• Skip to content
  • Skip to navigation
You are currently in the Global version of the Grant Thornton website. Would you like to visit our United States website?
Go to:
grantthornton.com
  • About us
    • Why Grant Thornton
    • Culture and experience
    • Global scale and capability
    • Leadership, governance and quality
    • Meet our International Business Centre Directors
    • Join our network
  • Global locations
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia-Pacific
    • Europe
    • Middle East
  • Services
    • Advisory
      • Advisory
      • Business consulting services
      • Business process solutions
      • Business risk services
      • Cybersecurity
      • Forensic services
      • Mergers and acquisitions
      • Recovery and reorganisation
      • Transactional advisory services
      • Valuations
      • Sustainability advisory
    • Assurance
      • Assurance
      • IFRS
      • Audit quality monitoring
      • Global audit technology
      • Sustainability assurance
    • Tax
      • Tax
      • Corporate and business tax
      • Direct international tax
      • Global mobility services
      • Indirect international tax
      • Transfer pricing
      • Africa tax desk
      • Sustainability tax
  • Industries
    • Asset management
    • Automotive
    • Banking
    • Business services
    • Energy and natural resources
    • Healthcare
    • Insurance
    • Life sciences
    • Media
    • Not for profit
    • Private equity
    • Public sector
    • Real estate and construction
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Telecommunications
    • Travel, tourism and leisure
  • Topics
    • Latest insights
      • Latest insights
      • Thriving through disruption
      • Scaling sustainability
      • CFO success: Inspiring change in female mid-market leadership
      • Trade in transition
      • Navigating tariffs
      • Women in Business 2025
    • Growing internationally
      • Growing internationally
      • Thriving through disruption
      • Trade in transition
      • Navigating tariffs
      • Top five constraints to international business in the mid-market
      • Brand and international marketing – breaking global barriers
      • The key to international business: Investing in people
      • Building resilience in international business
      • International business: Mid-market growth and expansion
    • Diversity, equity and inclusion
      • Diversity, equity and inclusion
      • CFO success: Inspiring change in female mid-market leadership
      • Women in Business 2025: Impacting the missed generation
      • Women in tech: A pathway to gender balance in top tech roles
      • Women in leadership: A pathway to better performance
      • Women in Business 2024: Pathways to parity
      • Women in Business 2023: The push for parity
    • Environmental, social and governance (ESG)
      • Environmental, social and governance (ESG)
      • Scaling sustainability
      • The journey to a sustainable future
      • Promoting ESG excellence through tax
      • Understanding the impact of environmental taxes
      • Engaging with incentives to drive your ESG goals
      • Transparency and tax governance in the ESG era
    • International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
      • International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
      • Example Financial Statements
      • IFRS 8
      • IFRS 16
      • IAS 36
      • IFRS 17
    • Tax
      • Tax
      • Pillar 2
      • Global expatriate tax guide
      • International indirect tax guide
      • Global transfer pricing guide
  1. Home
  2. Press releases
  3. 2015
  4. Europe looks beyond Greece as business optimism hits a fresh high

Europe looks beyond Greece as business optimism hits new high

07 Jul 2015

Europe looks beyond Greece as business optimism hits a fresh high

Prior to Greece’s 'No vote' on Sunday, business optimism in Europe had surged ahead to its highest level in five years, despite the ongoing uncertainty over the future of Greece and its continued membership of the single currency.

According to the Grant Thornton International Business Report (IBR), a quarterly global survey of 2,580 businesses, economies in Europe and beyond, are buoyed by improving business growth expectations and are looking beyond the problems in Greece.

Business optimism around the world jumped in the last quarter, from net 33% to 45%.  Confidence in the European Union (EU) increased by 20 percentage points over the quarter to reach 58%, beating pre-crisis highs. Optimism in the eurozone leapt from 34% to 54% over the same period. Germany is now the most optimistic economy in the IBR at 92% (Q1= 59%). Businesses in the UK, Spain, France and Italy also posted significant improvements in their outlook.

