Economy — Belarus
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for Belarus: As part of the former Soviet Union, Belarus had a relatively well-developed industrial base, but it is now outdated, inefficient, and dependent on subsidized Russian energy and preferential access to Russian markets. The country’s agricultural base is largely dependent on government subsidies. Following the collaps…
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Economic overview
- Economic Overview
As part of the former Soviet Union, Belarus had a relatively well-developed industrial base, but it is now outdated, inefficient, and dependent on subsidized Russian energy and preferential access to Russian markets. The country’s agricultural base is largely dependent on government subsidies. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, an initial burst of economic reforms included privatization of state enterprises, creation of private property rights, and the acceptance of private entrepreneurship, but by 1994 the reform effort dissipated. About 80% of industry remains in state hands, and foreign investment has virtually disappeared. Several businesses have been renationalized. State-owned entities account for 70-75% of GDP, and state banks make up 75% of the banking sector. Economic output declined for several years following the break-up of the Soviet Union, but revived in the mid-2000s. Belarus has only small reserves of crude oil and imports crude oil and natural gas from Russia at subsidized, below market, prices. Belarus derives export revenue by refining Russian crude and selling it at market prices. Russia and Belarus have had serious disagreements over prices and quantities for Russian energy. Beginning in early 2016, Russia claimed Belarus began accumulating debt – reaching $740 million by April 2017 – for paying below the agreed price for Russian natural gas and Russia cut back its export of crude oil as a result of the debt. In April 2017, Belarus agreed to pay its gas debt and Russia restored the flow of crude. New non-Russian foreign investment has been limited in recent years, largely because of an unfavorable financial climate. In 2011, a financial crisis lead to a nearly three-fold devaluation of the Belarusian ruble. The Belarusian economy has continued to struggle under the weight of high external debt servicing payments and a trade deficit. In mid-December 2014, the devaluation of the Russian ruble triggered a near 40% devaluation of the Belarusian ruble. Belarus’s economy stagnated between 2012 and 2016, widening productivity and income gaps between Belarus and neighboring countries. Budget revenues dropped because of falling global prices on key Belarusian export commodities. Since 2015, the Belarusian government has tightened its macro-economic policies, allowed more flexibility to its exchange rate, taken some steps towards price liberalization, and reduced subsidized government lending to state-owned enterprises. Belarus returned to modest growth in 2017, largely driven by improvement of external conditions and Belarus issued sovereign debt for the first time since 2011, which provided the country with badly-needed liquidity, and issued $600 million worth of Eurobonds in February 2018, predominantly to US and British investors.
- Industries
Metal-cutting machine tools, tractors, trucks, earthmovers, motorcycles, televisions, synthetic fibers, fertilizer, textiles, radios, refrigerators
- GDP - per capita (PPP)
$17,500.00 (USD)
- GDP - real growth rate
-3%
GDP & growth
- GDP - Gross Domestic Product (PPP)
$179,970,000,000 (USD)
- GDP Per Capita
$17,500.00 (USD)
- GDP - real growth rate
-3%
- GDP - official exchange rate
$48,130,000,000 (USD)
- GDP - composition, by end use
- GDP by Sector- agriculture
9.2%
- GDP by Sector- Industry
40.9%
- GDP by Sector- services
49.8%
- Industrial Growth Rate
-3%
Prices & money
- Inflation Rate
14%
- Exchange Rate per US Dollar
1.9
- Currency Name and Code
Belarusian Rubles (BYB/BYR)
- Fiscal Year
Calendar Year
- Commercial Bank Prime Lending Rate
18%
Employment & labor
- Labor Force
4,546,000
- Unemployment Rate
0.7%
- Unemployment - note
Official registered unemployed; a large number of underemployed workers
- Major Industries
Metal-cutting machine tools, tractors, trucks, earthmovers, motorcycles, televisions, synthetic fibers, fertilizer, textiles, radios, refrigerators
- Agriculture Products
Grain, potatoes, vegetables, sugar beets, flax; beef, milk
- Population Below Poverty Line
6.3%
- Child Labor - # of children ages 5-14
54,218
- Child Labor - % of children ages 5-14
5%
Public finance
- Annual Budget
$21,210,000,000 (USD)
- Public Debt (% of GDP)
60.7%
- Budget Surplus or Deficit - percent of GDP
0.6%
- Taxes and other revenues - percent of GDP
44.1%
