Based in Paris, BNP Paribas' Economic Research Department is composed of economists and statisticians:
The Economic Research department’s mission is to cater to the economic research needs of the clients, business lines and functions of BNP Paribas. Our team of economists and statisticians covers a large number of advanced, developing and emerging countries, the real economy, financial markets and banking. As we foster the sharing of our research output with anyone who is interested in the economic situation or who needs insight into specific economic issues, this website presents our analysis, videos and podcasts.
390289203007 paola.verduci@bnpparibas.com
The Italian economy is showing some resilience: GDP experienced a modest rebound in Q3 2025, and moderate inflation is helping to maintain household purchasing power. We forecast growth to be around 1% over the next two years (1% in 2026 and 0.9% in 2027). Market confidence has been bolstered, as evidenced by improved ratings, due to political stability, fiscal consolidation, and a growing share of public debt held abroad. Exports are benefiting from a robust pharmaceutical sector and intra-EU sales, while trade with the United States remains positive. Despite an historically strong labour market, productivity remains low due to weak intangible investment, limited digitalisation and significant fragmentation within the business sector.
In Q2 2025, Italy's real GDP fell by -0.1% q/q. This decline marks the end of seven consecutive quarters of growth. Investment rose (+1% q/q) but could not compensate for the fall in net exports, while industrial production slipped 1.1% y/y. Despite the challenges, the latest turnover data and qualitative indicators show an increase in activity and new orders, as well as improved business confidence. The labour market remains robust: employment held steady at 24.2 million and the unemployment rate kept falling. Inflation stayed low at 1.7%, enabling purchasing power to rebound (+0.9% q/q)