What is the situation?
CBS says the March 2026 business-cycle picture weakened further.
Nine of thirteen indicators were below their long-term trend. Consumer confidence fell to -30 from -24 in February, while the economic climate component dropped to -54.
Business investment in tangible fixed assets was down 1.4% year on year in January.
Unemployment reached 4.1% or 416,000 people, and vacancies stood at 380,000 in Q4 2025. GDP still grew 0.5% in Q4 2025, with exports up 1.1% in January, so this is not a collapse. It is a slowdown with weaker demand signals and more caution across households and firms.
Also note one correction: CBS reported bankruptcies were up 11% month on month in February, not 17%.
Analysis
The real signal is not recession panic. It is shrinking the room for error. Micro and small businesses usually feel this earlier than macro data shows: pricing resistance appears before revenue drops clearly, payment discipline weakens before bankruptcies spike, and hiring stress eases only slightly while payroll remains expensive.
The export and GDP numbers soften the headline, but they do not protect a small local operator selling discretionary services, retail, hospitality, or project-based B2B work.
Macro stability can exist alongside micro fragility. That is what the distortion boards should watch now.
This is a margin-and-cash discipline phase, not a growth-at-all-costs phase.
Impact
H1
Review and immediately tighten pricing, discounts, and payment terms. Assume weaker pricing power and slower customer decisions in discretionary B2C and project-based B2B. Act to protect margins.
H2
Re-test hiring and expansion assumptions. The labor market is a little less tight, but not cheap. Vacancies remain high, unemployment is only 4.1%, and payroll pressure has not disappeared.
H3
Expect more selective competition and slower investment cycles. When firms delay capital expenditure, and consumers stay cautious, small businesses with weak cash buffers or concentrated client exposure become structurally more vulnerable.
Daily operational takeaway
Within 72 hours, conduct a stress test: reduce revenue by 7%, extend average payment delay by 15 days, and halt all price increases for six months.
Adjust spending and sales priorities based on outcomes.
