European Central Bank joins global push to help economy The European Central Bank is taking steps to support a weakening economy, pushing back the earliest date of interest rate increases and announcing a new round of cheap loans to banks

FRANKFURT, Germany -- The European Central Bank took unexpectedly quick action on Thursday to support a slowing economy, joining the U.S Federal Reserve and Chinese leadership in their attempts to counter worries about global growth.

The central bank for the 19 countries that use the euro pushed back the earliest date for an increase in interest rates from current record lows. It said rates would stay unchanged at least until year-end — previously, it had said until the fall.

The ECB also said it would offer a series of ultra-cheap loans to banks, supporting their ability to keep lending to businesses.

The moves appear to signal concern that the weakness in economic growth could be more than a blip and threatens to turn into a more lasting downturn.

A trade war between the U.S. and China, the world's largest economies, has hurt international commerce and manufacturing. Britain's exit from the European Union could further damage business activity. U.S. President Donald Trump, meanwhile, has threatened to put tariffs on auto imports that would hit European automakers hard.

Amid doubts about the extent of the economy's slowdown, President Mario Draghi said, it was important to take action.

"In a dark room you move with tiny steps. You don't run, but you do move," he told a news conference at the bank's headquarters in Frankfurt. "You try to be proactive rather than reactive."

Wage growth continues to support consumer spending and the economy. But the eurozone, where the economy is heavily dependent on trade, faces external threats such as a chaotic Brexit and the possibility that governments around the world might put more limits in trade.

"Our decisions certainly increase the resilience of the eurozone economy," Draghi said, "but can they address the factors that are weighing on the economy in the rest of the word? They cannot."

The U.S. Federal Reserve has already adjusted the course of its monetary policy. It has signaled a pause in its rate increases and said it's ready to slow the reduction of bond holdings purchased under earlier stimulus efforts.

Chinese authorities, faced with a long-running cool-off in the country's high growth, are also offering support to business, including a cut of up to 1.3 trillion yuan ($200 billion) in value-added and other taxes.

Carsten Brzeski, chief economist at the bank ING Germany, said that the ECB's measures came earlier than expected.

"It is clearly an attempt to stay ahead of the curve," he said.

Investors initially reacted with euphoria to the bank's actions, but then sold off stocks as they seemed to focus on the longer-term prospect of weaker growth.

The ECB's actions highlight how quickly the fortunes of the European and global economy have shifted. The bank on Thursday slashed its forecast for eurozone economic growth this year to 1.1 percent from 1.7 percent previously. Inflation is expected at 1.2 percent, down from a 1.6 percent forecast earlier and well below the bank's goal of just under 2 percent.

Only in December, the ECB was confident enough to end almost four years of stimulus through monthly bond purchases amounting to 2.6 trillion euros (2.9 trillion). The purchases were a way of pushing newly created money into the economy to raise inflation from dangerously weak levels and support a recovery from the Great Recession and a crisis over too much debt in the eurozone.

Yet even as the bank was bringing that stimulus effort to an end, economic signals began to weaken. The eurozone economy grew by a weak 0.2 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, down from 0.4 percent in the first two quarters.

This week, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, which advises developed countries on policy, cut its forecast for global growth this year to 3.3 percent from the 3.5 percent it had forecast in November. That would be a slowdown from last year's 3.6 percent.

All of which means it could be some time before the ECB raises its key interest rates. The rate on for lending to banks is at zero, while the rate on deposits from commercial banks is at minus 0.4 percent.