Central bank: ECB plans further interest rate hikes in the fight against inflation

Central bank: ECB plans further interest rate hikes in the fight against inflation

The President of the European Central Bank, Christine Lagarde, is convinced that there is still a need for action to combat inflation. But the increase in the key interest rate also has contrary consequences.

After the third interest rate hike in a row, ECB President Christine Lagarde does not see the central bank as having reached its goal in the fight against high inflation. “We are aiming for the interest rate that can reach the medium-term inflation target of two percent. The target is clear and we are not there yet. We will continue to raise interest rates in the future,” Lagarde told the Latvian news portal Delfi in an Am Interview published Tuesday by the European Central Bank.

For months, the rise in energy and food prices has fueled inflation. In October, consumer prices in the euro area were 10.7 percent above the level of the same month last year – a record value. The ECB is aiming for medium-term price stability with two percent inflation for the currency area.

In order to curb inflation, the ECB decided last week to raise interest rates sharply for the third time in a row. The key interest rate at which commercial banks can borrow fresh money from the central bank is 2.0 percent. Higher interest rates make loans more expensive. This can slow down demand and thus counteract high inflation rates.

Lagarde: Uncertainty is still great

“We are increasingly finding that these higher energy costs are affecting more and more areas of the economy,” Lagarde said in the interview. “The longer inflation remains at such high levels, the greater the risk that it will spread to the economy as a whole.”

Because the economy is already suffering from supply bottlenecks and the consequences of the Ukraine war, for example on the energy market, there are also concerns that the ECB could normalize its ultra-loose monetary policy too quickly for years.

“It is true that the likelihood of a recession has increased and uncertainty remains high,” Lagarde said. Ultimately, however, persistently high inflation rates are rather harmful for society because they make everyone poorer: “Stable prices form the basis for a well-functioning economy from which everyone benefits,” said the ECB President.

Source: Stern

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