Bank of Portugal: economy holding up, but inflation still nags
June's Economic Bulletin points to a favourable labour market and more investment from EU funds, with inflation driven by energy prices.
The Bank of Portugal laid its mid-year cards on the table, and the picture is not bad. In June’s Economic Bulletin, the regulator describes an economy that is holding up: a favourable labour market, more investment pushed by incoming EU funds, and a budget stance still on the expansionary side.
Translated into kitchen-table terms: there are jobs, money is flowing in for works and projects, and the state is not tightening its belt. Added up, these are ingredients that help the economy grow.
The catch is called inflation
Not everything is rosy. The rise in prices in 2026 largely reflects costlier oil tied to instability in the Middle East, which hit an important slice of the world’s energy supply. When energy goes up, it drags almost everything with it, from the electricity bill to the price of what we put on the plate.
This is why the recent calm in the barrel price is so welcome. If oil stays well-behaved, inflation tends to ease, and that is felt directly in family budgets.
For now, the snapshot is of an economy that keeps resisting, with one eye on jobs and funds and the other, watchful, on the price thermometer.
See also: Inflation at 3.3% and the weight of energy. Read the Economic Bulletin at the Bank of Portugal.
Illustrative · Photo: Pixabay / Pexels