According to the French politician currently serving as the president of the European Central Bank (ECB), Christine Lagarde, Europe’s scorching hot inflation can be blamed on climate change. During her interview with Madame Figaro, Lagarde stressed that people need to take into account that “climate disasters” affect price stability a great deal.
ECB Board Member Isabel Schnabel Says Inflation Makes It Difficult for Central Banks to Control Price Pressures — Christine Lagarde Insists Climate Change Needs to Be Taken Into Account
Last June, Euro area inflation printed 8.6% and the following month in July, the European inflation rating jumped even higher to 8.9%. While Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell vowed to tame inflation on Friday, ECB executive board member Isabel Schnabel and Banque de France governor François Villeroy de Galhau told the press a larger “sacrifice” is needed to curb Europe’s rising inflation.
“Central banks are likely to face a higher sacrifice ratio compared with the 1980s,” Schnabel said on Friday. “Even if prices were to respond more strongly to changes in domestic economic conditions, as the globalisation of inflation makes it more difficult for central banks to control price pressures,” the ECB executive board member added.
Meanwhile, a recent Madame Figaro interview featuring ECB president Christine Lagarde shows that the central bank’s lead believes Europe’s inflation can stem from climate change.
Largarde is not the only person that has connected inflation to the alleged long-term shifts in temperatures and weather patterns worldwide. On August 15, the New York Times published an editorial on how specific policies can fight inflation by battling climate change at the same time. The Biden administration is following the same trend, as the recently implemented bill called the Inflation Reduction Act, claims to reduce inflation by fighting climate change.
Largarde wholeheartedly believes climate change has affected price stability and she noted that further climate disasters could hurt the global economy. “If more and more climate disasters, droughts, and famines occur throughout the world, there will be repercussions on prices, on insurance premiums, and on the financial sector,” Largarde insisted during the Madame Figaro interview (English translation here). The ECB Chief further added:
We need to take that into account.
Europe is struggling with rising energy costs tied to the…
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