Data extracted in March 2025

Planned update of the article: 12 June 2025

Highlights

A line chart showing the monthly total market production for the years 2015-24 for the EU and the euro area. Data are seasonally adjusted, where 2021=100.
Total market production, EU, EA, 2015-24, (seasonally adjusted data, 2021=100)

The total market production index (TMPI) is a new composite indicator that combines 4 short-term business statistics indicators covering most of the market economy, i.e. production in industry, construction, trade and services, excluding public and financial services (see methodological notes for details). Due to the relatively wide coverage of the TMPI the index gives a first impression on the evolution of the European market economy every month.


Recent development of total market production

In December 2024, compared with November 2024, total market production decreased by 0.2% in the European Union (EU) and by 0.4% in the euro area (EA). In November 2024, total market production had increased by 0.3% in both the EU and the euro area.

The recent decrease in total market production in the EU was mainly the result of a decrease in industrial production (-0.8%) while the other production indicators increased – construction production by 0.4% and services production by 0.2%. The trade volume grew by a modest 0.1%.

Compared with the same month of the previous year, total market production increased by 0.5% in the EU and by 0.4% the euro area (calendar adjusted data).

A line chart showing the monthly total market production for the years 2015-24 for the EU and the euro area. Data are seasonally adjusted, where 2021=100.
Figure 1: Total market production, EU, EA, 2015-24, (seasonally adjusted data, 2021=100)
Source: Eurostat (sts_tot_prod_m)

Among countries for which data are available, the highest monthly increases in total market production in December 2024 were observed in Slovakia (2.3%) and Greece (1.9%). The largest decreases were found in Belgium (-2.4%) and in Latvia and Austria (both -1.5%).

A table showing the monthly rates of change for total market production in 2024. Data are shown for the EU, the euro area and several countries.
Table 1: 2024, Monthly rates of change for total market production (except financial and insurance activities) (%, seasonally and calendar adjusted data, 2024)
Source: Eurostat (sts_tot_prod_a)


Development of total market production and its components in the EU and the euro area since 2015

Between January 2015 and February 2020, total market production grew by an average of 0.2% per month in both the EU and the euro area (Figure 1). In March 2020, total market production fell by 9.6% in the EU (-10.1% in the euro area), while April saw a further fall of 13.7% in the EU (-14.1 % in the euro area). In May, June and July, the total production index recovered rather quickly, but was still only around 93% of its pre-crisis level. Until autumn 2022, total market output continued to rise (passing its pre-crisis level in October 2021). Since then total market production remained fairly stable.

A line chart showing the monthly total market production for the EU for the years 2020-24. Data are shown for total market production, industry, construction, trade and services.
Figure 2: Total market production, components, EU, 2020-24 (seasonally adjusted data, 2021=100)
Source: Eurostat (sts_tot_prod_m)


The recovery after the COVID-19 shock in March and April 2020 in the EU was uneven across sectors. By June 2020, industry reached 90% of its February 2020 production level, construction 94%, trade 97% and services only 88% (Figure 2). The slow recovery in services was largely due to lingering COVID-19 effects for hotels, restaurants and tourism in general. In 2021 the recovery process continued and in late 2021 all sectors had regained their pre-Covid level.

Since early 2022, the evolution of the various sectors began to differ. Between January 2022 and December 2024, total market production increased by 2.0%. During this period, industrial production declined by more than 4%, the total trade volume fell by more than 3%. The production level of construction remained unchanged. During this period the production of services increased by more than 10%.

Annual development by country

The total market production index (TMPI) is not a mandatory index under the European Business Statistics Regulation (see below). Nevertheless some National Statistical Institutes produce this indicator on a voluntary basis or authorise Eurostat to produce and publish the indicator for their country.

Table 2 shows the available annual growth rates for the TMPI since 2015. The COVID-19 shock in 2020 is clearly visible for the EU (-7.2%) and the euro area (-7.6%). In 2021 and 2022 total market production increased relatively dynamically in the EU and the euro area with growth rates between around 5%. In 2023 the growth performance weakened significantly but just remained positive in the EU (0.1%) and the euro area (0.2%). In 2024 total market production declined for the first time since the pandemic (-0.2% in the EU and -0.3% in the euro area).

