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Stagflation describes the 1970s, not today’s economy, Lagarde says

By Thomson Reuters Apr 30, 2026 | 9:41 AM

By Yoruk Bahceli

FRANKFURT, April 30 (Reuters) – The euro zone economy isn’t facing stagflation even as growth and inflation risks intensify, European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde said ​on Thursday.

Analysts have described the bloc’s economy as ‌facing stagflationary risks in recent days, with data pointing to surging prices and plunging economic growth. But Lagarde said the term didn’t fit with current conditions.

“In the 70s, you had inflation continuing, continuing, continuing at a ‌sort ​of sustainable and solid pace. You ⁠had very high unemployment. ⁠You had a monetary and fiscal framework that had nothing to do with what we have at the moment,” Lagarde told journalists after the bank kept rates steady.

“So we ​don’t apply stagflation, that flashy term, to the circumstances that we have.”

The ECB on Thursday did say, however, that ⁠the upside risks to inflation – already ⁠far above its target – and the downside risks ​to the economy, which barely grew last quarter, have intensified.

Lagarde said ​the ECB’s March projections, which foresaw the euro zone ‌economy growing 0.9% this year followed by 1.3% next and 1.4% in 2028, did not point to stagnation.

“It’s lower growth granted in ’26, but we’re not in stagnation, let alone recession,” ⁠Lagarde said.

“Now you can imagine scenarios where we are heading towards those situations. But this is not what we are seeing for ⁠the moment.”

Earlier, Lagarde ‌said the economy was moving away from March’s ⁠baseline scenario.

In a separate, adverse scenario from ​March based ‌on oil prices averaging nearly $120 this quarter — ​a level ⁠they rose above on Thursday before falling — and natural gas prices that are much higher than they are today, the ECB had projected the bloc would grow 0.6% this year followed by 1.2% next and 1.6% in 2028.

(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli; Editing ​by Hugh Lawson)