FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) The European Central Bank on Thursday cuts its main interest rate by a quarter point to 0.25 percent, a record low, to help the economic recovery.
The ECB is the issuer of the euro currency and serves as the top monetary authority for the eurozone and its 331 million people. The bank and its president, Mario Draghi, have played a key role in fighting the government debt crisis afflicting the 17 European Union member countries that use the euro.
Some of the key steps the ECB has taken:
LOWER INTEREST RATES: The ECB has cut its key interest rate five times since Draghi become president. Before Thursday's cut, it last reduced rates in May. It also then cut the rate it pays banks for deposits to zero a push for them to lend rather than hoard money.
The refinancing rate is what the bank charges on the credit it offers to eurozone banks and thereby influences interest rates on the loans banks provide to each other, businesses and consumers. Theoretically, a lower rate makes it cheaper to borrow money and expand a business. In practice, a slack economy has meant weak demand for loans.