Whatever he takes next, Mario Draghi probably won’t vanish after ECB
Frankfurt: Mario Draghi has five months left in office at the European Central Bank, and yet more years of work ahead if he wants it.
The ECB president’s pending exit in October has sparked speculation back home in Italy over whether he’ll retire from public life or return one day to participate in the nation’s fractious political scene. Finance Minister Giovanni Tria said last month that Draghi could make a “big contribution” there.
Draghi, who will be 72 when he leaves, said this month that he’s made “no plans whatsoever.” But a packed career spanning more than three decades of economic policy-making in Rome, Washington and Frankfurt suggests a permanent withdrawal to his hillside villa in the central Italian region of Umbria is unlikely for now.
“He is still so full energy and life that I don’t really see him retiring to write his memoirs yet,” said Francesco Papadia, who was head of the ECB’s market operations from 1998 to 2012 and is now a senior fellow at the Bruegel think tank in Brussels. “All roads are open to him in the public and private sectors, let alone academia.”
Future job opportunities could include a political role in Italy, leading another international institution, or posts in universities, banks or other companies around the world. Here’s a closer look at what might be in store.
Crisis technocrat
Italy has had several technocrat-led governments at times of crisis, and Draghi would be well suited in case of need.
Such a situation could even unfold just as his ECB term ends, if Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte’s government collapses because of infighting and budget priorities. That might be too soon for a Draghi-led administration though, given the anti-establishment parties controlling the current parliament.
Palace of Popes
Draghi previously repeatedly denied he might quit the ECB early to become President of the Italian Republic. When the current head of state, Sergio Mattarella, ends his seven-year term in 2022, he won’t have the same constraints.
The role is traditionally held by senior statesmen, and brings with it tenancy of the Quirinal Palace, a residence for popes built on Rome’s highest hill.
“If the parliament still has the same composition, I don’t see how Draghi could be chosen,” said Papadia. “If there are early elections before 2022 and there is a different majority in parliament — maybe, who knows?”
That scenario would require such a vote to happen by July 2021 because the constitution bars the president from dissolving Parliament in the final six months of his term.
Global guardian
Draghi could consider a role leading another international or European institution, though there’s no obvious immediate vacancy for him.
A return to Washington, where he served as Italy’s representative to the World Bank, can’t encompass replacing International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde because he’s over the institution’s age limit for the role. Meanwhile Augustin Carstens took over at the Bank for International Settlements quite recently. The European Union jobs coming up are slated for politicians rather than central bankers.
Back to academia
Draghi graduated from Rome’s La Sapienza University in the 1970s and did a doctorate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From the late the 1970s to the early 1990s, he held professorship at the universities of Trento, Padua and Venice, and the University of Florence.
An academic role for him would be easy to come by, either in Italy or abroad.
Goldman Again
Several of Draghi’s former colleagues have made careers in finance. Draghi himself was Vice-Chairman of Goldman Sachs International for three years.
A move back into banking would require a significant cooling-off period. Even after that, it could spark controversy, as seen when former European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso himself moved to Goldman Sachs. Still, financial institutions would probably queue up to hire Draghi for his insights.