* Draghi, Carney to hog spotlight                
* ECB, BOE firmly on hold but unease stir over euro strength                
* Trade data eyed for signs of reviving global demand                
By Alan Wheatley, Global Economics Correspondent                
LONDON, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Central banking is in a state of  flux as policymakers from Tokyo to Washington ditch prevailing  orthodoxies to try to grab a bigger share of a slow-growing  global economic pie.                
That's why the focus this week will be on what European  Central Bank (ECB)Governor Mario Draghi has to say about the  strength of the euro and what Canadian central bank chief Mark  Carney might have in mind when he succeeds Mervyn King at the  Bank of England (BOE) in July.                
Draghi holds a news conference on Thursday after an ECB  policy-setting meeting. On the same day, with delicious timing,  Carney will be wrapping up testimony to British lawmakers just  as the BoE announces the results of its own policy meeting.                
The unanimous verdict of economists polled by Reuters is  that neither bank will change its stance. The environment,  however, is shifting, presenting both with unwanted challenges.                
The ECB must keep a close eye on the euro, which has risen  to a 14-month peak against the dollar and a 30-month high  against the yen, reflecting the Federal Reserve's promise to  keep buying bonds until U.S. unemployment falls much farther and  the Bank of Japan's plan for a much looser monetary policy.                
Exchange rates have much less of an impact on trade volumes  than the state of external demand.                
But, with global growth languishing, the relative  performance of euro zone exporters will take a hit, said Daniel  McCormack, a strategist at Macquarie in London.                
"The euro could well be starting to cause a bit of pain  already. It's moved up significantly, and in the context of what  Japan's doing and the Fed's desire to get the dollar down or  keep it low, it will have some impact," he said.                
WHAT MIGHT THE ECB DO?                
France has already complained about the euro's climb and  Germany has blamed Japan for encouraging a weaker yen.                
But Goldman Sachs said an ECB rate cut in response to a  rising euro was still some way off, not least because the  currency's vigour was largely due to improving economic and  financial news from the euro zone.                
The bank's economists did acknowledge, however, that the  risks to its forecast that rates will stay on hold in 2013 were  skewed to the downside.                
"While global growth is picking up and demand growing,  concerns about appreciation may be muted. But a strengthening  euro in a stagnant global economy is likely to prompt questions  about where the 'pain threshold' of German exporters to the  level of the euro exchange rate lies," they said in a report.                
Like the dollar, sterling has also fallen to a 14-month low  against the euro.                
British policymakers view a weaker pound as part of the  solution to reviving the economy, which stagnated in 2012, and  Goldman is among those who expect continued depreciation given  the prospect of a more innovative and expansionary monetary  policy under Carney.                
McCormack reckons the shortfall in Britain's potential  output that has opened up due to the recession is so great that  the BOE might not need to contemplate tightening until 2018 - a  full decade after the financial crisis climaxed.                
But he said it was debatable whether Carney would prevail  with his suggestion of targeting nominal gross domestic product,  which implies permitting a temporary overshoot of inflation to  allow growth to catch up.                
"Most central bankers at the end of the day are in favour of  strict inflation targeting. So he'll face a lot of intellectual  pushback if he tries to get that through. But clearly there's  the potential for some significant policy innovations once he's  on board because he'll want to make his mark," McCormack said.                
TRADE POLICY AND DATA IN SPOTLIGHT                
Central banks are not alone in rummaging around for new ways  to spur growth.                
European Union leaders, who hold a summit on Thursday  devoted mainly to the bloc's budget, are expected to call for  maximum efforts to reach a series of bilateral free trade pacts  to lower tariffs and cut red tape throttling exports.                
The prospects for talks with the United States and Canada  are still up in the air, but leaders are likely to endorse an  early start to talks with Japan, according to diplomats.                
Trade figures happen to be the core of this week's global  economic releases.                
Britain's gaping goods deficit is forecast to show a small  improvement, due in part to sterling's weakness.                
China's imports are projected to leap, which would bode well  for world growth.                
But, like most early-year data from Asia, interpretation  will be treacherous because of calendar distortions: Lunar New  Year, when factories in China close en masse, falls this year on  Feb. 10, while last year the week-long holiday was in January.                
America is likely to show a narrower trade deficit in  December. Improving net exports would reinforce the view that  the unexpected dip in GDP last quarter was due to fleeting  factors and not the harbinger of a trend.                
Bruce Kasman, an economist with JP Morgan in New York, said  after Friday's good-but-not-great January jobs report that the  economy was on track to expand about 2 percent this year despite  fiscal drag that would lop at least 1.5 percent off growth.                
Kasman said he was heartened by solid gains in labour income  in recent months. Risks of a break-up of the euro, a hard  landing in China and a plunge off the fiscal cliff in the United  States had also been avoided.                
All this pointed to steady if unspectacular U.S. growth.                
"We don't have by any means the kind of growth that we would  like, but we are setting ourselves up for a world where there's  less risk and more sustainability," Kasman said on a conference  call.
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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/03/central-bankers-global-economy_n_2611724.html
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