The eurozone’s inflation rate decelerated to precisely 2.0% in December, meeting the European Central Bank‘s long-standing target for the first time in months, according to figures released on Wednesday by Eurostat.
However, the achievement has sparked fresh debate among policymakers about whether further monetary easing may be necessary as inflation threatens to dip below the target in the coming months.
The December reading, down from 2.1% in November, matched economist expectations compiled by Reuters and marks a significant milestone for the ECB, which has spent the better part of two years wrestling inflation back down from double-digit peaks reached during the energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The latest moderation was driven primarily by continued declines in energy prices, which have been falling steadily as global supply pressures ease. This offset an uptick in food inflation, suggesting the disinflationary trend remains heavily dependent on volatile energy markets rather than broad-based price cooling.
More tellingly, core inflation—the closely watched measure that strips out volatile food and energy prices to reveal underlying price pressures—edged down to 2.3% from 2.4%. This modest decline reflected softer inflation in both services and industrial goods, though the figure remains stubbornly above the headline rate, indicating domestic price pressures have yet to fully dissipate.
The December figures place the ECB in an unusual position. After spending much of 2024 and early 2025 battling to bring inflation down, the central bank now faces the prospect of inflation falling below its 2% target and staying there for an extended period.
Some ECB officials have voiced concerns that persistently low inflation readings could become self-reinforcing, dampening wage demands and business pricing power in ways that make it harder to sustain the bank’s 2% objective over the medium term. In economics parlance, this risks “de-anchoring” inflation expectations—a scenario that could complicate future monetary policy.
However, the prevailing view within the ECB’s Governing Council appears more sanguine. Most policymakers have characterized the expected undershoot as temporary and largely the result of energy price volatility—factors they view as transitory rather than indicative of deeper economic weakness.
This relatively relaxed stance was reinforced last month when the ECB signaled it sees no pressing need for further policy adjustments, effectively cementing market expectations that its benchmark deposit rate will remain at 2% throughout 2026. The message was clear: having normalized rates after the pandemic-era easing and the subsequent inflation surge, the bank is now content to wait and watch.
Still, if inflation were to fall “deeply” below 2%—a threshold the ECB has not precisely defined—pressure could mount for renewed easing measures. Any such debate would need to grapple with the long lag times inherent in monetary policy, meaning rate cuts today would do little to boost prices in the near term.
What makes the ECB’s task particularly challenging is the array of conflicting forces that will shape inflation in the months and years ahead.
On the downside, falling energy costs show no signs of reversing soon. The euro has strengthened against major currencies, making imports cheaper. A surge in low-cost Chinese goods flooding European markets is adding to disinflationary pressures, while wage growth appears to be moderating as labor market tightness eases.
Working in the opposite direction are significant inflationary tailwinds. European governments, led by Germany, are ramping up defense spending in response to geopolitical tensions. Berlin’s promised fiscal expansion—a dramatic reversal of its traditional austerity stance—could inject substantial stimulus into the economy. Labor markets, while cooling, remain relatively tight by historical standards, and domestic demand has proven resilient despite higher borrowing costs.
Added to this mix is the ever-present risk of geopolitical shocks that could once again disrupt energy supplies or trade flows.
This exceptionally uncertain environment is likely to keep the ECB from offering concrete forward guidance beyond the immediate term. In practical terms, that means neither rate cuts nor further tightening can be definitively ruled out.
For businesses, consumers, and investors across the 20-nation currency bloc, the message is one of continued vigilance. Having finally reached its inflation target, the ECB now faces the arguably more complex challenge of keeping it there while navigating an economic landscape buffeted by forces pulling in opposite directions.
The coming months will test whether the central bank’s patient approach proves vindicated or whether unexpected developments force policymakers back into action mode.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The eurozone has hit the ECB’s 2% inflation target, but this success story comes with a catch: inflation is likely headed below target in the coming months due to falling energy prices. While the ECB plans to hold rates steady at 2% through 2026, policymakers face an increasingly uncertain path forward.
Conflicting forces—cheap energy and Chinese imports pulling prices down versus defense spending and fiscal stimulus pushing them up—mean the central bank cannot rule out either rate cuts or further tightening.
After years of fighting high inflation, the ECB’s new challenge is preventing inflation from falling too low, but with so many crosscurrents at play, the policy outlook remains genuinely unpredictable.























