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Eurostat Report Signals Modest Contraction In European Services Production

Overview Of Recent Sectoral Trends

New data released by Eurostat showed seasonally adjusted services production declining by 0.3% in both the euro area and the wider European Union during February. The decline followed stronger performance in January, when services production increased 1.0% in the euro area and 0.4% across the EU. Despite the monthly slowdown, annual figures remained positive, with services production rising 1.4% year-on-year in the euro area and 1.3% across the EU.

Sector-Specific Performance

Within the euro area, transportation and storage activities recorded a modest monthly increase of 0.2%, while accommodation and food services declined 0.6% and real estate activities fell 0.4%. Information and communication services experienced the sharpest monthly contraction, dropping 2.0%. At the same time, professional, scientific and technical activities increased 0.5%, while administrative and support services remained broadly stable.

A similar trend emerged across the EU, although transportation and storage services declined 0.3%. Meanwhile, professional and scientific activities recorded a stronger monthly growth of 1.0%, while administrative and support services posted a slight increase of 0.1%.

Member State Dynamics

Performance varied significantly between member states during the month. Estonia recorded the steepest monthly decline at 16.3%, followed by Luxembourg at 9.5% and Denmark at 3.0%. By contrast, Bulgaria posted the strongest monthly increase at 4.6%, while Hungary and Poland recorded gains of 3.7% and 1.4% respectively.

Year-On-Year Performance And Sectoral Leadership

From an annual perspective, information and communication services remained one of the strongest-performing sectors, increasing 4.0% in the euro area. Professional, scientific and technical activities also recorded solid annual growth, rising 2.3% in the euro area and 3.0% across the EU. Accommodation and food services remained the only major sector to post an annual decline, falling 0.8% in the euro area. At the national level, Hungary led annual growth with an increase of 7.6%, while Bulgaria and Slovenia each recorded growth of 6.3%. Meanwhile, Romania experienced the steepest annual contraction at 5.3%, with Denmark and Lithuania also reporting declines compared with the previous year.

Cyprus Tourism Regains Its Footing After A Turbulent Spring

Cyprus’ tourism sector is showing signs of renewed stability, even as June arrivals slipped 1.7% year on year, according to Deputy Minister of Tourism Kostas Koumis, who said the latest figures point to a market that has now returned to a steadier path.

The comments followed the release of new data from the Cyprus Statistical Service (Cystat), which showed that 489,965 tourists visited the island in June 2026, down from 498,527 in the same month last year.

A Softer First Half, But Not A Break in Momentum

For the January-to-June period, Cyprus recorded 1,656,015 tourist arrivals, representing a 10.1% decline from 1,843,013 in the first half of 2025. Even so, Koumis argued that the underlying picture was more resilient than the headline decline suggests.

He described June as “satisfactory under the circumstances,” saying it confirmed that the tourism sector had moved back onto a stable trajectory after a difficult spring. In particular, he pointed to the weaker performance in March and April, when the conflict in the Middle East weighed on travel demand and disrupted normal seasonal patterns.

“It also confirms that the actions taken by the deputy ministry, together with the entire tourism industry, to manage the extraordinary situation our country’s tourism sector faced from March 1 onwards have clearly produced improved results,” Koumis said.

Reading Beyond The Headline Numbers

The deputy minister also argued that the first-half performance, while down year on year, should be viewed in context. Arrivals in the first six months of 2026 were still 0.2% higher than during the same period in 2024, suggesting that the market has not lost its broader momentum.

“If we take into account the very significant losses recorded during March and April, which heavily influence any analysis, the first-half performance should also be considered satisfactory,” he said. “At the same time, a window of hope is opening for a further reduction in the overall decline for the current year.”

Targeted Support For Key Markets

Koumis said the government is now focusing on a deeper analysis of market trends rather than relying solely on overall arrival figures. That review, he added, has identified several geographic markets that have been affected and still require support to sustain long-term growth.

“As a government, and as the competent deputy ministry, we are certainly not stopping at simply reading the numbers,” he said. “A thorough analysis shows that several geographical markets have been affected and still require careful support to ensure their successful and uninterrupted development in the coming years.”

According to Cystat, the United Kingdom remained Cyprus’ largest source market in June, accounting for 33.0% of arrivals, or 161,913 visitors.

Looking Ahead To Next Year

Koumis said planning is already underway for the years ahead, with next year at the centre of the government’s coordination efforts with the tourism industry.

“We are continuing to work hard on planning for the coming years, with next year naturally at the centre of our efforts, in cooperation with the country’s tourism industry,” he said. “Our ultimate objective remains the continuation of our collective effort to transform Cyprus into a sustainable, digitally smart and accessible destination for everyone.”

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