For three years central banks in the US and Europe have been struggling to rein in price growth unseen in a generation
For the last three years, the US and Europe have struggled with a specter unseen for a generation – inflation. Now it looks like the phantom may finally be fading.
This week the US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and the Bank of England all held interest rates steady and cautiously signaled that the fight to tamp down soaring prices may be coming to an end.
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