Public debt is no real concern in the short term
In September 2021, the lifting of moratorium measures introduced during the pandemic2 does not seem to have created a corporate solvency shock. The government also set up the Retomar programme to serve as a buffer during this transition period.3 Portugal is one of the European countries that resorted to moratoriums the most during the Covid-19 crisis, and at their peak, a third of corporate loans were covered by the mechanism.4 The current surge in production costs, however, increases the risk of corporate defaults and weakens the Portuguese banking system. The banks have continued to clean up their balance sheets and seem to be in a better position to absorb any difficulties in the future. The non-performing loan ratio dropped to 2.3% in February, which is the same level as in year-end 2008.
The public deficit shrank below the 3% threshold to 2.8% of GDP in 2021. Thanks to the rebound in growth, the public debt ratio declined sharply to 127.4% of GDP in 2021, from 135.2% in 2020, but Portugal is still the third most heavily indebted country in the Eurozone. In the short term, the country’s sovereign risk will be largely contained. Portugal benefits from fiscal support provided by the new European mechanisms (SURE job support programme, European Recovery and Resilience Facility). The government also has major cash reserves (EUR15.6 bn or 7.2% of GDP in Q4 2021) that it can use to meet any future repayment deadlines.
February’s legislative election strengthened the position of the Socialist Prime Minister António Costa. Unlike the 2019 election, the Socialist party won a majority in parliament with 120 seats out of a total of 230 (up from 108 previously) to the detriment of the Social-Democrats, which lost 12 seats, and the leftist block, which lost 14 seats, bringing their total to 77 and 5, respectively. The election was also marked by the breakthrough of the far-right party Chega, which gained 11 seats, bringing its total to 12.