Business
Rising Debt and Fiscal Strains Put Europe’s Budgets Under Pressure
Europe’s public finances are facing renewed strain as governments unveil their 2026 spending plans, with debt and deficits climbing across the eurozone. Economists warn that markets, once patient during years of emergency stimulus, are growing less forgiving as borrowing surges again.
According to the International Monetary Fund’s latest Fiscal Monitor, the eurozone’s overall budget deficit is expected to widen from 3.2% of GDP in 2025 to 3.4% in 2026, reaching 3.7% by 2030. The region’s debt-to-GDP ratio is also projected to rise from 87.8% in 2025 to 92.2% by the end of the decade. These figures signal a gradual but persistent deterioration in fiscal discipline after years of post-pandemic spending.
The IMF’s projections highlight major differences among member states. France and Belgium are expected to record some of the steepest increases in debt, while Germany — long regarded as a model of restraint — will see its ratio climb from 64.4% to 73.6% by 2030, driven by a new fiscal package and higher defence spending. Italy’s debt, already among the highest in the world, will remain largely stable around 137% of GDP.
In contrast, Spain, Portugal, and Greece are charting a path toward debt reduction. Portugal’s debt is forecast to fall from 90.9% in 2025 to 77.4% by 2030, while Greece’s is expected to drop from 146.7% to 130.2%. Ireland remains the bloc’s standout performer, with debt falling below 30% of GDP by the decade’s end.
Goldman Sachs economists say fiscal policy will once again dominate the eurozone’s economic outlook next year, led by Germany’s stimulus programme, France’s budget tensions, and rising defence outlays. Berlin’s deficit is expected to expand from 2.9% to 3.7% of GDP, while France’s remains high at just above 5%.
Analysts at the Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA) note that Europe’s fiscal paths are diverging sharply. “Within Europe’s largest sovereigns, France, the UK, Germany, Spain and Italy appear under pressure, whereas Portugal, Ireland and Greece stand out as relative outperformers,” said Ken Egan, senior director at KBRA.
Egan warned that structural challenges — from ageing populations to climate transition costs and rearmament — are intensifying fiscal risks. Defence spending alone could reach 3.5% of GDP by 2035, adding further pressure to national budgets.
Markets are already reacting. Rising bond yields across the eurozone have pushed up borrowing costs, with KBRA estimating that a one-percentage-point increase in yields could lift annual interest payments by 0.46% of GDP within three years. For Germany, that could mean an additional €20 billion in yearly costs.
As nearly half of Europe’s public debt is set to be refinanced within the next three years, governments face growing scrutiny from investors. “The focus should shift from investing more to investing better,” Egan advised, urging stricter spending reviews and smarter capital planning.
With fiscal discipline back at the heart of economic policy debates, the eurozone is entering a new phase — one where debt management and market confidence may determine the stability of Europe’s financial future.
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