Bank of Portugal: economy growing 1.8%, but inflation keeps nagging
The June Economic Bulletin keeps 2026 growth at 1.8% and revises inflation up to 3.1%. International conflict is weighing on the numbers.
The Bank of Portugal laid its cards on the table in its June Economic Bulletin, and the read is of an economy that keeps growing — but with an increasingly loud catch: inflation isn’t easing the way it was supposed to.
Let’s start with the good news. The GDP growth forecast holds at 1.8% for 2026, with 1.6% in 2027 and 1.8% in 2028 rounding out the horizon. It’s not a spectacular figure, but it’s solid growth and above the euro area average, which the ECB has meanwhile revised down to a modest 0.8% this year. The engine is still investment, fuelled by larger inflows of European funds, and a labour market that remains favourable.
The problem is prices. The central bank revised inflation up, to 3.1% in 2026 — three tenths higher than it projected in March — before expecting a return to values closer to 2% in the following years (2.4% in 2027 and 2.0% in 2028). Behind this revision is, above all, energy: international conflict has sent uncertainty soaring and pushed oil-price assumptions higher.
In other words, it’s the old dilemma. The economy keeps moving forward, creating jobs and attracting investment, yet the cost of living continues to eat into part of those gains in household budgets. Anyone doing the maths at the end of the month feels that gap between the headline numbers and the price of the weekly shop.
There’s also a brighter note on public finances: the Bank of Portugal was more optimistic about the deficit, a sign that the budgetary effort of recent years hasn’t been lost along the way. But the underlying message is one of caution. In a year shaped by geopolitical tension and volatile energy, projections are worth what they’re worth — and could change at the next revision. For now, the picture is of a resilient economy keeping a wary eye on inflation.
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