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Minutes of the March decision show that Swedish rates will remain at 1.75%

The minutes from the most recent meeting of the Riksbank on monetary policy showed that the future is uncertain.

Erik Thedeen, Governor of the Riksbank, said that it was difficult to assess?the effects? of war but warned of the dangers of stagflation (higher inflation and lower growth).

Thedeen stated in the minutes that "given the length of time the crisis has been going on and the effects already being felt by the energy infrastructure, I am concerned about the long-term impact this may have on the supply of oil and natural gas in the world."

On March 19, the Riksbank maintained its policy rate at 1.75 %.

Central banks are trying to gauge the impact of U.S. Tariffs, the Ukraine War and AI adoption in countries that still haven't gotten over their pandemic hangovers.

"In this case, it's important to not act too quickly and then have to?make a U-turn or?to fall behind and be late," Riksbank Vice Governor Per Jansson said.

He added, "For the moment, everyone is in agreement that a wait-and see?approach would be the best approach."

(source: Reuters)