Conventional wisdom holds that the US Federal Reserve is much more proactive than the ECB. In this sense, comparisons are often made between the aggressive monetary expansions enacted in the US to counter the effects of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2007-09 and more recently of the Covid-19 pandemic and the hesitant reactions of the ECB to the same shocks and to the Eurozone Debt Crisis of 2010-12.
The evidence shows, however, that the ECB's monetary expansion, as measured by the size of the monetary base as a ratio to GDP, is now far greater than that of the Fed (see Chart 1). Having lagged the US in the aftermath of the GFC and of the Eurozone Debt Crisis, the eurozone monetary base grew faster than in the US since the ECB launched its QE in early 2015. Moreover, the ECB has applied negative interest rates since June 2014, and today offers refinancing to the banking sector at a rate that can be as low as -1%. In contrast, the Federal Reserve has never reduced interest rates below zero, thereby limiting the potential decline in the real interest rate.