Economy | Europe
European Real Wages Near Pre-COVID Levels — Just as the Iran Crisis Threatens to Wipe Out the Gains
After years of real wage erosion, Europeans have almost recovered their pre-COVID purchasing power. The Iran energy crisis is now threatening to undo years of hard-won progress.
After years of real wage erosion, Europeans have almost recovered their pre-COVID purchasing power. The Iran energy crisis is now threatening to undo years of hard-won progress.
- After years of real wage erosion, Europeans have almost recovered their pre-COVID purchasing power.
- The timing is genuinely cruel.
- And then the Iran crisis arrived, with its energy price spike that is adding approximately 1.
After years of real wage erosion, Europeans have almost recovered their pre-COVID purchasing power.
The timing is genuinely cruel. After three years of inflation that eroded real wages across Europe — the period of negative real wage growth between 2021 and 2024 that produced the cost-of-living crisis that dominated European politics — recent data had been showing that nominal wage growth was finally outpacing price increases sufficiently to restore real purchasing power toward pre-pandemic levels. Euronews economic analysis published in the final week of March 2026 confirmed that European real wages were 'near pre-COVID levels' for the first time since 2019.
And then the Iran crisis arrived, with its energy price spike that is adding approximately 1.5 percentage points to eurozone headline inflation in March alone, and the progress is being threatened before workers have had a chance to consolidate it.
The mechanism of real wage erosion through inflation is well-understood economically and viscerally felt at household level. A worker who earns €40,000 per year and whose nominal wage has increased to €43,000 over three years to offset the inflation of 2021-2024 has, in real terms, recovered lost ground only if prices have not increased further. If energy prices now add another 2-3 percent to the cost of the household basket, the real wage gain is partially reversed — not through a nominal wage cut that would be politically visible, but through the invisible erosion of purchasing power that inflation produces.
The ECB's response will determine how much of the gains are preserved. If the bank raises interest rates in response to the energy inflation shock, it slows wage growth alongside inflation — potentially maintaining real wages but at lower nominal levels that reduce credit-financed consumption. If it holds rates and allows inflation to run higher, real wages are eroded more directly. There is no monetary policy response that costs nothing.
Trade unions across Europe have already begun signalling that the Iran energy crisis will be a factor in the autumn 2026 wage negotiation round. Germany's IG Metall, France's CGT, and Italy's CGIL have all published preliminary positions calling for wage settlements that account for the energy cost increases of spring 2026. The wage-price dynamic that central banks spent 2022-2024 fighting is threatening to re-emerge through exactly this channel.