ECB will have to ‘think again’ on policy if outlook deteriorates rapidly, chief economist says

ECB will have to ‘think again’ on policy if outlook deteriorates rapidly, chief economist says


Christine Lagarde (R), President of the European Central Bank (ECB), and Vicepresident Luis de Guindos (L)

Thomas Lohnes | Getty Images News | Getty Images

European Central Bank Chief Economist Philip Lane on Friday acknowledged “very high” inflation in the region and said the Frankfurt institution might have to “think again” about its policy stance.

The euro area saw inflation reaching 7.5% in March, according to preliminary data released Friday. Headline inflation has broken new records recently, having stood at 5.9% in February. Moreover, experts estimate inflation will rise even higher going forward.

“In terms of our sequence, the first decision will be if the medium-term inflation outlook is maintained we would be looking at ending net [asset] purchases in the third quarter,” ECB’s Lane told CNBC Friday, regarding its current policy trajectory and the removal of pandemic-era stimulus.

“However, if the outlook deteriorates by so much that the inflation outlook weakens, then we will have to think again,” he added.

The ECB had announced last month that it will end its quantitative easing program in the third quarter given higher inflationary pressures. However, the central bank is seen as being at a crossroads as Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine has brought new economic challenges, notably pushing up energy and food prices.

As such, one of the dilemmas that the ECB faces is how to address massive inflation levels while also taking into account slower economic momentum.

“We have opposing forces,” Lane said. “We have the energy shock at the prospect of second-round effects at pushing up inflation; on the other hand … the weakening of sentiment, at the fact that real incomes will suffer with the high energy prices especially over a kind of a one or two-year horizon, we’ll have a negative pressure on the inflation outlook,” Lane told CNBC.

He added that as a result there will be a “lot of work, a lot of analysis, a lot of debate about the net impact of those opposing forces.”



Source

Orsted files legal challenge over Trump’s halt to  billion offshore wind project
World

Orsted files legal challenge over Trump’s halt to $5 billion offshore wind project

A turbine blade is lifted onto a rack near tower sections at the Revolution Wind project assembly site at State Pier in New London, Connecticut, US, on Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Danish renewables giant Orsted, the world’s largest developer of offshore wind farms, said on Friday that it had […]

Read More
China’s BYD poised to overtake Tesla as world’s top EV seller for the first time
World

China’s BYD poised to overtake Tesla as world’s top EV seller for the first time

Imported BYD vehicles are parked at a port on March 27, 2025 in Yokohama, Japan. Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images News | Getty Images Chinese auto giant BYD on Friday is expected to dethrone U.S. rival Tesla as the world’s biggest seller of electric vehicles on a calendar-year basis. The milestone would cap an extraordinary […]

Read More
China’s ‘Silicon Valley’ is building robots and fortune-telling AI apps at the same time
World

China’s ‘Silicon Valley’ is building robots and fortune-telling AI apps at the same time

HANGZHOU, China — In what is sometimes dubbed China’s Silicon Valley, tech giants and startups in Hangzhou are racing to build cutting-edge chips, robotics and brain-computer interfaces. Across town, aspiring founders are creating AI pets and fortune-telling apps. The city on China’s southeastern coast is reinventing itself as an artificial intelligence hub. A year after the […]

Read More