Close Menu

    RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

    November 18, 2025

    Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

    November 17, 2025

    She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

    November 17, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

    November 18, 2025

    Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

    November 17, 2025

    She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

    November 17, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025
    • Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore
    • She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue
    • Electric Vehicle Sales Are Surging in South America — Even Without Tesla
    • TotalEnergies is set to significantly expand its gas-powered energy portfolio through a €5.1 billion ($5.92 billion) all-stock partnership with Czech energy group EPH.
    • Rwanda’s Post-Genocide Reputation: How a Nation Rewrote Its Global Narrative
    • Shabana Mahmood threatens Trump-style visa ban on several countries in major immigration overhaul
    • 15th African Achievers Awards Inspires Global Celebration of African Excellence at UK Parliament
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Reputation Poll IntlReputation Poll Intl
    • ABOUT US
    • NEWS
      1. Personalities
      2. Brands
      3. Aviation
      4. Communications
      5. Lifestyle and Travels
      6. Entertainment
      7. View All

      13th African Achievers Awards holds in UK 

      May 20, 2023

      African Achievers Awards 13th  Edition holds at the UK Houses of Parliament.

      May 2, 2023

      Trinity College amazingly gets €30m in largest ever third level individual philanthropic donation

      May 31, 2021

      It’s Not Just an AI Bubble, Here’s What’s Really at Risk

      November 11, 2025

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

      May 20, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024

      How pilots handle flying the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird at 3,540 km/h?

      August 29, 2023

      Virgin Galactic gets date for suborbital commercial spaceflight launch

      June 16, 2023

      UK GOVT. Overhauls Travel Rules

      September 20, 2021

      Afghan Baby Born On U.S. Military Plane Named After Aircraft

      August 26, 2021

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

      May 20, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024

      Digitalise borders to unlock Africa’s full potential

      June 2, 2023

      Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

      November 17, 2025

      She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

      November 17, 2025

      Sinach’s Victory Sounds Concert Sells Out OVO Wembley Arena in London.

      July 8, 2024

      Apple Music reveals top 10 albums of all time on 100 Best list

      May 23, 2024

      RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

      November 18, 2025

      Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

      November 17, 2025

      She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

      November 17, 2025

      Electric Vehicle Sales Are Surging in South America — Even Without Tesla

      November 17, 2025
    • POLLS
      1. Most Reputable Bank CEOs
      2. 100 Most Reputable Brands
      3. 2019 100 Most Reputable People on Earth
      4. 2017: 100 Most Reputable People on Earth
      5. 2017 Most Reputable Bank CEO
      6. 50 Reputable Global Entertainment Companies
      7. 100 most Reputable Indians
      Featured

      13th African Achievers Awards holds in UK 

      By Reputation PollMay 20, 2023178
      Recent

      13th African Achievers Awards holds in UK 

      May 20, 2023

      African Achievers Awards 13th  Edition holds at the UK Houses of Parliament.

      May 2, 2023

      100 MOST REPUTABLE AFRICANS, 2023.

      January 1, 2023
    • FINANCE
    • ENERGY
    • TECHNOLOGY
      1. AI
      2. Communication
      3. Companies
      4. FinTech
      5. View All

      It’s Not Just an AI Bubble, Here’s What’s Really at Risk

      November 11, 2025

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024

      UNGA adopts resolution on artificial intelligence

      March 22, 2024

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

      May 20, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024

      Digitalise borders to unlock Africa’s full potential

      June 2, 2023

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

      May 20, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024

      Workers at Mercedes-Benz plant in Alabama vote against unionizing

      May 17, 2024

      RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

      November 18, 2025

      Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

      November 17, 2025

      She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

      November 17, 2025

      Electric Vehicle Sales Are Surging in South America — Even Without Tesla

      November 17, 2025

      It’s Not Just an AI Bubble, Here’s What’s Really at Risk

      November 11, 2025

      Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

      June 6, 2024

      African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

      May 20, 2024

      We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

      May 18, 2024
    • GLOBAL REPUTATION FORUM
    Reputation Poll IntlReputation Poll Intl
    Home»Finance»Banking»European Central Bank Raises Rates to Highest Level Since 2001
    Banking

    European Central Bank Raises Rates to Highest Level Since 2001

    Reputation PollBy Reputation PollJune 16, 2023No Comments37 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    2d0628d477aecf163159cf30de0e7386
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The European Central Bank raised interest rates to their highest level in more than two decades on Thursday and warned that there was further to go in order to stamp out inflation.

