Eurozone Manufacturing Faces Headwinds Amid Inflation, Supply Chain Woes

The Eurozone manufacturing sector's growth slowed in May as stagnating demand and supply-chain issues driven by Middle East conflicts caused input costs to soar. The S&P Global Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Index fell to 51.6 in May, highlighting challenges from rising prices and supply disruptions. Order books stalled, and export orders fell.


Devdiscourse News Desk | London | Updated: 01-06-2026 13:30 IST | Created: 01-06-2026 13:30 IST
Eurozone Manufacturing Faces Headwinds Amid Inflation, Supply Chain Woes
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Manufacturing growth in the eurozone lost steam in May, impacted by stagnant demand and escalating supply-chain disruptions linked to Middle Eastern conflicts, according to a new survey.

The S&P Global Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Index dropped to 51.6 from April's near four-year high of 52.2, though still above the 50.0 growth threshold.

Input costs soared to a four-year high, with manufacturers passing increased costs onto consumers. Despite continued factory output, it expanded at the slowest rate since January. Policymakers face a delicate task balancing inflation control with faltering demand.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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