Should not forget that baseline scenario already entails a more restrictive monetary policyIt would be more appropriate to respond in June if outlook does not improve markedlyWell, this just reaffirms the report from yesterday that policymakers were converging towards a June rate hike. The report even suggested that some policymakers were already on board with perhaps even "two rate hikes" being needed to address the situation.Again, there's a lot that I do not like with how the ECB is choosing to respond here. The first thing is that this kind of communication means that they are seeing markets do the tightening for them - to some extent. Traders are now seeing ~75% odds of a move in June with ~70 bps of rate hikes priced in by year-end.If the ECB does not deliver on that, then we'll see financial conditions loosen and they risk a policy misstep in second-round effects get out of control.The next thing is that monetary policy is not well equipped to deal with a supply shock, especially the kind we're seeing. If the ECB is just advocating token rate hikes just because, then that's just poor form.The deposit facility rate now is at 2.00% and it fits with where they see "neutral" as being. 50 bps or even 75 bps of rate hikes will just bring things to being marginally or slightly restrictive at best. So if their goal is to really rein in inflation, they will have to do much more than that. The question is with economic conditions set to face a hard struggle, do they have the stomach to raise interest rates by that much and put added pressure on the economy?Damned if you do, damned if you don't I guess. This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.