``We're sticking to our assessment that, based on current data, growth will be around potential in 2008,'' Stark said in an interview in Viernheim, Germany, today. ``I want to repeat that we have said that we will do what is needed to avoid so-called second-round effects. We are ready to act.''
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet threatened to raise rates on Jan. 10 if unions push through bigger wage demands to compensate for faster inflation. Since then, several ECB policy makers have expressed concern that economic growth may slow more markedly as the U.S. economy teeters on the brink of recession.
Stark said while risks to the growth outlook ``are pointing downward,'' even a more pronounced slowdown wouldn't necessarily damp inflation.
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