A table showing the annual rates of change for total market production for the years 2015-24. Data are shown for the EU, the euro area and several countries.
Table 2: Annual rates of change for total market production (except financial and insurance activities) (%, calendar adjusted data, 2015-2024)
Source: Eurostat (sts_tot_prod_a)


Source data for tables and graphs

Methodology

Coverage

The total market production index (TMPI) covers industry, construction, trade and services, i.e. it combines all areas currently covered by short-term statistics (STS) indicators under the European Business Statistics Regulation (EBSR). In terms of NACE Rev. 2 the coverage of the TMPI is as follows:

  • Industry: NACE sections B (mining and quarrying), C (manufacturing), D (electricity, gas, steam)
  • Construction: NACE section F
  • Trade: NACE section G, i.e. wholesale trade (G46), trade and repair of motor vehicles (G45), retail trade (G47)
  • Services: Divisions H (transport), I (accommodation and food services), J (information and communication), L (real estate activities), M (professional and technical services), N (business support services)

The TMPI does not cover:

  • Agriculture (NACE section A)
  • Financial services (NACE section K)
  • Public and quasi-public services (sections O, P, Q, R, S, T, U)

Given that agricultural activities now account for a relatively small share of national production, the TMPI can be considered as an indicator that covers most of the market-based part of the European economy, with the exception of financial services. There are also some areas that are not included in STS and thus also not in the TMPI, i.e.

  • Water supply, waste management (NACE Section E)
  • Activities of head offices (NACE group M70.1)
  • Scientific research (NACE division M72)
  • Veterinary services (NACE division M75)

The reasons for excluding these activities are of a technical nature (i.e. difficulty in compiling data, small share in total, low impact on the business cycle).

Figure 3 illustrates the share of the industries combined in the total market production index in the total value added (note that the shares are not exact due to the small exceptions mentioned above).

A pie chart showing the share of the sectors combined in the total market production index in the total value added the EU for the year 2023.
Figure 3: EU, Total value added 2023, current prices
Source: Eurostat (nama_10_a10)

Reference period, delay and publication

The TMPI is compiled with a monthly reference period and is usually available after 65 days. The components of the TMPI are already available at an earlier date, i.e. retail trade volume after 30 days, industrial production after 40 days, and construction production after 45 days. Services production and total trade are available after 60 days. This Statistics Explained article will be updated every quarter.

Form and adjustment

Data for total market production are only published as an index (as is the case for the vast majority of STS indicators). The index base year is 2021. The TMPI will be produced for the EU, the euro area and, where possible in the future, for individual countries. It will be available in calendar adjusted and seasonally and calendar adjusted form (the adjustment is carried out by Eurostat).

Weights and calculation

As the TMPI is a production and volume indicator, the weights used to combine the different indicators for industry, construction, trade and services are value added. (Please note that the trade production indicator that is used for the TMPI is a special aggregate calculated for this purpose since it uses value added as weights.) In general the trade indicators are calculated with turnover data as weights. The indices from the different areas combined in the TMPI are the total production index for industry and construction, the total volume of trade indicator and the production indicator for services. The EU and euro area indices are weighted averages of the national indices of total market production (indirect method). The national total production indices are weighted averages of the monthly national production indicators for industry, construction, services and the volume of trade indicator. The coverage of the various monthly production indicators varies according to the availability of national data. For industrial production and retail trade full coverage is reached. In the case of construction production, monthly data are not available for some smaller countries that are only obliged to transmit quarterly data (Estonia, Greece, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg and Malta). Services production and turnover indicators for wholesale trade and trade in motor vehicles haven been added to the set of STS indicators with the European Business Statistics Regulation of 2019. Their coverage is not yet complete due to transition arrangements. Moreover, data for several countries are provisional.

Some countries calculate an index of total market production themselves on a voluntary basis and transmit the data to Eurostat. For some other countries the calculations are done by Eurostat but National Statistical Institutes have authorised Eurostat to publish these indicators.

