Portugal was "economy of the year" — but there's a cliff edge marked June 30
Growth above the EU average, rising jobs, a buoyant stock market. The less-talked-about bit: the recovery-fund money ends abruptly at month's end, and that could bite.
Let’s start with the good news, because there’s plenty. Portugal closed 2025 looking like the model student: growth above the EU average, rising employment, calmer prices, and a stock market on the up. Some even named it one of the economies of the year. For a country used to hearing bad news from Europe, that felt good.
But best not to get carried away. There’s a date on the calendar that deserves attention: the recovery-and-resilience funds — that huge stream of European money bankrolling works and investment — come with an expiry. They accelerate through this first half of the year and then stop, abruptly, on June 30.
The risk is easy to grasp. When a tap like that shuts off suddenly, public investment can shrink and some jobs tied to those projects may feel it in the second half of the year. Add the weakness of partners like Germany and France, who buy a lot from us, and the caution makes sense.
The takeaway
Portugal is in a good spot, but with a test ahead: proving the economy can walk on its own once the European support stops pushing. Not a moment for alarm — a moment to look hard at where money is spent and invested.
Illustrative · Photo: Leeloo The First / Pexels