Chapter News

ANFA, the Agreement on Net Financial Assets Explained

The abbreviation ANFA stands for Agreement on Net Financial Assets. It is an agreement between the 19 national central banks (NCBs) of the euro area and the ECB, which together form the Eurosystem. The agreement sets rules and a limit for holdings which are related to national tasks of the NCBs. Non-monetary policy assets of national central banks can be related, for example, to the NCB’s employee pension funds, NCB foreign reserves, the counterpart to their capital and accounting reserves or other specific liability items, or they can be held for general investment purposes.

How did ANFA come to exist?

When the currency union was founded governments decided to mutualise only those central bank functions and tasks that are necessary to conduct a single monetary policy for the whole euro area. At the same time, they decided to keep national central banks (NCBs) as independent institutions that can continue to perform certain national tasks that do not interfere with a single monetary policy. This is in line with the key European legal principle of subsidiarity, under which decisions should be taken at the most local possible level.

This decision is enshrined in Article 14.4 in the Statute of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) and of the ECB:

“National central banks may perform functions other than those specified in this Statute unless the Governing Council finds, by a majority of two thirds of the votes cast, that these interfere with the objectives and tasks of the ESCB. Such functions shall be performed on the responsibility and liability of national central banks and shall not be regarded as being part of the functions of the ESCB.”

In other words: national central banks are financially independent institutions that also fulfil national tasks as well as the Eurosystem’s primary role of maintaining price stability. ANFA was signed precisely to set limits to the amounts that NCBs could use each year to perform their tasks, including their investment portfolios, without interfering with monetary policy.

Does ANFA allow uncontrolled money creation?

No, the Governing Council of the ECB is in full control of the size of the Eurosystem balance sheet. The maximum amount of net financial assets in the Eurosystem is decided beforehand by the Governing Council. There is no such thing as “money printing by NCBs” outside of the Eurosystem framework. In any case, the Governing Council ensures that all Eurosystem operations are performed according to the Statute, and especially to Articles 123 and 124 of the Treaty which forbid monetary financing.

Why was it not made public?

Some NCBs publish more detailed information about their non-monetary policy portfolios, like the NCBs of Belgium and Finland, and all of them publish balance sheet information on their websites, through which you can track the overall size of non-monetary policy portfolios. Additionally, the Eurosystem has published a guideline on how NCBs must manage domestic asset and liability operations in line with the objectives set out in national and European law. ANFA itself is an internal technical document, which does not contain data on portfolios. The agreement describes the mechanism used to ensure that total net financial assets do not exceed a level at which they would interfere with monetary policy.

Why doesn’t the ECB decide on these investments?

The Governing Council sets the ceiling on net financial assets according to its monetary policy decisions and to the development of specific liability items on the Eurosystem’s balance sheet, such as demand for banknotes and deposits of banks with the central bank as determined by required reserves.

The decisions on non-monetary policy portfolios are decentralised, but there are important safeguards: first, the investment decisions taken by NCBs are controlled under their domestic risk management and auditing procedures; second, monetary financing concerns are assessed by the Governing Council; third, information on portfolios is available to the ECB.

So while the Governing Council maintains full control over the overall size of the Eurosystem balance sheet, it is not for the ECB to intervene in these operations based on national tasks unless they interfere with the objectives and tasks of the European System of Central Banks.

Could the Governing Council stop Eurosystem non-monetary policy activities altogether?

The Governing Council of the ECB sets the framework for all investments of national central banks, to ensure that they do not interfere with Eurosystem tasks and that they are not in contradiction with the monetary financing prohibition. Generally constraining investment operations by NCBs beyond these two issues would require legislation.

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