Research Briefing
| Jul 3, 2024

We expect employment growth in the eurozone to continue slowing despite the economic recovery gathering speed. Future employment will be constrained by demographics and by the unemployment rate falling only slightly, given it is at a historical low and close to its long-term natural level. This will favour less dormant wage growth than before the pandemic.

What you will learn:

  • There is structural scarcity of adequate candidates in the pool of unemployed, and an ageing population will limit the scope for an increase in participation, absent changes in policy, preferences, or culture. But the recovery in productivity and a contained pick-up in hours worked as labour hoarding unwinds will prevent a significant tightening in the labour market.
  • In the short run, nominal wage growth will continue to slow as the inflation shock unwinds and workers recoup real income losses. But in the medium term, the combination of stronger demand and not-so-responsive supply should encourage reallocation in the labour market and make wages advance less sluggishly than before the pandemic, which will enhance disposable income and support spending. Reduced costs thanks to recovering productivity will offset the inflationary impact of less anaemic pay growth.
  • The risks to the employment outlook are balanced. If the recovery disappoints, then companies may pause hiring as they reassess business expansion expectations. Stronger-than-expected migrant inflows would support job growth by alleviating supply-side constraints.

Back to Resource Hub

Related topics

Eurozone: When forward guidance blurs guidance
Eurozone: The fiscal consolidation conundrum for governments


Find Out More

What Trump 2.0 would mean for European growth

A second Trump presidency could have a moderate impact on European growth based on our simulation of his proposed policies. In the most extreme protectionist scenario, the eurozone economy would be 0.4% smaller than in our baseline forecast by 2029.


Find Out More

European CRE virtual roundtable – Top questions we received

In our recent virtual roundtable event for commercial real estate, we discussed our expectation for eurozone interest rate cuts in H2, starting this month, despite the recent uptick in inflation and negotiated wage data.


Find Out More

Zone Euro : les marges bénéficiaires des entreprises continuent de baisser

Profit margins in the eurozone have largely dropped back towards their long-term pre-pandemic average, after they increased faster than wages during the post-pandemic rebound. But we think margins will narrow further as wages catch up to inflation and productivity remains weak.


Find Out More