FRANKFURT, Germany — The European Central Bank has cut rates by a quarter percentage point amid signs of weakening growth and concern about the impact of political chaos in France and the possibility of new U.S. import tariffs after Donald Trump takes office as president.
The bank's rate-setting committee made the decision Thursday at its skyscraper headquarters in Frankfurt to lower the benchmark from 3.25% to 3%.
Bank President Christine Lagarde said that efforts to drive down inflation toward the ECB's 2% target were succeeding, making room to cut rates. ''The disinflation process is well on track,'' she said in her post-decision statement delivered at a news conference. Fighting inflation is the bank's main job.
She said the bank now foresaw ''a slower economic recovery'' than it did in a last set of projections in September.
Inflation has fallen steeply to 2.3% from its peak of 10.6% in late 2022, shifting attention from reigning in consumer price increases to worries about ongoing weak growth. The eurozone is expected to grow 0.8% this year and 1.3.% next year, according to forecasts from the European Union's executive commission.
Higher ECB central bank benchmarks helped bring down inflation by making it more expensive to borrow and spend, and thus taking pressure off prices. For the same reason, rates that are kept too high for too long can undermine growth. The ECB has now cut its benchmark four times from its record peak of 4%.
Lower rates should support growth amid signs that the post-pandemic recovery is slowing in the 20 countries that use the euro currency. Concerns that Trump might impose new tariffs, or import taxes, on goods imported to the US after he is inaugurated Jan. 20 has sent a cold chill through the business world in Europe, where exports are an outsized contributor to growth and employment.
Without mentioning Trump by name, Lagarde said that the possibility of trade conflicts were one factor that meant economic growth could turn out worse than expected.