Bank of Portugal: economy growing 1.8%, but the war is weighing in
June's Economic Bulletin keeps growth at 1.8% for 2026 and pushes inflation to 3.1%. The culprit has a name: the jump in energy prices.
The Bank of Portugal laid its cards on the table, and the read is bittersweet: the economy is still growing, just slower than anyone hoped back in January.
June’s Economic Bulletin keeps the 2026 growth forecast at 1.8%, followed by 1.6% in 2027 and 1.8% in 2028. Not bad — but a downgrade from late last year’s optimism. Inflation, meanwhile, is heading up: it should close 2026 at 3.1% before drifting back toward 2% in the years after.
Where the brake is coming from
The explanation fits almost entirely into one word: energy. The rise in oil prices after the US–Iran conflict kicked off made imports pricier and worsened the country’s terms of trade. Add a heap of uncertainty, less friendly financial conditions and weaker external demand, and you’ve got the recipe for less growth with more inflation.
The glass half full
It’s not all clouds. The labour market is still solid, European funds are flowing in harder and giving investment a push, and budget policy is still playing for the home team. Translation for daily life: jobs aren’t the problem, but your shopping basket will keep stinging for a few more months. Watch the price at the pump — that’s what’s running this story.
Illustrative · Photo: Arturo Añez. / Pexels