9,842.15 TRY BIST 100 BIST 100
4.95 CNY CNY CNY
37.23 EUR EUR EUR
35.97 USD USD USD
0.13 CNY CNY/EUR CNY/EUR
38.77 TRY Interest Interest
74.67 USD Fossil Oil Fossil Oil
32.16 USD Silver Silver
4.49 USD Copper Copper
103.89 USD Iron Ore Iron Ore
350.00 USD Shipbreaking Scrap Shipbreaking Scrap
3,313.24 TRY Gold (gr) Gold (gr)

Energy prices and supply bottleneck warning from the European Central Bank

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde: "Growth rate is slowing due to supply bottlenecks and rise in energy prices"

Energy prices and supply bottleneck warning from the European Central Bank

Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), said that inflation may remain at high levels for a long time if energy prices increase or supply constraints continue.

Lagarde attended the "Monetary Dialogue" session of the Economic and Financial Affairs Committee of the European Parliament (EP) via video conference.

Reminding that the economy in the Euro Zone grew by 2.2 percent in the third quarter, Lagarde stated that they expect the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to reach the levels before the new type of coronavirus (Kovid-19) epidemic by the end of the year.

"Growth is slowing due to supply bottlenecks and rising energy prices," Lagarde said. he said.

Stating that while consumer spending is strong, shortages of materials, equipment and labor are weighing on manufacturing output and weakening the near-term economic outlook, Lagarde said, "Supply constraints will likely continue for several months and will gradually ease in 2022." made its assessment.

Emphasizing that supply bottlenecks are not the only downside risk to the growth outlook, Lagarde said, "Further rise in energy prices may reduce growth by lowering purchasing power and pausing the recovery in consumption." said.

Reminding that inflation increased more than expected to 4.1 percent in October, Lagarde explained that the rise in inflation was due to the increase in energy prices, the recovery in demand due to the reopening of the economy, and the end of the temporary VAT cuts implemented in Germany last year.

“Current futures prices point to a noticeable easing in energy prices in the first half of 2022. As the economic recovery continues and supply bottlenecks ease, we can expect price pressure on goods and services to return to normal,” Lagarde said. said.

Explaining that they expect inflation to ease next year, Lagarde said, "If the increase in energy prices or supply constraints continue, inflation may remain higher than our current expectation. This may feed higher wages and then higher prices." used the phrase.

In the Eurozone, annual inflation reached 4.1 percent in October, the highest level in the last 13 years.

The general price increase in Europe, especially for energy products such as natural gas and electricity, draws attention.

Comments

No comment yet.

Only +plus subscribers can access this content.

SUBSCRIBE now to share your thoughts on the markets and get more comments.
SUBSCRIBE If you already have an account Sign In

Most read news

EU plans exemption for 80% of companies under border carbon tax

Friday, February 7, 2025

CMA CGM awarded the operation of Latakia Port, Syria's gateway to the world

Friday, February 7, 2025

Asian stock markets declined after the statements of China and the USA

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

China retaliates against U.S. tariffs with its own levies

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Trade volume between Türkiye and Egypt to reach 10 billion dollars in 2025

Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Follow List
Expand
Your watch list is empty

Add your favorite commodities for quick access and don't miss the latest price change news.


There are no news categories you follow
Edit Notification Preferences
E-bulletin subscription
Sign up to receive the latest news and daily iron prices by e-mail and sms
Become a Plus Subscriber Now!
Try it free for 3 days!
Subscribe Now
Neutral Prices
Be informed
Provincial Iron Prices
Comments and Analysis
Subscribe Now