For each component index and the TMPI, a national index is calculated by Eurostat if 80% of the weights are available; European aggregates are calculated if 50% (currently reduced threshold) of the country weights are available. If data are missing for the most recent period, the log-transformed (outliers excluded) SARIMA (011)(011) forecast is used instead.

Legal basis

The TMPI is a composite indicator produced by Eurostat based on the production indicators for industry, construction and services and the volume of trade indicator. These indicators have their legal basis in the European Business Statistics Regulation of 2019 and the Commission Implementing Regulation of 2020. The TMPI itself is not part of the European Business Statistics Regulation.

Context

STS indicators describe recent developments in the economies of the European Union and its Member States. STS indicators are important tools for the formulation and monitoring of economic and monetary policy in the EU and the euro area, and are in great demand by the European Commission and the European Central Bank, national governments and central banks, business and financial markets, research institutes and enterprises. STS has a number of flagship indicators for which monthly news releases are issued and many STS indicators are included in the set of Principal European Economic Indicators (PEEIs) and in the European Statistical Monitor.

In 2023, industry, construction, trade and services (excluding financial and public services) accounted for around 72% of total EU gross value added (see Figure 3 above). The main sectors not covered are agriculture (around 2% of EU value added), financial intermediation (between 4% and 5% of EU value added) and public and quasi-public institutions (more than 21% of EU value added). Due to the relatively wide coverage of the TMPI, it can be expected that the evolution of the total market production index will give a first impression of the evolution of total economic performance, but will not be identical with it. Figure 4 shows a comparison between the quarterly TMPI and the quarterly estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) for the EU between 2015 and 2024. As can be seen, the evolution of the two indices is quite similar, although there are also differences that become more pronounced with increasing distance from the base year. Apart from the limited coverage of the TMPI, there are several other methodological reasons for the differences between the TMPI and GDP:

  • The STS indicators are indices based on value added in industry and construction. The output of services in STS is a turnover indicator deflated by an appropriate index of producer prices for services. The volume of trade is also calculated as deflated turnover data. A chain-linked volume indicator has been used for comparison with national accounts (NA).
  • Data sources for STS and NA may differ. In some countries STS data are an important input for national accounts, but NA also uses several other sources.
  • The compilation process and estimation techniques may differ between STS and NA.
  • The weights used to calculate the indices used in STS are usually derived from structural business statistics and to a limited extent from NA.
A line chart showing quarterly total market production and gross domestic product in the EU for the years 2015-2024. Data are seasonally adjusted, where 2021=100.
Figure 4: Total market production and gross domestic product, EU, 2015-24 (seasonally adjusted data, 2021=100)
Source: Eurostat (sts_tot_prod_m) and (namq_10_GDP)

The EU average absolute difference between the GDP index and the TMPI for the years 2015-24 equals around 1.6% of the GDP index. For the various sectors, the absolute differences between STS/TMPI and national accounts vary. The differences are relatively low for professional and business services (around 1%) and for industry (around 2%). Somewhat higher differences can be found for the combined sector of trade, transport, accommodation and food services (around 4%), for communication (around 4%), and for construction (around 4%). The highest divergence can be observed for real estate services (almost 5%). It should be noted that the differences between national accounts data and STS vary considerably between countries.

Explore further

Other articles

Database


Industry (sts_ind)
Production in industry (sts_ind_prod)
Construction, building and civil engineering (sts_cons)
Production in construction (sts_cons_prod)
Trade and services (sts_ts)
Wholesale and retail trade (NACE G) (sts_wrt)
Trade and services (sts_ts)
Services (sts_os)


Thematic section

Publications

Selected datasets

Industry (t_sts_ind)
Production in industry (t_sts_ind_prod)
Construction, building and civil engineering (NACE F) (t_sts_cons)
Production in construction (teiis500)
Trade and services (t_sts_ts)
Wholesale and retail trade (NACE G) (t_sts_wrt)
Trade and services (t_sts_ts)
Services (t_sts_ser)


Methodology

External links