European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde said on Tuesday that it was difficult to say whether inflation had peaked in the eurozone, as consumer prices hit a record high. fueled by soaring energy costs.

Inflation in the eurozone jumped to 10% in September, after reaching 9.1% the previous month, already the highest since the European statistics office began publishing the indicator in January 1997.

2% target

Speaking at a meeting with students organized at the central bank of Cyprus, Lagarde again stressed that inflation was reaching an “undesirably high level”.

“Has she peaked?

Hard to say and I'm not going to risk it,” she said.

Lagarde reiterated his determination to bring prices back within the limits set by the ECB, ie inflation at 2%.

“If we let inflation rise freely, we have to fight even harder to bring it back [to an acceptable level] and that is painful,” she noted.

"We certainly don't have to stimulate demand any further," she also added.

At its last meeting in September, the ECB raised its key rates by 0.75 percentage points - after +0.50 points in July - and specified that it was planning further increases in order to contain inflation, an aggressive policy that fuels fears about growth.

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  • Economy

  • Christine Lagarde

  • central bank

  • Eurozone

  • ECB

  • Inflation