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Inflation back up, pressure back on

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  • Inflation back up, pressure back on
  • April 1, 2026 by
    Paolo Maria Pavan


    What is the situation?


    Dutch inflation rose to 2.7% in March 2026, up from 2.4% in February. The main signal is not broad overheating. It is a renewed cost shock in the parts of the economy that small firms cannot easily avoid: energy rose 6.5% year on year, and services inflation stayed high at 3.8%. Food, beverages, and tobacco rose 2.0%, while industrial goods excluding energy were up just 0.4%. CBS published the data as its flash estimate on 31 March.

    This matters because the inflation mix is hostile to micro and small businesses. Energy volatility has returned, and contracted service costs remain sticky. CPB also warned that higher expectations for the gas and oil markets in early March could add around 0.6 percentage points to Dutch inflation in 2026.

    Analysis


    For small businesses, the inflation impact is felt directly in shrinking profit margins. While headline inflation at 2.7% appears manageable, the true pressure comes from increasing overhead and outsourced operating costs. Key expenses, such as electricity, fuel, software, accounting, logistics, and maintenance, are outpacing many Q1 pricing assumptions, directly eroding margins unless pricing is promptly adjusted.

    The distortion is simple: macro inflation looks moderate, but business reality is harsher because the rising components are exactly the ones founders struggle to defer or renegotiate quickly. If contracts were priced in January based on 2.4% inflation, many firms are already under-recovering costs. The risk is not only a lower margin. It is timing: costs reprice now, while customer repricing usually lags.

    Impact


    H1


    Act now: urgently review Q2 pricing and cash flow. If you depend on mobility, premises, or energy-intensive equipment, March likely changed your cost base before revenue could respond.

    H2


    Audit all service renewals in Q2 and Q3. High services inflation means accounting, software, logistics, maintenance, and other contracted costs may continue to rise even if headline inflation stabilizes.

    H3


    Treat this as an urgent warning: 'normal inflation' masks unstable costs. Build shorter pricing cycles, escalation clauses, and tighter cost monitoring into all contracts and budgets for the rest of 2026 without delay.

    Daily operational takeaway


    Within 72 hours, you must reforecast Q2 cash flow using 2.7% headline inflation, 6.5% energy inflation, and 3.8% services inflation as your baseline stress test. Waiting risks severe shocks to your margins.

    in BOARD BRIEF TODAY
    Paolo Maria Pavan April 1, 2026
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