Greek Manufacturing PMI Rises to 6-Month High
2026-03-02 09:05
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The S&P Global Greece Manufacturing PMI rose slightly to 54.4 in February 2026 from 54.2 in January, marking the fastest improvement since August 2025.
Growth was driven by sharper increases in production and new orders, the latter rising at the steepest pace in six months, largely supported by domestic demand.
Firms continued to hire and expand purchasing, although difficulties finding suitably-skilled staff limited the pace of job creation, while backlogs of work accumulated for the first time in ten months.
Input costs rose at the fastest rate in almost a year, driven by higher metals and transportation prices, yet selling price inflation softened as companies sought to balance cost pass-through with competitive pricing.
Supplier performance also improved, delivery delays eased, and inventories were accumulated for the first time in two and ten months.
Manufacturers remained confident of output growth over the next 12 months, supported by planned investments and new projects.