"The framework of quantitative easing is the key and this framework still works and will work till we get better, more detailed data that would point toward a possible change in operations," said Jazbec, who heads the Slovenian central bank.
"At this moment, there is no need to change anything," he told reporters on the sidelines of a banking conference.Jazbec added that governments' fiscal and investment policies must complement the ECB's quantitative easing."Those policies are a key for the working of the monetary policy of the ECB and ... ensuring sustainable economic growth," he said, adding that monetary policy always works with a lag.The ECB said last month there was a growing risk that inflation would undershoot its near 2 percent target in 2017 and that it stood ready to modify the size, composition or duration of the 1 trillion euro plus QE program it launched in March. (Reporting by Marja Novak; Editing by Catherine Evans)