    Unlike the Federal Reserve, which left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, policymakers who set rates for the 20 countries that use the euro said they hadn’t even discussed pausing rate increases at this week’s policy meeting.

    “Are we done? Have we finished the journey? No, we are not at destination,” Christine Lagarde, the president of the bank, told reporters in Frankfurt.

    The bank lifted rates by a quarter of a percentage point, putting the deposit rate at 3.5 percent, the highest since 2001, as officials said inflation was forecast to remain too high for too long. It was the bank’s eighth consecutive increase. The move had been well telegraphed since the last meeting of the bank’s Governing Council in early May, when policymakers expressed concern about underlying inflation pressures from wage growth and corporate profits or the impact of rising food prices.

    A day earlier, the Federal Reserve held interest rates steady for the first time in more than a year. After last month’s mirror-image move, when both raised rates a quarter point, the two central banks have begun to diverge again. The European Central Bank, which began to raise rates from below zero in July, hasn’t been raising them for as long or as high as the Fed.

    Business and Economy in Europe

    Eurozone: Europe’s statistics agency reported that the eurozone slipped into a recession early this year amid the shock of high food and energy prices.

    Food Prices: Even as agricultural and energy costs fall, basic items across Europe remain stubbornly expensive for consumers. What is driving up the prices?

    A Wind Pioneer: Henrik Stiesdal helped design the first modern wind turbines. A thousand patents later, he’s a green tech entrepreneur rolling out new innovations.

    A Deal Under Scrutiny: Plans by a U.S. company to acquire a maker of heat pumps, seen by many as the key to Germany’s green future, have prompted a review by the government in Berlin.

    “We are not thinking about pausing,” Ms. Lagarde said on Thursday. It is “very likely” that the bank will raise rates again in July, she added, as long as there isn’t a “material change” to the bank’s expectations for inflation.

    Policymakers say they want to avoid the risk of declaring victory in their fight against rising prices prematurely, even as the eurozone’s annual rate of inflation has dropped from its double-digit peak late last year to 6.1 percent in May, the slowest pace in more than a year. Much of the slowdown can be attributed to lower wholesale energy costs, but central bankers have been alert to signs that inflation is becoming embedded in the economy, which could impede them from getting inflation back to their 2 percent target.

    Ms. Lagarde highlighted the growing effect of wage increases on inflation, saying that “wage pressures, while partly reflecting one-off payments, are becoming an increasingly important source of inflation.” Higher wage costs for companies also explain why core inflation, which excludes energy and food costs, is expected to be higher over the next two years, she said.

    Christine Lagarde, the European Central Bank president, said in Frankfurt that wages were becoming “an increasingly important source of inflation.”

    Wage growth will be persistent, Ms. Lagarde said, especially in the short term as the summer travel and tourism season begins. While she is laying the groundwork for strong wage gains in the eurozone, unexpectedly fast wage growth in Britain has led traders to bet on higher interest rates there.

    The European Central Bank forecasts headline inflation to average 5.4 percent this year, but expects it to still be above the target in two years, at 2.2 percent, slightly higher than projections set out three months ago. That 2.2 percent forecast is “not satisfactory,” Ms. Lagarde said.

    As inflation slows, the question of how much policy tightening is the right amount has become difficult to gauge. Too much could restrain the economy more than necessary and cause or worsen a recession. Too little could allow inflation to become a persistent problem that policymakers can’t root out. It’s a challenge facing central bankers around the globe.

    On Wednesday, the Fed said it was giving itself time to assess how the U.S. economy was reacting to the rapid pace of past rate increases. But policymakers warned that they might need to raise rates again later. Such a pattern was established recently in Australia and Canada, where central banks held rates steady for a short period before resuming increases.

