IMF trims Portugal's growth forecast to 1.7% — but sees the books balanced
The International Monetary Fund cut its outlook for Portugal's economy this year while projecting a balanced budget.
There are two pieces of news here, and they pull in different directions, so it’s worth reading slowly.
The first: the International Monetary Fund again trimmed its growth forecast for Portugal’s economy this year, from 1.9% to 1.7%. It’s no collapse — it’s a cooling, a sign the engine isn’t accelerating at the pace many had hoped.
The second, cheerier one: the same IMF expects Portugal to close the year with a balanced budget, better than the small 0.1%-of-GDP deficit it flagged in April. In other words, the country spends roughly what it takes in — a historical rarity that a few years ago looked like fiction.
Two portraits of the same country
How do a growth downgrade and balanced books fit in the same sentence? Because they measure different things. Growth tells us how fast the economy is fattening up; the budget balance tells us whether the state is living within its means. You can have the second tidy and still be running at half-throttle on the first.
It’s also worth remembering that each institution has its own thermometer. The Bank of Portugal is more upbeat in the short term, buoyed by incoming EU funds and a labour market that stays robust. The IMF, more cautious, looks at the risks abroad — the Middle East chief among them.
The takeaway
For someone at home, the translation is simple: no drama, but no party either. The economy keeps growing, just more slowly; and the state, on paper at least, is balancing its ledger. In a Europe full of deficits, that’s not a bad calling card.
Illustrative · Photo: Alesia Kozik / Pexels