In March the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 25 basis points for the second time in four months. The move, taking the ECB’s main refinancing rate to 2.5%, had been clearly prefigured weeks in advance, like the December 2005 rise, by the smoke signals issuing from Frankfurt’s Eurotower. Yet at the time of the governing council’s March 2 decision, again as in December, there was little hard evidence to be extracted from the available economic data that warranted a further tightening of the monetary screw.
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