Negotiated wages in the Euro Area rose by 2.95% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2025, accelerating from an upwardly revised 1.89% in the previous quarter, signaling a pickup in pay growth but remaining well below the 5.4% peak seen in 2024. The rebound supports the ECB’s view that there is no immediate need to cut interest rates further, as wage dynamics remain consistent with a gradual easing in inflation pressures. After keeping its deposit rate at 2% for a fifth consecutive meeting, ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasized close monitoring of salaries given their impact on services inflation, which remains above 3%. The ECB expects inflation to stabilize around its 2% target as wage growth moderates, though it sees the risk of slower wage easing as an upside inflation threat. At the same time, policymakers are wary of an excessive slowdown in pay, with Euro Area inflation having fallen to 1.7% in January and projected to stay near or slightly below 2% in the coming years.
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Eurozone Negotiated Wage Growth Quickens in Q4
Negotiated wages in the Euro Area rose by 2.95% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2025, accelerating from an upwardly revised 1.89% in the previous quarter, signaling a pickup in pay growth but remaining well below the 5.4% peak seen in 2024. The rebound supports the ECB’s view that there is no immediate need to cut interest rates further, as wage dynamics remain consistent with a gradual easing in inflation pressures. After keeping its deposit rate at 2% for a fifth consecutive meeting, ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasized close monitoring of salaries given their impact on services inflation, which remains above 3%. The ECB expects inflation to stabilize around its 2% target as wage growth moderates, though it sees the risk of slower wage easing as an upside inflation threat. At the same time, policymakers are wary of an excessive slowdown in pay, with Euro Area inflation having fallen to 1.7% in January and projected to stay near or slightly below 2% in the coming years.