymakers speaking on and off the record argue that the token caveat in the ECB's guidance that would let them extend quantitative easing only covers genuine crises, not a slowdown.
"It would take a lot more than this to change monetary policy," a Governing Council member, who asked not to be named said. "We have a super-easy monetary policy and it would take a lot to make it easier, especially when there is inflation momentum."
ECB rate setters Ardo Hansson, Ewald Nowotny and Olli Rehn also weighed in, arguing that recent data fail to change their narrative that growth is merely slowing from an exceptional to a more normal rate - albeit weighed down by temporary one-offs.
Weak growth could still derail the ECB's plans to raise interest rates sometime in the fourth quarter of 2019 but that decision is so far in the future, policymakers have yet to even start debating it.
MISSION IMPOSSIBLE?
Even the ECB decided it wanted to extend the bond purchases, doing so would be close to impossible.
It can only buy up to a third of each country's debt and in Germany, the bloc's biggest economy, it is already close to this limit and, with Berlin running budget surpluses, German debt is shrinking fast.
While this one-third rule is self imposed, the ECB defended the asset purchases in a European Court challenge arguing that such limits ensure it would not exceed its mandate, which is keeping inflation at close to but below 2 percent.
So discarding the limit while inflation is rising - it hit 2.2 percent this month as volatile energy prices soared - would be likely to land the ECB back in court and in a difficult-to-defend position.
That is a high price to pay when there is no acute crisis.
Compensating with more bond buys from more indebted countries such as Italy would also breach its own rules, irritate Berlin - long opposed the stimulus measures - and put the ECB on the wrong side of a political debate as Rome argues with Brussels over a budget that flouts EU standards.
Indeed, policymakers speaking on condition of anonymity said there was agreement at last week's policy meeting that Italy must be sent a strong signal that it would get no assistance from the ECB.
For the central bank to change course on curbing stimulus, it needs evidence that economic slack is rising, weakening inflationary pressures.
That would only happen if growth settles well below the bloc's potential, a hard to define figure but seen at around 1.5 percent. In the third quarter, annual expansion fell to 1.7 percent and slumped to just 0.2 percent quarter on quarter.
Below-potential growth would mean the labour market stopped tightening and long-term wage pressure eased.
Given the lag in data, evidence of this would take months to come in. By then quantitative easing will be history and the ECB would be free to think of other measures to support the economy.
($1 = 0.8822 euros)
(Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa, Tarmo Virki, Francois Murphy and Paul Day; editing by John Stonestreet)
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