IMF cuts forecasts for the eurozone

WorldBusiness & Finance
12 Jun 2026 • 3:21 AM MYT
DPA International
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Image from: IMF cuts forecasts for the eurozone
The International Monetary Fund logo stand next to a stage at the conference building of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). (is associated with: «IMF cuts forecasts for the eurozone») Soeren Stache/dpa

The growth outlook for the eurozone is deteriorating due to the ongoing war in Iran, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday.

A report states that economic output in the countries using the single currency is now expected to rise by just 0.9% this year, according to an IMF report. This is 0.5 percentage points lower than had been forecast before the war, the IMF said in a statement

At the same time, headline inflation is expected to rise to 2.8%, which is 0.8 percentage points higher than forecast as recently as January.

According to IMF estimates, growth in 2027 is then expected to be 1.2%, 0.2 percentage points weaker than previously forecast. Economists now expect inflation to reach 2.3% - 0.4 percentage points higher than anticipated at the start of this year.

The Washington-based institution warned that a prolonged energy shock could further fuel inflation and inflation expectations, whilst a loss of confidence or financial difficulties could dampen demand. Meanwhile, a resurgence of the US war against Iran poses an additional risk.

IMF advises more ECB tightening if energy prices rise further

Due to concerns about stagflation, the IMF advised that the European Central Bank (ECB) must tighten key interest rates even more significantly than previously thought this year. On Thursday the ECB raised rates to 2.25% from 2% for the first time since 2023 and blamed the Iran war for the rate hike.

Should energy prices continue to rise, the ECB could be forced to intervene even more drastically, the IMF said.