Kuwait Times

ECB chief: Interest hikes won’t drop energy prices

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FRANKFURT: A European Central Bank rate hike will not reduce energy prices, the cause of half of the continent’s inflation, ECB president Christine Lagarde said Sunday, even as the institutio­n faces pressure to raise interest rates. “Inflation in Europe is very high at the moment. Fifty percent of that is related to energy prices” and Russia’s war in Ukraine “has dramatical­ly increased those prices,” Lagarde told US network CBS in an interview.

“If I raise interest rates today, it is not going to bring the price of energy down.”

Central banks around the world have largely begun raising interest rates in response to inflation, in order to increase the cost of credit to slow consumptio­n-and therefore ease the pressure on prices. Lagarde again defended the position adopted by the ECB, which seeks to gradually withdraw its accommodat­ion policy intended to support eurozone economies during crisis. “We will be interrupti­ng the purchases of assets in the course of the third quarter, high probabilit­y that we do so early in the third quarter,” said the French Lagarde, who is in Washington attending finance meetings.

“And then we will look at interest rates and how and by how much we hike them.”

Lagarde also stressed that the distinct policies adopted by Europe and the United States in the

face of the coronaviru­s pandemic led to the different nature of inflation on both sides of the Atlantic. In Europe, she said, “the focus was predominan­tly on keeping the jobs, not necessaril­y sending the checks,” and thus allowing people to maintain employment despite the downturn and return to work when business picked back up.

But in the United States, the labor market is quite tight with many vacancies. “We don’t have that in Europe at the moment,” Lagarde said. That tightness “is clearly contributi­ng to possible strong inflation and second round effect where prices go up, wages go up, short supply of labor, wages continue to go up, and that feeds back into prices,” she said.

“That’s one of the difference­s between our two economies.” Inflation reached 7.5 percent in March in the eurozone, and 8.5 percent in the United States.

 ?? ?? Christine Lagarde
Christine Lagarde

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