Research Briefing | Oct 17, 2024

Eurozone: Hopes of a strong consumer rebound fade

Hopes of a consumer spending recovery becoming the driving engine of eurozone growth in 2024 have not materialised. Private consumption growth is still unspectacular, mirroring the tepid momentum of the wider economy. Consumption growth will remain unspectacular at 0.8% this year and 1.5% in 2025.

What you will learn:

  • Still-tight monetary policy is a key headwind for consumer spending. Households continue to move their liquid savings into fixed-term deposits to take advantage of high deposit rates. Tight credit conditions have also curbed demand for durable goods.
  • Rate cuts will gradually help, but we’re seeing warning signs in the labour market. We now expect a modest increase in unemployment in 2025, which will add to the moderation in real income growth and induce some precautionary saving.
  • Our forecast risks are balanced and moderate. More front-loaded rate cuts could boost spending by 0.2ppts in 2025. Conversely, a more severe labour market deterioration could shave off 0.4ppts off 2025 spending growth.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

Post

The economic impact of bp in the UK

This report quantifies the economic impact that bp supported in both the UK national and regional economies in 2023.

Find Out More

Post

UK households are willing to pay for greater energy efficiency

For homes with an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) – a measure of a home's energy efficiency – energy spending for an F-rated property was on average £2,000 more since the start of 2022 than for a B-rated property.

Find Out More

Post

The growing importance of energy efficiency in home buying decisions

Our proprietary analysis shows that that homes with a higher Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating sell at a premium.

Find Out More

Post

A lacklustre recovery for the Eurozone’s lukewarm economy

We expect stronger activity in the eurozone in 2025, but growth will remain lacklustre as the consumer recovery lacks momentum. Monetary policy will become less restrictive, but fiscal policy will continue to drag on growth. External demand is set to improve, but prospects are prone to risks from rising protectionism. We anticipate GDP growth of 1.3% in 2025, slightly below consensus.

Find Out More