The head of the European Central Bank (ECB), Christine Lagarde, has said that despite the consequences of the war in Ukraine, the Eurozone was still likely to show growth in the coming year. Rising inflation and shrinking consumer confidence would definitely leave their mark, Lagarde said on Monday, but even in the “gloomiest scenario” the ECB expected the economy to grow. Lagarde described such a scenario as inflationary second-round effects in the form of significantly rising wages, a boycott of Russian energy and a prolonged and intensified war. Lagarde chose not to comment directly on the …