Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

The headquarters of the European Central Bank, in Frankfurt, Germany, on March 10.DANIEL ROLAND/AFP/Getty Images

Poorer households trust the European Central Bank less, particularly in countries where income inequality is greater, an ECB study showed on Wednesday.

The ECB and many of the world’s other top central banks have come under fire for their policies of low interest rates and massive bond purchases over the past decade.

Aimed at averting deflation after the global financial crisis, such policies have been blamed for a boom in home prices – which has excluded poorer households from the property market – and more recently for a sudden surge in consumer prices.

In their report, ECB economists found that trust in the ECB, national central banks and the European Commission was lowest among euro zone households who earn less than €20,000 per year or who feel that inequality is too large.

A study of six euro zone countries found that trust in the ECB, the European Parliament and the Commission increased along with household income.

“This relationship is robust to differences in age, gender, education level and employment status,” authors Stephanie Bergbauer, Alessandro Giovannini and Nils Hernborg wrote.

The relationship was strongest in Italy, where inequality is greater, and weakest in the more equal Netherlands.

The study also found a relationship between a country’s inequality, as measured by the Gini coefficients of post-tax income, and how much citizens trust the ECB.

In separate reports published this week, the ECB found that households with the lowest income were bearing the brunt of a recent surge in energy prices.

This has pushed up inflation to a record 7.4 per cent in the euro zone last month, vastly exceeding the ECB’s own estimates and fuelling criticism of the central bank by some commentators and politicians.

Be smart with your money. Get the latest investing insights delivered right to your inbox three times a week, with the Globe Investor newsletter. Sign up today.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe