8 February 2026

ECB Leaves Benchmark Rate Unchanged

#
Share This Story

FRANKFURT — The European Central Bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged on Thursday, once again defying criticism that it is doing too little to counteract very low inflation that some economists see as a grave threat to the euro zone economy.

The central bankers, meeting in Brussels, left the main rate at 0.25 percent, a record low. While many economists have called for more decisive action to stimulate the euro zone economy, members of the bank’s governing council appear reluctant to deploy the more radical measures that would be required to do so.

“There is consensus about being dissatisfied with the projected path of inflation,” Mr. Draghi said. “There is a consensus about not being resigned and accepting this as a fact of nature.”

But he declined to offer specifics about the possible next steps. And at least on Thursday, conditions apparently did not impress the governing council enough to act yet.

Mr. Draghi also said the E.C.B. was concerned about geopolitical tensions, making several specific references to the crisis in Ukraine.

Annual inflation in the euro zone was 0.7 percent in April, according to an official estimate, which is well below the central bank’s target of close to 2 percent. Such low inflation is risky, some economists say, because it leaves the euro zone vulnerable to a ruinous downward price spiral known as deflation that might be set in motion by some sort of shock, like a worsening of tensions in Ukraine.

Modest inflation is considered healthy, in part because it eases the burden on debtors in a region where many countries, companies and individuals are having problems repaying their loans.

The problem facing the central bank is that, while it is standard practice to keep a lid on excess inflation by raising rates, inducing an increase in inflation is much more difficult. It might require the bank to use measures that have never been tested in the euro zone, such as huge purchases of government bonds or other assets to pump money into the economy.

Mr. Draghi, the E.C.B. president, said in April that the bank was prepared to make asset purchases, a strategy similar to the quantitative easing, or Q.E., used in the United States by the Federal Reserve. But most analysts did not expect the E.C.B. to take action yet — and the bank did not on Thursday.

Click here for the full article in the New York Times.

Join Our Online Community
Join the Better Way To Retire community and get access to applications, relevant research, groups and blogs. Let us help you Retire Better™
FamilyWealth Social News
Follow Us