The strong economic expansion is projected to slow gradually in the next two years. Private consumption will be supported by real-wage gains and record-high employment, while investment will be boosted by housing construction and corporate activity, as well as disbursements of EU structural funds, albeit at a slower rate. Tight labour market conditions will raise inflation, projected to reach 4% in 2019. As capacity constraints bite, demand is increasingly met by imports, and growth will gradually lose momentum.
Fiscal and monetary policies are expansionary. Tax cuts and public spending increases were introduced in 2018, and further tax cuts are scheduled for 2019. The central bank has maintained policy rates on hold although headline inflation exceeds its central target of 3%. Macroeconomic policies should be tightened gradually to prevent the economy from overheating. This would also help the authorities to meet their target of reducing public debt below 50% of GDP in the medium term.