Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Container ship moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam
Container ship moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam - Credit: Foto-VDW / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Central Bureau for Statistics Netherlands
Statistics Netherlands
dutch economy
job market
Dutch job market
economic growth
economic growth forecast
Thursday, 30 April 2026 - 10:30

Share this article:

Dutch economy grows slightly as job market eases

The Dutch economy grew a modest 0.1 percent in the first three months of 2026, Statistics Netherlands (CBS) reported Thursday. Growth slowed from 0.4 percent in the previous quarter. Over the past year, the economy expanded 1.2 percent.

Household spending stayed flat. Families bought more food and clothing but spent less on transport, petrol, and diesel. The job market also eased slightly. Employers added a net 2,000 jobs, mostly in business and public services, including 1,000 new positions in accommodation and food services.

However, jobs were cut in trade, transport, accommodation, and temporary employment agencies. Unemployment rose by 3,000 people, while job vacancies fell by 6,000. In most sectors, vacancies stayed about the same as late last year but dropped by 2,000 each in the public sector and business services.

“The tightness in the labor market, therefore, eased slightly,” CBS said. There are now 91 open jobs for every 100 unemployed people.

Investment and government spending drove most of the economic growth. Weaker exports held it back. Changes in business inventories also helped.

Business investment rose 0.7 percent, especially in aircraft and machinery. Government consumption increased 0.5 percent, with more money spent on healthcare and public wages.

Exports fell 0.6 percent. Goods exports dropped 1.2 percent, as factories shipped out fewer machines and transport equipment. Service exports rose 0.8 percent. Imports did not change, so the trade balance hurt growth.

Financial services grew the fastest, with value added up 2.1 percent. The public sector (including education and care) rose 0.6 percent. These two areas gave the biggest boost to the economy. Manufacturing fell 1.8 percent, and business services dropped 0.4 percent — the largest drags on growth. Other sectors showed smaller changes.

More like this

Image
Enjoying a drink on a terrace in The Hague
Economic growth in all Dutch provinces last year; Unemployment up in most of them
Image
Container ship moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam
Netherlands saw 1.9 percent economic growth in 2025, incl. 0.5 percent in Q4
Image
A crowded shopping street in Amsterdam
Dutch economic growth slows as weak companies stay in the market, economists warn
Image
A crowded shopping street in Amsterdam
Dutch economy grew 0.4% in Q3; Strongest growth since end-2024
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen trains separately as Oranje open Kansas City World Cup camp
  • ASML and unions finalize social plan to address 1,700 job cuts
  • Archeologists find over 3,000 historical objects in Drenthe stream valley
  • Dutch-led proposal urges phased EU benefits and longer transitions for new members
  • Cabinet explores allowing pepper spray for women in high-risk situations

Top stories

  • Lightning strike halts train services between Amsterdam, Schiphol and Utrecht
  • Netherlands 17th on Global Peace Index in an increasingly unsafe world
  • Falling tree kills driver, hail destroys campsite in Noord-Brabant; More storms today
  • Dutch home prices won't rise further this year: Rabobank
  • New national siren system to be developed as Netherlands keeps air raid alerts

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content