Adina Akbik

Senior Assistant Professor of European Politics

Reconciling Independence and Accountability at the European Central Bank: The False Promise of Proceduralism


Journal article


Mark Dawson, Adina Maricut‐Akbik, Ana Bobić
European Law Journal, 2019

DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Dawson, M., Maricut‐Akbik, A., & Bobić Ana. (2019). Reconciling Independence and Accountability at the European Central Bank: The False Promise of Proceduralism. European Law Journal.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Dawson, Mark, Adina Maricut‐Akbik, and Bobić Ana. “Reconciling Independence and Accountability at the European Central Bank: The False Promise of Proceduralism.” European Law Journal (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Dawson, Mark, et al. “Reconciling Independence and Accountability at the European Central Bank: The False Promise of Proceduralism.” European Law Journal, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{mark2019a,
  title = {Reconciling Independence and Accountability at the European Central Bank: The False Promise of Proceduralism},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {European Law Journal},
  author = {Dawson, Mark and Maricut‐Akbik, Adina and Bobić, Ana}
}

Abstract

This article revisits the balancing act between independence and accountability at the European Central Bank (ECB). It contrasts procedural and substantive concepts of accountability, and challenges the mainstream idea that independence and accountability can be reconciled through narrow mandates, the indiscriminate increase of transparency, the creation of multiple channels of accountability, and the active use of judicial review. These assumptions form the pillars of a procedural type of accountability that promises to resolve the independence/accountability dilemma but fails to do so in practice. The article brings evidence to show how ECB accountability has become a complex administrative exercise that focuses on the procedural steps leading up to monetary and supervisory decisions while simultaneously limiting substantive accountability. The failure to acknowledge the trade‐off between independence and accountability (said to be ‘two sides of the same coin’) has resulted in a tendency to privilege the former over the latter.