Francesca Lagerberg, global leader for tax services at Grant Thornton, commented: “Business confidence in Europe has proved extremely resilient in the first half of 2015. In a period where financial markets and politicians have once again been spooked by the Greek situation, businesses appear to be looking past the issue. Supported by strong revenue and profit growth expectations, businesses are forecasting a strong 12 months. I think that despite the outcome of the referendum in Greece, European businesses will remain optimistic.

No doubt there is also a feeling among business leaders that they have seen this before, and that there looks still to be some way to go before it’s resolved. In the meantime, Europe's banks have increased their capital buffers and are thus better placed to cope with a Grexit; other previously troubled economies such as Ireland, Spain and Portugal are growing; while we should remember that Greece accounts for less than 2% of eurozone GDP.

That said, business leaders must make sure they keep contingency plans robust and avoid being caught out, should a Greek default cause an unplanned exit from the eurozone. There remains a lot of negotiation to be done between Greece , the ECB and the IMF.”

Optimism in Europe is underpinned by exceptional levels of expectation on revenues: net 52% of businesses expect growth over the next 12 months, the highest since 2008. Germany (91%) leads the way, supported by France, Spain and Ireland, all of which reported increases in expectations. There is also good news for workers in Europe, with net 70% of companies planning to offer their employees pay rises in the next year, up from 55% in the previous quarter.

Francesca Lagerberg continued: “Rising revenue and profitability growth are very welcome signs for the regional economy, particularly given ongoing political uncertainty, and increasing salaries are a sure sign that businesses believe the recovery has truly taken hold. And of course, there is a virtuous cycle here: higher salaries should boost consumption, further boosting business growth.”

Global outlook

Europe is not alone in its sentiment that the next 12 months will be good for business. The three largest economies in the world all saw sharp upswings in optimism: the United States (up 11pp to 54%), China (up 8pp to 46%) and Japan (up 25pp to 8%) also report an uplift in levels of optimism.

However, the picture is not universally positive. Brazil, one of the leading emerging economies of the last decade, is seeing a rapid deterioration in confidence and expectations. Over the past year optimism has fallen 56pp to -24%, the biggest negative swing reported by a major economy in the survey over this period. Revenue growth expectations there have plummeted by 29pp to 28% over the same period.

Francesca Lagerberg concluded: “With so many large economies reporting increased confidence, the global economy is clearly headed in the right direction. Business growth feeds on confidence - the confidence to make an acquisition, to expand abroad, to hire new people - and we'll be watching closely to see if this momentum can be maintained in the face of some relatively severe geopolitical headwinds."

Notes to editors

The Grant Thornton International Business Report (IBR) provides insight into the views and expectations of more than 10,000 businesses per year across 36 economies. This unique survey draws upon 22 years of trend data for most European participants and 11 years for many non-European economies. More information: www.grantthornton.global

Questionnaires are translated into local languages with each participating country having the option to ask a small number of country specific questions in addition to the core questionnaire. Fieldwork is undertaken on a quarterly basis, primarily by telephone. IBR is a survey of both listed and privately held businesses. The data for this release are drawn from interviews with more than 2,500 chief executive officers, managing directors, chairmen or other senior executives from all industry sectors conducted in May 2015.

Connect Connect

  • Meet our people
  • Contact us
  • Global reach

About About

  • About us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Modern slavery statement
  • GPPC

Legal Legal

  • Privacy policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Site map
  • Unauthorised trademark use
  • Transparency report 2024
  • Cookie Preferences

Services Services

  • Advisory
  • Assurance
  • Tax

Follow usFollow us

© 2025 Grant Thornton International Ltd (GTIL) - All rights reserved. "Grant Thornton” refers to the brand under which the Grant Thornton member firms provide assurance, tax and advisory services to their clients and/or refers to one or more member firms, as the context requires. GTIL and the member firms are not a worldwide partnership. GTIL and each member firm is a separate legal entity. Services are delivered by the member firms. GTIL does not provide services to clients. GTIL and its member firms are not agents of, and do not obligate, one another and are not liable for one another’s acts or omissions.