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Iran conflict threatens to stall Germany’s economic growth, IMK says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 26, 2026 | 3:32 AM

BERLIN, March 26 (Reuters) – A prolonged Iran war could bring German economic growth close to a standstill this year, the IMK ​institute said on Thursday.

If the conflict ‌in the Middle East drags on or escalates, gross domestic product would grow by just 0.2%, the Macroeconomic Policy Institute (IMK) said in a risk scenario. The economy ‌would ​then expand by 1.4% next ⁠year.

In December, IMK ⁠economists had projected growth of 1.2% for 2026.

“In February, we were still thinking about raising our 2026 forecast because the signals were becoming ​increasingly positive,” IMK director Sebastian Dullien said. “The economic effects of the war are now ⁠at least partly spoiling ⁠that and, in the worst case, ​could intensify the risk of deindustrialisation in Germany.”

In its ​main scenario, IMK forecasts growth of 0.9% ‌in 2026, assuming the war does not last beyond the summer and higher energy prices ease. On that basis, the economy would grow ⁠by 1.6% in 2027.

The institute expects the current rise in energy prices to recede by the end of ⁠the year, allowing ‌the positive effects of public ⁠investment and private consumption to outweigh ​the ‌drag from the second half onward.

Inflation ​would then ⁠average 2.4% in 2026 before falling to 1.7% in 2027. In the risk scenario, by contrast, inflation would rise to 3.1% this year.

(Reporting by Klaus Lauer, writing by Maria Martinez, editing by ​Friederike Heine)