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RWI Cuts Germany Recovery Outlook on Energy Inflation

BERLIN, June 16 (Reuters) - Germany's economy is expected to grow by 0.8% in both 2026 ​and 2027, as resilient industrial activity offsets only ‌part of the drag from higher energy prices linked to the Iran war, the RWI economic institute said on Tuesday.

In ​March the institute expected growth of 0.9% ​in 2026 and 1.2% in 2027.

The institute said ⁠it had lowered its expectations for the recovery, with ​rising oil, fuel and transport costs increasingly feeding through ​to broader parts of the economy.

It forecast consumer price inflation of 3.1% in 2026 and 2.9% in 2027.

"The current inflation ​surge is not limited to fuel and energy," RWI ​chief economist Torsten Schmidt said. "Higher costs are increasingly working their way ‌through ⁠value chains and will become visible in more and more goods and services."

RWI said private consumption was likely to remain weak as persistent inflation erodes household ​purchasing power, and ​it expects ⁠the economy to stagnate in the second quarter of 2026.

On the other hand, ​the institute said German industry had so ​far ⁠proved more robust than expected, with output, orders and exports rising in the first quarter.

Industry should continue to benefit ⁠from ​stronger exports and higher public ​investment, though elevated energy costs would weigh over time, RWI said.

Reporting by ​Maria Martinez, Editing by Miranda Murray and Linda Pasquini

Source: Reuters


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