Economy June 12, 2026 05:07 AM

Bundesbank: Fiscal Boost Keeps Germany From Sliding Into Recession Amid War-Driven Shock

Defence and infrastructure outlays are expected to offset energy-price headwinds, but inflation risks and weak private activity cloud the outlook

By Avery Klein
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

The Bundesbank says elevated government spending - notably on defence and infrastructure - will prevent Germany from falling into recession this year despite a war-driven surge in energy prices and elevated inflation. It trimmed growth forecasts for 2026 and 2027, flagged upside risks to inflation and persistent core price pressures through 2028, and warned that higher rates and uncertainty will weigh on private investment.

Bundesbank: Fiscal Boost Keeps Germany From Sliding Into Recession Amid War-Driven Shock
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • Expansionary fiscal policy - particularly defence and infrastructure spending - is expected to prevent Germany from entering a recession in the summer half-year.
  • Growth forecasts were revised down to 0.5% in 2026 (from 0.6%) and 0.8% in 2027 (from 1.3%).
  • Underlying (core) inflation is projected to remain above the ECB's 2% target through 2028, supporting the prospect of further rate increases.

Germany's recent rise in public expenditure - concentrated on defence and major infrastructure projects - is expected to be the decisive factor preventing the economy from contracting this year, the Bundesbank said on Friday. The central bank described the fiscal expansion as sufficient to largely offset the economic shock from the war in the Middle East, which has pushed up energy prices and added to inflationary pressures across Europe.

The Bundesbank noted that Germany's economy has been broadly stagnant over the past three years. Policymakers had anticipated that a notable increase in government spending would help restart growth in the current year, but that recovery has been undermined by a war-related rise in energy costs.


The bank revised its growth outlook downward. It now expects the economy to expand by 0.5% in 2026, compared with a 0.6% forecast published in December. The forecast for 2027 has been cut to 0.8% from 1.3%.

Those revisions come a day after the European Central Bank lowered its own euro zone growth projection while still deciding to raise interest rates to combat inflation. In that context the Bundesbank emphasized fiscal policy's offsetting role. "Expansionary fiscal policy will be the only thing preventing a decline in gross domestic product in the summer half-year," the bank said. "It will more or less offset the impact of the war in the Middle East."

The Bundesbank quantifies the contribution from government spending - particularly defence outlays - as a cumulative boost of 1.3 percentage points to growth through 2028. At the same time it warned that the surge in energy costs will erode household purchasing power and that firms may face mounting supply bottlenecks alongside weaker demand.

In addition, the central bank said uncertainty and elevated interest rates will act as a drag on private investment, even if the direct effects of the war are expected to abate in the years ahead.

"Risks are clearly tilted to the upside for inflation and to the downside for economic activity," the Bundesbank said.

The bank does not expect underlying price growth - that is, inflation excluding volatile food and energy components - to fall back below the ECB's 2% target during its forecast horizon through 2028. Overall inflation in Germany is projected at 2.9% this year and 2.7% in 2027.

Core inflation is forecast at 2.6% for this year, 2.5% in 2027 and 2.3% in 2028. Those projections underpin Bundesbank chief Joachim Nagel's observation that the ECB would be prepared to raise interest rates again in July, if needed, and mirror the ECB's assessment that returning core inflation to 2% will be challenging.


While the Bundesbank attributes Germany's avoidance of an immediate recession to fiscal stimulus, it also highlighted several constraints on a more durable, private-sector led upswing: elevated energy costs hurting household incomes, potential supply-chain frictions and weaker demand for firms' products, and the dampening impact of higher borrowing costs and uncertainty on investment decisions.

Risks

  • Upside risk to inflation driven by war-related energy-price increases - this affects consumer prices and monetary policy decisions, with implications for bond markets and fixed-income sensitive sectors.
  • Downside risk to economic activity from high energy costs, supply bottlenecks and weaker demand - this weighs on consumer-facing sectors and industrial producers.
  • Higher interest rates and ongoing uncertainty are likely to drag on private investment - impacting capital goods, construction and technology spending.

More from Economy

New Fed leadership raises uncertainty as U.S. stocks cool after strong run Jun 12, 2026 After DOJ Drops $1.8 Billion 'Weaponization' Fund, Allies Turn to Federal Tort Claims Act Jun 12, 2026 Bundesbank: Germany to Avoid 2026 Recession as Public Spending Counters War Shock Jun 12, 2026 China's new yuan loans rise to 520 billion yuan in May but miss analyst forecasts Jun 12, 2026 Turkey to Hit Budget Deficit Goal While Capping Pump Prices, Minister Says Jun 12, 2026