Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
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European Central Bank (ECB) President
Jean-Claude Trichet holds a news conference after an ECB Governors Council
meeting in Brussels December 4, 2008. (Xinhua/AFP
Photo) Photo
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BRUSSELS, Dec. 4 (Xinhua) -- The European Central
Bank (ECB) on Thursday cut its benchmark rate by a record 75 basis points or
0.75 percentage points to help reactivate the slumping European economy.
The bank also readjusted its economic and inflation
projections for 2009.
The rate reduction, made by the ECB's 21-head council
at its regular out-of-town meeting in Brussels, lowered the bank's benchmark
refinancing rate to 2.50 percent.
The move, the third in two months, was the deepest
since the bank began in 2002 to take charge of the euro zone monetary policy. It
had never cut more than 50 basis points before.
Since early October, the ECB has axed rates by a
total of 175 basis points.
ECB chief Jean-Claude Trichet said a press conference
after the meeting that the cut was based on "our analysis" of the economic
health in the 15-nation euro zone and inflation situation and would contribute
to financial stability.
"Global and euro-area demand are likely to be
dampened for a protracted period of time" as the world faces "an intensifying
and broadening of financial turmoil" into next year, Trichet said.
The ECB chief said that the bank's governing council
would continue to monitor very closely all developments.
"If new decisions are needed we will take new
decisions, but I can't say anything else at this stage," Trichet said. "We
continue to look very carefully at the situation of the market and the situation
of the economy."
Economists had expected such a reduction as the
economic picture is getting dimmer and inflation pressures are disappearing with
the fall of oil and food prices.
Official figures showed that the euro zone economy
entered recession in the third quarter and economic sentiment in the euro zone
dipped to a 15-year low last month.
Eurostat said Thursday that the euro zone economy
contracted by 0.2 percent in the third quarter of the year and entered recession
because it was the second straight quarter with minus growth.
Economic sentiment in the euro zone dipped to a
15-year low last month.
Trichet also released the bank's latest projections
of new inflation and economic growth, saying the euro zone economy would
contract by 0.5 percent rather than grow by 1.2 percent as it had predicted in
September.
This is the first time the ECB has ever predicted a
contraction. In September, it forecast a 1.2 percent growth for 2009.
Concerning inflation, Trichet said it would slow to
about 1.4 percent in 2009 from 3.3 percent this year. It predicted 2.6 percent
in September.
"Overall, since our last meeting, evidence that
inflation pressures are diminishing has increased," Trichet said. "Inflation
rates are expected to be in line with price stability over the relevant policy
horizon."
Inflation in the 15-nation eurozone fell drastically
in recent months to 2.1 percent in November after it hit a record high of 4
percent in July due to rocketing oil and food prices.
The bank sets the target in inflation in the zone at
2 percent to keep economy stable.
Amid deep financial crisis, rates reduction were big
around the world.
The Bank of England axed rates by 1.5 percent a month
ago. The United States, China, Australia and Switzerland all repeated cuts
recently.
The Bank of England Thursday cut 1.0 percentage point
to 2 percent, while Sweden's central bank slashed its key interest rate by a
record 1.75 percent to 2 percent.

Denmark decreases interest rate by
0.75%
STOCKHOLM, Dec. 4
(Xinhua) -- Denmark's central bank Nationalbank announced Thursday that it had
decided to decrease its lending rate and the rate of interest on certificates by
0.75 percentage point to 4.25 percent, according to reports reaching here from
Copenhagen.
Swedish central bank cuts key interest
rate by 1.75 points
STOCKHOLM, Dec. 4 (Xinhua) -- Sweden's central bank Riksbank decided Thursday to
cut its key interest rate by a bigger-than-expected 1.75 percentage points to 2
percent.
Indonesia central bank cuts rate by 25
basis points
JAKARTA, Dec. 4
(Xinhua) -- Indonesian central bank on Thursday reduced its benchmark interest
rate by 25 basis points to 9.25 percent, to boost real sector as the economic
growth predicted to slow in coming months, the bank said in a statement.
New Zealand central bank cuts interest
rate to 5%
WELLINGTON, Dec.
4 (Xinhua) -- The Reserve Bank of New Zealand on Thursday cut the Official Cash
Rate (OCR) to 5 percent from the previous 6.5 percent, a reduction by 1.5
percentage points and the lowest in five years.