The Tunisian economy posted a year-on-year growth of 2.6% in the first quarter of 2026, compared with the same period in 2025, according to data from the National Institute of Statistics (INS).
This performance, seemingly encouraging in an uncertain international environment, nevertheless deserves a more nuanced reading.
In fact, the quarterly national accounts show a 0.3% decline in real GDP compared with the fourth quarter of 2025. This divergence between annual momentum and cyclical contraction illustrates an economy in a fragile transition, oscillating between signs of recovery and short-term losses of pace.
This statistical duality is not merely an artefact of measurement. It reflects a growth structure that remains insufficiently consolidated, dependent on external cycles, sector shocks and domestic demand affected by the trade-offs in purchasing power.
A statistical rebound
Without dwelling on the first-quarter figures, the recent trajectory of the Tunisian economy sits within a climate of moderate growth, after a decade of successive shocks marked in particular by the European slowdown, post-pandemic logistical disruptions, energy tensions and pressures on public finances.