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Iceland Economic growth will drop to 2.0% in 2024 and edge up to 2.3% in 2025. Private consumption will ease as real wage growth is modest. Business investment will moderate as financial conditions continue to deteriorate and confidence remains lacklustre. Despite tighter financial conditions, housing investment will pick up to satisfy pent-up demand. Public investment will decline in 2024 and remain subdued in 2025. Goods exports and foreign tourism will slow. The unemployment rate will rise gradually to around 4.5%. In August, the central bank lifted the key policy rate to 9.25%. Consumer price inflation is declining but still at around 8%. It is expected to fall further but remain above target until well into 2025. Fiscal policy is already contractionary and is projected to be tightened further, as planned by the government, to help reduce inflationary pressures and maintain fiscal space. A new tourism strategy should help increase productivity of the tourism sector and reduce pressure on infrastructure and the environment. The economy is gradually slowing The economy is weakening, although growth continues to benefit from strong foreign tourism. Activity in the seafood and aluminium sectors, Iceland’s main goods exports, is easing as demand in major export markets has weakened. Household consumption is moderating as real wage growth is sluggish and dissaving has probably come to an end. Business investment is tailing off as financial conditions are worsening, although business sentiment has improved since the early summer. Public investment is declining. The labour market remains tight, with the unemployment rate at around 3.5%, and the labour force is expanding following continued immigration. With seismic movements on the Reykjanes peninsula ongoing, several thousand inhabitants have been evacuated and activity in the area concerned has largely stopped.
Iceland
Source: OECD Economic Outlook 114 database; Central Bank of Iceland; and OECD Consumer Prices database. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/ohqvie
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2023 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2023