    On Thursday, Ms. Lagarde said policymakers would know where to keep rates only when they arrived there. Nevertheless, traders are betting that date will arrive at the bank’s September or, more likely, October meeting.

    “The E.C.B. just talked itself into two more rate hikes,” Claus Vistesen, the chief eurozone economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote in a note after Thursday’s announcement. Each one, in July and September, will be a quarter point, leaving the deposit rate at 4 percent, where he predicted it would stay. But economists at Berenberg bank and Commerzbank expect the E.C.B. to stop after one more increase, to 3.75 percent, and keep rates there throughout 2024.

    In May, the European Central Bank slowed its rate increases as it acknowledged the impact that tighter monetary policy was having on the region’s economy through more restrictive lending conditions. On Thursday, the bank said tighter financing conditions were expected to further dampen demand.

    As the Central Bank signaled higher interest rates, it also slightly lowered its forecasts for economic growth, predicting that the economy will grow 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent next year. The eurozone slipped into recession earlier this year as high prices caused people to spend less.

    The central bank’s next decisions “will ensure that the key E.C.B. interest rates will be brought to levels sufficiently restrictive to achieve a timely return of inflation to the 2 percent medium-term target,” it said in a statement, “and will be kept at those levels for as long as necessary.”

     

    Culled from The New York Times

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Reputation Poll

    Related Posts

    Banks and Regulators Endorse AI to Streamline African Trade

    November 13, 2025

    IEA’s Bullish Oil Forecast Backs Trump’s View, Raises Global Alarm

    November 12, 2025

    Every Year, New Investments Will Be Made’: 50 Years After Independence, Angola Charts a Course Toward Economic Diversification

    August 9, 2024
    Search

    Subscribe to Updates

    Our Picks

    It’s Not Just an AI Bubble, Here’s What’s Really at Risk

    November 11, 2025

    Sword Health Raises $130 Million, Valuation Soars to $3 Billion

    June 6, 2024

    African Fintech Giant Ranked as Fastest-Growing

    May 20, 2024

    We’ll need universal basic income – AI ‘godfather’

    May 18, 2024
    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    UPCOMING EVENT

    Top Trending
    Reports

    RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

    By Reputation PollNovember 18, 202574

    Reputation Poll International/ Global Reputation Forum Index offers a comprehensive assessment of…

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Latest Posts

    RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

    November 18, 2025

    Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

    November 17, 2025

    She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

    November 17, 2025

    Electric Vehicle Sales Are Surging in South America — Even Without Tesla

    November 17, 2025
    Don't Miss
    Reports

    RPI AFRICAN POLICY INDEX 2025

    By Reputation PollNovember 18, 202574

    Reputation Poll International/ Global Reputation Forum Index offers a comprehensive assessment of governance and policy…

    Man who grabbed Ariana Grande at premiere jailed in Singapore

    November 17, 2025

    She’s cuter than me,’ says Zellweger on new Bridget Jones statue

    November 17, 2025

    Electric Vehicle Sales Are Surging in South America — Even Without Tesla

    November 17, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Top Trending
    Ukraine Conflict

    Review: Russia’s Putin Sets Out Conditions for Peace Talks with Ukraine

    7.2 By Reputation PollJanuary 20, 20210
    Top Posts

    100 MOST REPUTABLE AFRICANS, 2023.

    January 1, 202326,813

    100 MOST REPUTABLE AFRICANS [2024 EDITION]

    January 28, 20244,186

    Poll puts Gento in lead over incumbent Aki-Sawyer.

    June 12, 20231,936

    Rising Star Sia to Be Featured at the Global Short Film Awards Gala in Cannes

    July 8, 2021987
    X (Twitter) Instagram

    News

    • World
    • US Politics
    • EU Politics
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • Connections
    • Science

    Company

    • Information
    • Advertising
    • Classified Ads
    • Contact Info
    • GDPR Policy
    • Media Kits

    Services

    • Subscriptions
    • Customer Support
    • Bulk Packages
    • Newsletters
    • Sponsored News

    Subscribe to Updates

    © 2025 ReputationPoll. Designed by ReputationPoll.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.