The ECB has decided to maintain interest rates at restrictive levels (2.00% deposit, 2.15% financing and 2.40% marginal) in a context of high uncertainty, especially due to the impact of the Middle East conflict on energy.
The key is not only to reduce current inflation, but also to prevent long-term expectations from becoming unanchored. If businesses and households anticipate persistently high inflation, they will tend to adjust prices and wages upwards, generating a spiral that will be difficult to control.
The inflation forecast for 2026 has been revised upwards to 2.6% mainly due to the conflict in the Middle East. The ECB is monitoring two levels of contagion:
Although they have revised growth for 2026 downward (only 0.9%), the ECB identifies pillars of support that prevent a deep recession:
Given the volatility of oil and gas supply, the ECB is not relying on its “baseline scenario” alone. They have analyzed alternative scenarios where a prolonged disruption of energy supply would raise inflation higher than expected and reduce growth further.
1. The “protracted disruption” scenario.
The main alternative scenario analyzed contemplates a prolonged and severe disruption of oil and gas supply. In this case, the results for the economy would be worse than in the baseline scenario.
This would occur in case of:
Although the ECB focuses on negative risks, they also mention a scenario where things could go better than expected if:
ECB. Press Release (March 19, 2026)