ECB cuts rates again, Lagarde backs EU reform call
The
The
It was policymakers' second cut, after a move in June, which ended a record hiking cycle that began in mid-2022 to tame a surge in consumer prices.
Inflation rates have been easing, and are now only a whisker off the
After the
But she warned that the battle was far from over, with inflation likely to tick up again later this year and fast-rising wages still a threat.
She again insisted that the rate path ahead was "not pre-determined".
"We shall be data dependent, we shall decide meeting by meeting," she told a press conference.
The central bank for the 20 countries that use the euro left its inflation forecasts unchanged from its last projections in June, forecasting the figure would drop below two percent in 2026.
LBBW bank analyst
- 'Severe but just' -
The central bank's latest meeting came the week that a key report by Lagarde's predecessor at the
"It's a formidable report in that it poses a diagnosis which is severe but which is just in our view," Lagarde said.
The report urged the 27-country bloc to ramp up industrial investment by hundreds of billions of euros per year and boost innovation to keep pace with
"I very much hope that the executive authorities in charge will actually take it to heart and will see a path towards those structural reforms," she said.
The
While eurozone inflation has been sticky, policymakers have in recent times grown more confident that it is now on a more sustained downward trajectory.
Consumer price rises slowed to 2.2 percent compared to the same month last year, down from 2.6 percent in July, leaving the figure just a whisker off the
Inflation rates had peaked at 10.6 percent in
A lacklustre performance in some parts of the eurozone has also fuelled calls for more cuts to take pressure off the single currency area.
While signs in the first half of the year were positive, recent indicators have pointed to a deteriorating outlook.
The eurozone's largest economy,
Lagarde listed a series of risks for the eurozone economy, from a weakening global economy to trade tensions, and conflicts in
"Risks to economic growth remain tilted to the downside," she said.
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