Europe’s two largest central banks raised interest rates sharply on Thursday, opting for a bigger rise than the US Federal Reserve as inflation in the region remains near historically high levels.
The European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England both lifted rates by another half a percentage point. Benchmark interest rates for both are at their highest levels since 2008.
Across the Atlantic, the Federal Reserve eased up on rate hikes on Wednesday, opting for just a quarter-point increase as it judged that its battle against inflation was making progress.
The ECB said it expected to raise benchmark rates further. Although inflation in the 20 countries that use the euro slowed in January, at 8.5% it remains far above the bank’s 2% target.
UK inflation has also eased, coming in at 10.5% in December, but remains near a 41-year high.
The Bank of England said UK inflation was likely to fall sharply over the rest of the year, largely as past increases in energy and other prices fell out of the calculation. But it signaled significant uncertainty over its forecast.
Credit: cnn.com