Key facts
- The IMF has reduced its eurozone growth forecast for the current year to 0.9%.
- The IMF projects eurozone inflation to reach 2.8% this year.
- The European Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate to 2.25%.
- The IMF anticipates an additional 0.25 basis point rate hike from the ECB by year-end.
- The IMF advised euro area nations to tighten fiscal policies to maintain stability.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that the energy price shock stemming from the Middle East conflict will negatively impact eurozone growth more than anticipated, while also contributing to higher inflation. The fund projects eurozone growth to be 0.9% this year, a decrease from its earlier forecast of 1.1%, with a slight increase to 1.2% expected in 2027. Inflation is now forecast to reach 2.8% for the year, exceeding the previous estimate of 2.6% and a significant rise from pre-conflict levels.
The IMF noted that persistent energy market disruptions could weaken consumer confidence and lead to spending pullbacks, even if immediate price surges are temporary. This situation presents a challenge for the European Central Bank (ECB), which recently increased its benchmark interest rate to 2.25% in an effort to curb inflation while mitigating economic damage. The ECB also revised its own 2026 growth forecast downward to 0.8% and raised its inflation projection to 3.0%, well above its 2% target.
The fund emphasized that the immediate priority is to anchor inflation expectations and manage the shock's impact within the existing fiscal capacity, advising against excessive government spending that could inflate public deficits. The IMF anticipates a further 0.25 basis point increase in the ECB's benchmark rate by the end of the year.
