The IMF and OECD are talking about Portugal — and the numbers add up
Growth above the EU average, a third straight surplus, debt below 90%. June's reviews hand out good marks, but there's a catch.
A few years back, “Portugal” and “IMF report” in the same sentence made people wince. In June 2026, the script has flipped. Both the OECD and the International Monetary Fund wrapped up their yearly check-ups with a tone that, translated out of economist-speak, runs roughly: nice work, keep going.
The figures back it up. In the first quarter the economy grew 2.3% year-on-year — above the euro-area average, again. Public accounts closed with a third consecutive surplus, and government debt slipped below 90% of GDP. Anyone who remembers the 134% of 2020 can feel how big that turn is.
Where the catch lives
Inflation, which had been tame, jumped to 2.7% in March, pushed up by energy prices abroad. Unemployment is low (around 6%) and set to ease a touch more. The real soft spot is still housing: prices climbing faster than wages keep plenty of people awake at night — and no glossy report fixes that on its own.
The takeaway
Portugal is in a good place, with investment driving growth and confidence rising. The next test is holding the pace once the EU recovery money stops pushing. Good news for now: the economy is walking on its own two feet.
Illustrative · Photo: Mizuno K / Pexels