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French Central Bank Cuts Growth Outlook as Energy Bites

  • Growth seen at 0.5% in 2026, cut from 0.9%
  • Economy stalling in Q2 after surprise Q1 contraction
  • Inflation raised to 2.5% on higher oil prices

PARIS, June 16 (Reuters) - France's ​economy is growing more slowly than expected after a sluggish start ‌to the year with the Middle East conflict weighing on activity, the central bank said on Tuesday, warning the outlook was hostage to geopolitical developments.

The euro zone's second-biggest economy is set ​to grow 0.5% this year, the Bank of France said in its ​quarterly outlook, cutting its forecast from 0.9% previously.

The downgrade reflects an ⁠unexpected 0.1% contraction in the first quarter and a spike in global ​energy prices since the outbreak of the Iran war at the end of February.

The ​central bank said its forecasts were based on oil futures as of May 21 and therefore did not take into account the latest developments in the Middle East, including a deal ​to halt the conflict, which has helped push oil prices to three-month lows.

After the first-quarter ​pullback in GDP, economic growth is expected to stall in the current quarter, although executives ‌reported ⁠signs of a pickup in June compared with May, according to the Bank of France's monthly business sentiment survey of 8,500 firms.

Looking ahead, growth was expected to accelerate to 0.9% in 2027, revised up from 0.8% previously, and then reach ​1.2% in 2028 ​as consumer spending ⁠and business investment recover.

Inflation is now expected to average 2.5% in 2026 before easing to 1.7% in both 2027 and ​2028 on expectations that energy prices normalise. In March, the ​central bank ⁠had forecast inflation of 1.7% in 2026, 1.4% in 2027 and 1.6% in 2028.

High inflation is eroding households' purchasing power this year and weighing on consumption, which ⁠is expected ​to recover next year as price pressures ease.

Given ​heightened geopolitical uncertainty, the central bank also outlined alternative, less favourable scenarios, which pointed to weaker ​growth and higher inflation than its baseline.

Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Source: Reuters


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