Germany’s economy is likely to slip into a technical recession this year as an energy ​price shock triggered by the war in Iran ‌derails a fragile recovery, the DIW economic institute said on Wednesday, cutting its 2026 growth forecast in half.

DIW Berlin now ​expects Europe’s largest economy to grow by ​0.5% this year and 0.8% in 2027, around ⁠half a percentage point lower than forecast in spring.

The ​institute said output was likely to contract slightly in ​both the second and third quarters before stabilising toward the end of the year.

Many economists define a recession as two ​consecutive quarters of decline in a country’s gross domestic ​product.

DIW said higher oil and gas prices were pushing up consumer ‌prices, ⁠weakening household purchasing power and increasing uncertainty for companies.

Inflation is expected to reach 2.9% this year and 3% in 2027, above the European Central Bank’s target ​of 2%.

“The energy ​price shock ⁠is noticeably slowing the recovery — but we are not experiencing a repeat of ​2022/23,” DIW’s head of forecasting, Geraldine Dany-Knedlik, ​said, ⁠adding that energy supply remained secure and Germany was less dependent on fossil fuel imports than after Russia’s full-scale ⁠invasion ​of Ukraine.

DIW added that public ​spending, including higher defence expenditure and infrastructure funds, was preventing an even ​sharper downturn.

Source:  Reuters