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German economic council cuts growth forecast as energy prices bite

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 3:09 AM

By Maria Martinez

BERLIN, May 27 (Reuters) – The German Council of Economic Experts cut its growth forecast ​for Europe’s largest economy on ‌Wednesday, citing the impact of the Middle East conflict, higher energy prices and U.S. trade policy.

The economists now expect ‌0.5% ​growth this year, down ⁠from a November ⁠forecast of 0.9%, according to their spring report to the government.

For 2027, the panel forecasts growth of ​0.8%.

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Higher energy prices are ⁠reducing household purchasing power ⁠and weighing on consumption, ​the economists said.

Inflation is expected to average ​3.0% in 2026, up from 2.2% ‌in 2025, before easing to 2.8% in 2027.

In a risk scenario in which oil prices rise ⁠to $120 per barrel and remain elevated until October 2026, the advisers said German growth ⁠could ‌slow to 0.2% in 2026 ⁠and 0.5% in 2027, ​while ‌inflation could rise further.

The council ​also warned ⁠that Germany’s long-running economic weakness reflected structural problems, including weaker industrial competitiveness and demographic pressures.

(Reporting by Maria Martinez and Klaus Lauer, Editing by ​Linda Pasquini)