Growth still solid in 2025, with investment taking over from tourism
In 2024, growth remained much stronger than in the rest of the region (around 0.5% on average in the eurozone) thanks to buoyant tourism and a rebound in consumption. The Portuguese economy should continue to outperform in 2025, despite the expected slowdown in tourism after two years of exceptional growth. This should be offset by the acceleration in domestic demand. First, private consumption will continue to be buoyed by the ongoing positive growth in real wages thanks to easing inflation and a durably tight labour market, and the reduction in the income tax rate for the majority of households. At the same time, business investment should accelerate as a result of the gradual improvement in financing conditions – the European Central Bank (ECB) having launched its monetary easing cycle in June 2024 – and the reduction in the corporate tax rate from 21% to 19% in 2025 (from 17% to 15% for SMEs on the first €50,000 of taxable income) provided that it is approved and enacted. Above all, public investment is set to rise sharply thanks to the increase in European funds. The country is one of the main beneficiaries of the Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRP), with EUR 13.9 billion in grants and €2.7 billion in loans over the 2021-2026 period. According to the government's timetable, more than a third of the funds should be disbursed in 2025 alone, compared with 20% of the total in 2024. Furthermore, while tourism (17% of GDP and 50% of service exports in 2019) is likely to slow, exports should remain robust thanks to resilient global demand and continued gains in market share, particularly in the automotive, machinery, IT and telecoms sectors. However, the external contribution to growth will be less significant than in 2024, due to a rebound in imports in the wake of investment.
Slight deterioration in public finances
Despite the substantial budgetary support linked to the cost of living, public finances improved considerably in 2022 and 2023, thanks to strong growth in nominal GDP and an outperformance in revenue. Conversely, despite the withdrawal of these support measures, the budget surplus has contracted sharply in 2024 mainly as a result of the decrease in income tax. In 2025, public finances are expected to deteriorate slightly, partly as a result of further tax cuts sought by the centre-right government and partly as a result of increased public investment under the RRP. After being financed almost exclusively by grants between 2021 and 2024 (with a neutral impact on the budget balance), it will be partly financed by loans in 2025, this time with a negative impact on the public accounts. It should be pointed out, however, that in the absence of a Parliamentary majority, the centre-right government will necessarily require the support of the Socialist Party (PS) or the far-right Chega party to pass its reforms and secure approval for the 2025 budget, both of which are far from certain. While the public accounts could return to a (slight) deficit in 2025, public debt will remain on a clear downward trajectory.
After returning to a large surplus in 2023, the current account improved further in 2024. It should remain in substantial surplus in 2025, despite the rebound in imports, which will widen the structural deficit in the goods balance. However, the deficit will continue to be more than offset by the surplus on the balance of services, fuelled mainly by income from tourism. Similarly, the surplus on the balance of income will be maintained (0.7%), with remittances from the Portuguese diaspora making up for dividends repatriated by foreign investors. Last, with the country receiving even greater European funding than in 2024, the capital account surplus will increase even further.
Centre-right minority government promises political instability
Early parliamentary elections in March 2024 following the resignation of former Socialist Prime Minister Antonio Costa after he was named in an investigation into influence peddling resulted in a fragmented Parliament. Having led the polls, the PSD (centre-right, 80 seats out of 230) secured the appointment of its leader Luis Montenegro as Prime Minister despite the absence of a majority. Thus, in order to pass reforms, the PSD will require the support of the Socialist Party (78 seats) or the far-right Chega party, whose number of MPs jumped from 12 to 50 in 2024, and with which the PSD has refused to form a governing coalition. Against this backdrop, and despite the Socialists' willingness to negotiate, a vote on the 2025 budget cannot be guaranteed. In the event of failure, the President of the Republic may be forced to dissolve Parliament again, as was the case in 2021. Whatever the outcome of these negotiations, the currently fragmented Parliament spells a period of uncertainty and possible political instability.