Eurozone inflation remained weak in
August, raising the prospect of further action from the European Central
Bank to stimulate the bloc's economy.
Inflation in the eurozone was 0.2%, unchanged from July and below analysts' forecasts of a slight increase.
The
ECB has introduced a number of stimulus measures, but the inflation
rate still remains some way off the bank's target of just below 2%.
Separate data showed the unemployment rate remained at 10.1% in July.
Analysts had been predicting a slight fall in the jobless rate.
ECB meeting
Eurozone
inflation remained unchanged as prices of food, services, and
industrial goods rose by less than in July, while the drop in energy
prices was not as sharp.
In March this year, the ECB stepped up its attempts
to stimulate the eurozone's economy, cutting its main interest rate
from 0.05% to 0% and its bank deposit rate from minus 0.3% to minus
0.4%.
The ECB has stepped up its programme of quantitative easing, and is now buying €80bn worth of bonds a month.
The
bank's rate-setting Governing Council is due to meet next week,
although analysts are not sure whether it will announce new policy
measures at the meeting.
"It looks to be a very tight call as to
whether or not the ECB acts on 8 September or decides to maintain a
'wait and see' stance as to how the Eurozone economy is performing - we
marginally lean towards the 'wait and see' view," said Howard Archer,
chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight.
However,
Stephen Brow of Capital Economics said: "There is a strong case for the
ECB to announce further policy easing. This could come as soon as the
bank's meeting next week."
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