Ireland's economy is on track to contract this year as US trade tariffs hammer exports, marking one of the sharpest forecast reversals in the eurozone.
Ireland's economy is on track to contract this year as US trade tariffs hammer exports, marking one of the sharpest forecast reversals in the eurozone.

The Central Bank of Ireland slashed its 2026 GDP projection to a 2.7 percent contraction from a 1.3 percent expansion forecast in March, blaming a collapse in US-bound exports as transatlantic trade tensions escalate.
"The sharp downward revision reflects a significant deterioration in the external trading environment, particularly the impact of US tariff measures on Irish export volumes," the central bank said in its quarterly economic bulletin published Thursday.
The 400-basis-point swing in just three months makes Ireland the first eurozone member to formally project a full-year contraction tied directly to US trade policy. The central bank had previously forecast growth of 1.3 percent in its March update, before the Trump administration imposed a series of escalating tariffs on European goods. Ireland, home to the European headquarters of many US multinationals including Apple, Pfizer and Google, is disproportionately exposed to transatlantic trade flows. US-bound exports account for roughly one-third of Irish goods exports, a concentration unmatched elsewhere in the currency bloc.
The revision carries implications beyond Ireland's borders. As one of the most open economies in the eurozone, Ireland's GDP trajectory often serves as an early indicator for trade-sensitive peers including Germany and the Netherlands. The European Central Bank, which next meets on July 16, faces growing pressure to address the economic drag from trade disruptions even as services inflation remains sticky. The ECB's deposit rate currently stands at 2.50 percent after the last 25-basis-point cut in April, with money markets pricing roughly 50 basis points of additional easing by year-end, according to swaps data.
The Irish central bank's downgrade also underscores a widening divergence between the eurozone's export-oriented economies and its domestic-demand-driven ones. While Ireland's GDP is forecast to shrink, the ECB's latest staff projections from June show the broader eurozone growing at a modest 0.8 percent in 2026, weighed down by trade headwinds. The last time Ireland's economy contracted on an annual basis was in 2023, when GDP fell 3.2 percent amid a post-pandemic correction in the multinational sector.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.