European growth faces pressure from US tariffs, competition from China

European growth faces pressure from US tariffs, competition from China

The biggest challenge for most EU nations is gaining access to the US market under President Donald Trump’s tariff blitz.

Europe growth
Shipping containers stacked at the commercial port in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, but EU economic and export growth expected to remain sluggish. (EPA Images pic)

The London-based European Bank for Reconstruction and Development slightly downgraded its growth forecast for its regions in 2026, while revising upwards its expectations for growth this year.

“The first pressure point everybody has been thinking about is access to the US market,” Beata Javorcik, chief economist at the EBRD, told AFP.

Exports from EBRD countries to the United States grew in the first quarter of the year in anticipation of President Donald Trump’s tariffs kicking in, before declining in the second quarter.

“But these averages hide a lot of differences between countries,” Javorcik said.

For example, Kazakhstan saw increased exports of silver and gold bullion to the United States, while Hungary benefited from shipments of pharmaceuticals and computers.

In contrast, Slovenia’s exports suffered due to its integration into Switzerland’s pharmaceutical supply chains — a country whose imports to the United States are taxed at 39 %.

The EBRD now forecasts growth of 3.1%  in 2025, slightly up from its May projection of 3.0%.

However, the increase to 3.3-percent growth expected next year is weaker than it initially forecast, dragged down by Romania and the Balkan countries.

The institution also cited pressures related to increased competition from China in export markets and limited fiscal headroom in government budgets.

The OECD on Tuesday said the global economy will grow more than previously forecast this year after absorbing the shock of Trump’s tariffs, but noted that their full impact remains uncertain.

The EBRD was founded in 1991 to help former Soviet bloc nations embrace free-market economies, but has since extended its reach to the Middle East and North Africa.

Stay current - Follow FMT on WhatsApp, Google news and Telegram

Subscribe to our newsletter and get news delivered to your mailbox.