Recession alone won’t subdue eurozone inflation: ECB’s de Guindos

Published Wed, Sep 21, 2022 · 04:37 PM
    • Luis de Guindos, vice-president of ECB, says: “Markets believe that the slowdown of the economy would reduce inflation by itself. Actually, this is... not right. Monetary policy has to make a contribution.”
    • Luis de Guindos, vice-president of ECB, says: “Markets believe that the slowdown of the economy would reduce inflation by itself. Actually, this is... not right. Monetary policy has to make a contribution.” PHOTO: REUTERS

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    THE eurozone may suffer a recession over the winter as risks to the growth outlook are intensifying, but even that is not enough to reduce inflation without further rate hikes, European Central Bank (ECB) vice-president Luis de Guindos said on Wednesday (Sep 21).

    Growth has been suffering due to high energy costs and a loss of Russian gas, raising the risk of energy rationing over the winter while households and businesses take a financial hit from high costs.

    “Markets believe that the slowdown of the economy would reduce inflation by itself,” de Guindos told a conference. “Actually, this is... not right. Monetary policy has to make a contribution.”

    The ECB promised rate hikes at each of its coming meetings and markets see the deposit rate exceeding 2.5 per cent by next spring, jumping from its current 0.75 per cent level.

    De Guindos added that recent economic data point to a substantial slowdown of the economy, and risks to the ECB’s projection of stagnating growth in the winter months were skewed to the downside.

    Inflation is “very, very” high right now, De Guindos said, and the potential prolongation of Russia’s war in Ukraine risked keeping this rate uncomfortably high for longer.

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    Price growth hit 9.1 per cent last month and was seen inching up over the coming months before a slow decline that will still keep it above the ECB’s 2 per cent target through 2024. REUTERS

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