Economy — Angola
GDP, employment, industries, public finance, and currency.
Profile updated 2026-06-02
⚡ Economy at a glance
GDP, employment, industries, public finance, and currency. Key figure for Angola: Angola's economy is overwhelmingly driven by its oil sector. Oil production and its supporting activities contribute about 50% of GDP, more than 70% of government revenue, and more than 90% of the country's exports; Angola is an OPEC member and is subject to its direction regarding oil production levels. Diamonds co…
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Economic overview
- Economic Overview
Angola's economy is overwhelmingly driven by its oil sector. Oil production and its supporting activities contribute about 50% of GDP, more than 70% of government revenue, and more than 90% of the country's exports; Angola is an OPEC member and is subject to its direction regarding oil production levels. Diamonds contribute an additional 5% to exports. Subsistence agriculture provides the main livelihood for most people, but half of the country's food is still imported. Increased oil production supported growth averaging more than 17% per year from 2004 to 2008. A postwar reconstruction boom and resettlement of displaced persons led to high rates of growth in construction and agriculture as well. Some of the country's infrastructure is still damaged or undeveloped from the 27-year-long civil war (1975-2002). However, since 2005 the government has used billions of dollars in credit from China, Brazil, Portugal, Germany, Spain, and the EU to help rebuild Angola's public infrastructure. Land mines left from the war still mar the countryside, and as a result, the national military, international partners, and private Angolan firms all continue to remove them. The global recession that started in 2008 stalled Angola’s economic growth and many construction projects stopped because Luanda accrued billions in arrears to foreign construction companies when government revenue fell. Lower prices for oil and diamonds also resulted in GDP falling 0.7% in 2016. Angola formally abandoned its currency peg in 2009 but reinstituted it in April 2016 and maintains an overvalued exchange rate. In late 2016, Angola lost the last of its correspondent relationships with foreign banks, further exacerbating hard currency problems. Since 2013 the central bank has consistently spent down reserves to defend the kwanza, gradually allowing a 40% depreciation since late 2014. Consumer inflation declined from 325% in 2000 to less than 9% in 2014, before rising again to above 30% from 2015-2017. Continued low oil prices, the depreciation of the kwanza, and slower than expected growth in non-oil GDP have reduced growth prospects, although several major international oil companies remain in Angola. Corruption, especially in the extractive sectors, is a major long-term challenge that poses an additional threat to the economy.
- Industries
- GDP - per capita (PPP)
$6,800.00 (USD)
GDP & growth
- GDP - Gross Domestic Product (PPP)
$203,710,000,000 (USD)
- GDP Per Capita
$6,800.00 (USD)
- GDP - official exchange rate
$91,940,000,000 (USD)
- GDP - composition, by end use
- GDP by Sector- agriculture
10.2%
- GDP by Sector- Industry
61.4%
- GDP by Sector- services
28.4%
- Industrial Growth Rate
0.9%
Prices & money
- Inflation Rate
26.9%
- Exchange Rate per US Dollar
172
- Currency Name and Code
Angola Kwanza (AOA)
- Fiscal Year
Calendar Year
- Commercial Bank Prime Lending Rate
30%
Employment & labor
- Labor Force
10,850,000
- Major Industries
- Agriculture Products
- Population Below Poverty Line
40.5%
- Child Labor - # of children ages 5-14
832,895
- Child Labor - % of children ages 5-14
24%
Public finance
- Annual Budget
$27,270,000,000 (USD)
- Public Debt (% of GDP)
57.4%
- Budget Surplus or Deficit - percent of GDP
-6.8%
- Taxes and other revenues - percent of GDP
29.7%
