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Germany Halves 2026 Growth, Lifts Inflation on Iran War

  • Adds minister comment in paragraph 4, trade details in paragraphs 6 and 7

BERLIN, April 22 (Reuters) - Germany's economy ministry on Wednesday revised ‌its growth forecasts for 2026 and 2027 downward and raised its inflation projections, as the Iran war drives up oil and gas prices.

The ​government now expects 0.5% growth for 2026, down ​from an earlier projection of 1.0%, and cut its ⁠2027 growth outlook to 0.9% from 1.3%, confirming a ​Reuters report on Thursday.

"The economic recovery expected for this year is ​once again being held back by external geopolitical shocks," Economy Minister Katherina Reiche said.

The war in Iran is driving up energy and raw ​material prices, the minister said, placing financial strain on ​private households and increasing costs for Germany's economy.

The ministry now expects inflation ‌to ⁠accelerate to 2.7% this year and 2.8% in 2027, up from 2.2% last year.

In addition to the war in Iran, international trade faces headwinds from protectionist measures and economic ​fragmentation, hindering ​Germany's export-oriented economy ⁠from leveraging foreign trade to boost growth.

Exports are not expected to rise year-on-year until ​2027, when they are forecast to increase by ​1.3%.

Imports ⁠are expected to grow faster, rising by 1.8% in 2027, which would narrow Germany's trade surplus.

Europe's largest economy has been ⁠struggling ​since the pandemic to regain momentum. ​Heightened competition from China and higher energy costs are posing significant challenges its ​export-driven economic model.

Reporting by Maria Martinez, editing by Kirsti Knolle

Source: Reuters


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