Luis de Guindos states energy shocks today differ from 2021-22 due to tighter monetary and fiscal policies.
European Central Bank Vice-President Luis de Guindos said inflation risks in the current energy price shock are lower than during 2021-22. He cited tighter monetary policy, quantitative tightening, and reduced fiscal stimulus as key differences.
In 2021-22, inflation surged due to pandemic-related bottlenecks, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and expansionary policies. De Guindos noted the ECB was slow to act then, partly due to academic debates over inflation drivers.
De Guindos emphasized that today’s environment—with positive interest rates and a shrinking balance sheet—limits inflationary pressures compared to the earlier period.