Emeritus Professor Joe Nellis is economic adviser at MHA, the accountancy and advisory firm.
The latest Eurozone figures tell a worrying story: modest growth, rising inflation and a fresh energy shock that could derail an already fragile recovery.
The Eurozone economy expanded by only 0.1% in the first quarter of 2026. While that keeps the region out of stagnation, it is hardly the sort of growth that inspires confidence. This is an economy moving forward cautiously, not one gaining real momentum.
At the same time, inflation has risen to 3% in April, in the face of renewed pressure from the energy markets. Europe, still heavily dependent on imported energy, remains exposed whenever global supply fears intensify. This matters because higher energy prices spread quickly through the wider economy. Fuel becomes more expensive, transport costs rise, factories face higher bills and households are left with less money to spend elsewhere.
If the Middle East crisis drags on for several more months, the consequences for Europe could become far more serious. Consumer confidence may weaken again, business investment could be delayed, and manufacturing output — already soft in countries such as Germany — may come under renewed strain. Several member states would feel the pressure sharply.
For the European Central Bank, the numbers create a policy trap. Growth is too weak to celebrate, yet inflation at 3% makes any more interest rate cuts far harder to justify. Supporting the economy while controlling prices is becoming a difficult balancing act.
The danger now is not collapse, but drift: weak growth, externally driven inflation and falling confidence. That combination can quietly erode competitiveness and living standards over time.
Europe has avoided recession, but it has not escaped vulnerability. If the energy shock deepens, today’s slow recovery could quickly become tomorrow’s bigger economic headache.






