From ECB President Christine Lagarde on PEPP, EU Aid, Digital Euro: Full Interview · · Bloomberg Television
“what monetary policy has to do and what the ecb has to do is to provide as much certainty as possible and this is really the aim of the most recent monetary policy decisions we have taken clearly in the scope of our mandate which is price stability but i think that in the very exceptional circumstances that we are encountering providing a degree of certainty is the best that we can do at the moment.”
On , Christine Lagarde, President at European Central Bank, spoke about monetary policy during ECB President Christine Lagarde on PEPP, EU Aid, Digital Euro: Full Interview on Bloomberg Television.
Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank, has recently focused on the economic impact of the war in Iran and the resulting energy price shock. In April and May 2026, she stated that the euro area economy had moved away from the ECB’s baseline forecast and was now between its baseline and adverse scenarios, with upside risks to inflation and downside risks to growth having intensified. Following the Governing Council meeting on 30 April 2026, Lagarde announced that the ECB had decided to keep interest rates unchanged, and she emphasized that the bank would follow a data-dependent, meeting-by-meeting approach. She described the current situation as one of “extreme volatility” and “lack of certainty,” and did not rule out the possibility of inflation exceeding 3% by the end of the year or further interest rate hikes. Lagarde also said that fiscal responses to the energy price shock should be “temporary, targeted, and tailored.” In other appearances, Lagarde discussed the economic case for women’s full participation in the workforce, stating that closing gender gaps could boost GDP and that financial literacy for women is important for their independence. Speaking at a conference in Berlin, she argued that “Europe-bashing is vastly excessive” and that Europe has strengths including its 450 million consumers, educational system, and democratic principles. She also said that the ECB’s independence must be earned through accountability, credibility, and transparency. Regarding her own mandate, Lagarde stated that “when there is big clouds on the horizon, the captain does not leave the ship,” indicating her intention to remain in her role.