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    Home » IMF sees euro area growth slowing to 0.9 percent in 2026
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    IMF sees euro area growth slowing to 0.9 percent in 2026

    July 17, 2026
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    WASHINGTON / RankWire.AI / – The International Monetary Fund expects the euro area economy to grow 0.9% in 2026 and 1.2% in 2027. The updated forecast marks a slowdown from 1.4% growth in 2025. The IMF Executive Board completed its annual review of common euro area policies on July 13. The fund released its findings on July 16. The assessment covered growth, inflation, public debt, financial stability and structural reforms across the currency bloc.

    IMF sees euro area growth slowing to 0.9 percent in 2026
    Euro area policymakers face slower growth, higher inflation and rising debt.

    Headline inflation will rise from 2.1% in 2025 to 2.9% in 2026, according to the forecast. The IMF expects inflation to ease to 2.3% in 2027. Its July update reduced the 2026 growth projection by 0.2 percentage point from April. The forecast for 2027 remained unchanged. Euro area growth also trails the fund’s 1.7% estimate for advanced economies in 2026. Inflation remains above the European Central Bank’s 2% medium-term target.

    The IMF linked the weaker outlook to higher energy prices, poor consumer confidence and an unfavorable first-quarter carryover. Ireland drove much of that carryover, while several other economies also showed weak momentum. Higher energy costs reduced household purchasing power and slowed private consumption. Tighter financial conditions added pressure on domestic demand. Government support measures offset part of the impact. However, the assessment found that those measures did not fully remove the burden on economic activity.

    Higher energy costs restrain growth

    The euro area began 2026 with output near its estimated potential and inflation close to target. Economic growth reached 1.4% in 2025, while unemployment stayed near 6.3%. Domestic demand supported activity despite the war in Ukraine, higher tariffs and a stronger euro. Net exports reduced growth as imports remained firm and services exports lost strength. Results differed across member states. Spain continued to expand faster than several of the region’s larger economies.

    Energy supply disruption linked to the Middle East conflict ranked as the largest source of uncertainty. The fund also cited weaker confidence, financial stress, trade disruption and further escalation in Ukraine. Financial stability risks increased as the economic outlook softened. The IMF expects public debt to rise from 87% of gross domestic product in 2025 to about 90% by 2031. Euro area governments also face higher spending needs for defense, infrastructure and other common priorities.

    Fiscal discipline remains a priority

    IMF directors urged policymakers to keep inflation expectations stable and base monetary decisions on current economic data. They said the European Central Bank should monitor inflation, demand and financial conditions when setting policy. The assessment supported fiscal help for households and businesses within available budget limits. It recommended temporary and targeted measures rather than broad support programs. Directors also called on highly indebted countries to adopt credible plans that reduce deficits and preserve funding for essential investment.

    The fund also urged euro area governments to improve energy security and strengthen the European single market. It called for progress on the banking union and deeper capital market integration. The assessment also recommended fewer barriers to cross-border investment. The IMF connected those reforms with higher productivity, stronger resilience and better medium-term growth. It also stressed the need to protect fiscal sustainability while financing shared priorities. The latest projections show slower growth in 2026, followed by a modest recovery in 2027.

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