Governing Council
The Governing Council is the main decision-making body of the ECB. It consists of the six members of the Executive Board, plus the governors of the national central banks of the euro area countries.
The Governing Council
(16 October 2024)
Responsibilities
- to adopt the guidelines and take the decisions necessary to ensure the performance of the tasks entrusted to the ECB and the Eurosystem;
- to formulate monetary policy for the euro area. This includes decisions relating to monetary objectives, key interest rates, the supply of reserves in the Eurosystem, and the establishment of guidelines for the implementation of those decisions.
- in the context of the ECB’s responsibilities related to banking supervision, to adopt decisions relating to the general framework under which supervisory decisions are taken, and to adopt the complete draft decisions proposed by the Supervisory Board under the non-objection procedure.
Meetings and decisions
The Governing Council usually meets twice a month. It assesses economic and monetary developments and takes its monetary policy decisions every six weeks. At the other meetings, the Council discusses mainly issues related to other tasks and responsibilities of the ECB and the Eurosystem. To ensure the separation of the ECB’s monetary policy and other tasks from its supervisory responsibilities, separate meetings of the Governing Council are held.
The monetary policy decisions are explained in detail at a press conference held every six weeks. The President, assisted by the Vice-President, chairs the press conference.
Calendar of the Governing Council meetings Background to monetary policy decisionsIn addition, the ECB publishes regular accounts of the Governing Council’s monetary policy meetings before the date of the next one.
Find out more about decision-making within the Single Supervisory Mechanism.
How do voting rights rotate on the ECB Governing Council?
The accession of Lithuania to the euro area on 1 January 2015 triggered a system under which National Central Bank Governors take turns holding voting rights on the Governing Council.
In this text, the ECB answers some frequently asked questions on how the system works and why it exists.
Explainer on the rotation of voting rights Overview of the full schedule