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Ekonomické zprávy
15.11.2024

European Commission has confirmed its forecast for eurozone GDP growth for 2024

  • Autumn Forecast projects real GDP growth in 2024 at 0.9% in the EU and 0.8% in the euro area. For the EU, this is 0.1 pps. lower with respect to spring, while it is unchanged for the euro area.

  • Growth in the EU is expected to pick up to 1.5% in 2025, as consumption is shifting up a gear and investment is set to rebound from the contraction of 2024.

  • In 2026, economic activity is projected to expand by 1.8%, on the back of continued expansion of demand.

  • Growth in the euro area is set to follow similar dynamics and attain 1.3% in 2025 and 1.6% in 2026.

 

  • The disinflationary process that started towards end-2022 continued over the summer.

  • Headline inflation in the euro area is set to more than halve in 2024, from 5.4% in 2023 to 2.4%, before easing more gradually to 2.1% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026.

  • In the EU, the disinflation process is set to be even sharper in 2024, with headline inflation falling to 2.6%, from 6.4% in 2023, and to continue easing to 2.4% in 2025 and 2.0% in 2026.

 

  • Household disposable income kept expanding at a healthy pace in the first half of the year, supported by expanding employment and continued recovery in real wages.

  • By mid-year, the purchasing power of wages had recouped almost half of the loss caused by high inflation. 

  • Households, however, appeared reluctant to consume their extra income.

 

  • At the cut-off date of this forecast, markets priced the euro area deposit facility rate below 3% by the end of the year.

  • By the end of 2025, the policy rate is expected to fall further to around 2%, some 60 basis points lower than expected in spring, and to stabilise around that level for the rest of the forecast horizon.

  • Most central banks in non-euro area Member States are also expected to loosen the monetary stance, with somewhat more pronounced cuts in Poland and especially Romania.

  • Long-term rates in the euro area (10-year) decreased in recent months, but by far less than short-term rates. They are now expected to stay slightly above 2% over the forecast horizon, with the downward adjustment since spring largely reflecting lower inflation expectations.

 

  • The unemployment rate is projected to edge further down, reaching 5.9% in the EU and 6.3% in the euro area in 2026.

  • After the peak reached in 2023 (6.1%), wage growth in the EU is still expected at a healthy pace in 2024 (4.9%). It is then set to slow down markedly to 3.5% and 3% in 2025 and 2026 respectively.

  • Wage growth will be sufficiently above inflation to allow full recoup of real wages by next year in the EU and the following year in the euro area.

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