The economy of the eurozone is now expected to expand more slowly in 2026 than previously projected, the European Commission announced Monday, citing mounting headwinds from global trade tensions and geopolitical developments.
The Commission forecasts real GDP growth of just 1.2% next year in the 20-nation euro area, down from a prior projection of 1.4%. For the entire 27-country European Union, growth is now expected at 1.4% in 2026, slightly lower than the May forecast of 1.5%. European Commissioner for Economy Valdis Dombrovskis emphasise that the EU — a “highly open economy” — remains vulnerable to ongoing trade restrictions, shifts in supply chains and uncertainty in key export markets.
Key Drivers and Risks
- The forecast assumes that current U.S. tariffs and trade restrictions, combined with non-tariff barriers facing exporters, will persist deep into 2026. The autumn forecast’s annex noted that “persistently high trade-policy uncertainty continues to weigh on economic activity.”
- Although some relief has come from a recent U.S.–EU framework agreement — which sets a headline tariff rate of 15% on certain EU exports instead of a threatened 30% — the situation remains fraught.
- Export momentum is anticipated to weaken moving into 2026, especially for goods, given slower global demand and the fading of front-loading effects seen earlier in 2025.
- On the upside, the Commission pointed to rising defence-industry spending, EU efforts to boost manufacturing competitiveness, and deployment of Recovery & Resilience funds as possible buffers to slow growth.
Country-Level Outlook
- Germany — the eurozone’s largest economy — is forecast to grow by 1.2% in 2026, up from a previous 1.1% estimate, after a weak 2025. Even so, it remains one of the most exposed to external demand weakness and trade turbulence
- France is expected to expand by just 0.9% in 2026, down from an earlier projection of 1.3%. Domestic uncertainty, labour market issues and weak export growth are cited as drags.
Fiscal and Inflation Context
The Commission also flagged increased public-spending pressures, especially on defence and infrastructure, which will likely raise budget deficits and debt-to-GDP ratios across the bloc. For the euro area, the deficit is projected to rise to 3.3% of GDP in 2026 and public debt to nearly 90% of GDP. Reuters+1
Inflation is forecast to ease further — from around 2.1% in 2025 to 1.9% in 2026 in the euro area — though risks remain from rising energy costs and supply-chain disruptions.
Why the Slow-Down Matters
The modest growth numbers reflect deeper structural and external challenges:
- Europe’s dependence on export-led growth makes it especially vulnerable to disruptions caused by trade policy shifts, supply-chain re-routing and slowing global demand.
- Investment and productivity growth remain subdued, and demographic headwinds are reducing labour force growth and thus potential growth.
- The slower pace of growth raises questions about Europe’s ability to meet long-term objectives of higher living standards, green-industrial transition and competitiveness.
Commission’s Tone: Cautious but Not Pessimistic
Despite the downgrade, Commissioner Dombrovskis struck a cautiously optimistic tone:
“The EU’s economy has beaten expectations in the first nine months of the year. Looking further ahead, we expect growth to continue at a moderate pace despite the challenging external environment.”
The Commission emphasised that the forecast does not assume further major shocks, and there remains upside potential if trade tensions ease, investment picks up, and structural reforms accelerate.
Bottom Line
While the eurozone is not headed for contraction, the outlook for 2026 signals a period of sluggish growth — well below pre-pandemic norms. The combination of trade-policy uncertainty, weak external demand and structural constraints means the EU must rely increasingly on domestic resilience, fiscal investment and competitiveness reforms to sustain momentum.
For policymakers and markets alike, the message is clear: growth is moderate, risks are elevated — and Europe must adapt accordingly.






