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French central bank sees fourth quarter growth of at least 0.2%

By Thomson Reuters Jan 13, 2026 | 1:02 PM

PARIS, Jan 13 (Reuters) – France’s economy probably grew modestly in the final quarter of last year, with aerospace and defence sectors driving December momentum ‍despite political uncertainty, the Bank of France said in its latest business sentiment survey

The euro zone’s second-biggest economy likely grew “at least” 0.2% in the fourth quarter from the third quarter when it grew 0.5%, the central bank said, leaving its ‌estimate unchanged.

Its monthly survey, which polled ‌executives from roughly 8,500 companies between December 22 and January 7, showed economic activity continued to advance in December, though at a slightly slower pace than in November.

Aerospace and defence-related sectors ​fuelled robust growth in the industrial sector, while services posted more moderate gains. Construction activity remained largely ‍flat, the survey found.

However, the ​outlook for January signals a shift in ​momentum. Industrial activity is expected to slow, linked to slower ‍aerospace production, limited visibility on order books, and heightened uncertainty. By contrast, service-sector firms anticipate stronger activity, at a pace closer to the average of the past decade.

In construction, activity is forecast to remain broadly ‍unchanged, with finishing work continuing to outperform structural work.

The central bank’s monthly uncertainty indicator declined again across all three major sectors ‍but remains ‍at elevated levels, reflecting ongoing concerns about ​France’s 2026 budget.

Lawmakers failed to pass a ​2026 ⁠budget by the end of last year, ‌requiring emergency stop-gap legislation to be passed. They resumed their review of the 2026 budget on Tuesday, but many say that the government will need to bypass parliament with special constitutional powers to get it passed.

(Reporting by Leigh Thomas;Editing ⁠by Alison Williams)