Full interview hereECB Chief Economist, Philip Lane said in an interview with Nikkei Asia that the conflict in the Middle East has worsened the euro area's macroeconomic outlook, introducing heightened uncertainty. Elevated energy prices are dragging down consumption and investment, potentially leading to prolonged economic weakness.While gas prices remain relatively stable due to US supply, oil prices have exceeded the ECB’s March projections. Lane expects the ECB to make a further upward adjustment to its inflation forecast at the June meeting due to these net upward pressures.The ECB is monitoring whether energy shocks will broaden into wider inflation. While some sectors (like airlines) initially raised prices, some are now reversing them due to falling demand, indicating that demand conditions in Europe remain weak.Lane emphasised that the ECB does not pre-commit to specific interest rate paths. He outlined three scenarios for monetary policy based on the energy shock: ignoring a temporary shock, a limited response for a persistent medium-sized shock, or a strong response if the shock broadens significantly.Addressing speculation of a June rate hike, Lane stated that the market does not need extra guidance from the ECB, effectively endorsing market expectations. He cautioned that any decision beyond June (July, September, etc.) will depend entirely on incoming data, and the ECB will continue to debate its options rather than laying out a complete long-term vision.Lane dismissed concerns that the ECB is repeating past mistakes of reacting too slowly to inflation. Unlike 2022, when Europe faced a massive gas shock, surging post-pandemic demand, and negative interest rates, the ECB today enters the shock from a neutral position (rates and inflation both around 2%) alongside weaker demand.He also noted that tightening looks different globally. For the US and UK, it means postponing cuts. For the ECB, it means raising rates toward steady-state levels; and for the Bank of Japan, the debate centers on the speed at which it moves up toward its long-term average. This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.