IMF trims Portugal's 2026 growth forecast (again) to 1.7%
The Fund lowered the bar for 2026 and warns on inflation. But there's good news under the numbers: balanced books and debt below 90%.
The International Monetary Fund ran the numbers on Portugal and the result has two sides. The headline one: the 2026 growth forecast slipped again, now to 1.7%. The fine-print one: the country is, on the whole, still doing its homework.
What changed
A few months ago the IMF pencilled in 1.9%. Now it’s 1.7% — below the 2% the government projects. The reason is mostly external: the fallout from the Middle East conflict weighs enough to cancel out part of the boost that EU funds were meant to provide. Severe storms early in the year also dented the start of 2026, though reconstruction work should even things out over the coming months.
Inflation is the other flag. The Fund sees prices rising to 3.4% this year — pushed by pricier commodities and wage pressure — before easing back to 2.3% in 2027. In plain terms: purchasing power will feel the squeeze before it gets to breathe.
The good bit that won’t fit in the headline
Beneath the downgrade sits a country with its books in order. Portugal closed 2025 growing faster than the euro-area average and posted its third budget surplus in three years — something that looked like fiction not long ago. Public debt fell below 90% of GDP, a level that changes how markets view the country.
Why it matters
Growing 1.7% instead of 2% isn’t a disaster, but it isn’t a footnote either: it means less room to lift incomes and more patience needed before inflation cools. The upside is that Portugal enters this stretch with a cushion — sound finances and falling debt leave slack to absorb shocks from abroad. For 2027, the Fund projects 1.6%. Slow, but standing.
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