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Home Business

European Central Bank slows pace of rate hikes but vows more

by News Wires
May 5, 2023
in Business
Christine Lagarde

Christine Lagarde

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FRANKFURT, Germany – The European Central Bank slowed the pace of its interest rate increases, stepping back like the US Federal Reserve from a string of jumbo hikes aimed at snuffing out inflation.

But the ECB also said it was “not pausing” even as its efforts have worked by making mortgages and business loans harder to get.

The quarter-point hike came a day after the Fed approved the same increase but hinted it may be the last for now.

The central bank for the 20 countries that use the euro currency started later and said it has further to go even as economic growth slows to a crawl and US bank instability stirs new fears of financial turmoil.

“Based on the information we have today, we have more ground to cover, and we are not pausing. It´s extremely clear,” ECB President Christine Lagarde said at a news conference according to AP. She later added, “This is a journey. We have not arrived yet.”

Lagarde said there’s no “magic number” but that the bank “will know what that is when we get there.” Inflation has declined for several months, but at 7 per cent is still far above the ECB’s goal of 2 per cent considered best for the economy.

The previous streak of six hikes of half- or three-quarters of a point were being “transmitted forcefully” to lending practices, making it harder to borrow, the bank said. But how that is affecting the rest of the economy, namely by bringing down prices, isn’t yet clear.

The ECB’s lending survey this week showed that banks are getting stricter about giving loans and that consumers and companies are asking for less credit and fewer mortgages.

While the rate hikes are having an effect, “is it a sufficient effect yet? We don´t know,” Lagarde said.

Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg bank, foresees two more increases of a quarter-point.

“Unlike the US Fed, the ECB is almost certainly not done yet,” Schmieding said by email. “However, the fact that the ECB … slowed down the pace of hikes suggests that the peak is not far away.”

Making it more expensive to borrow can cool off spending, easing pressure on prices but potentially weighing on economic growth. Demand for housing loans in the eurozone plummeted in the first three months of the year, following the sharpest decline since statistics started in 2003 at the end of last year.

Inflation – which peaked at 10.6 per cent in October – has been fueled by Russia´s invasion of Ukraine, which drove up oil prices and led Moscow to cut off most natural gas to Europe. Energy costs have since fallen, but the surge is still feeding through to higher prices for goods, services and food.

The spiking cost for Europeans to feed their families has become the new pain point because “the most vulnerable spend a lot more on food,” Lagarde said. Food prices jumped 13.6 per cent in April from a year earlier, following a 15.5 per cent annual increase the month before.

Lagarde said employees seeking raises and companies hiking prices to preserve profits were forces that could push up prices.

“We would hope that through a good social contract, these drivers of inflation do not activate each other in what I have called in other places a tit for tat,” she said.

Tags: BUSINESSEuropeGermany

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