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Bulgaria flagEconomyBulgaria

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 Bulgaria: Bulgaria, a former communist country that entered the EU in 2007, has an open economy that historically has demonstrated strong growth, but its per-capita income remains the lowest among EU members and its reliance on energy imports and foreign demand for its exports makes its growth sensitive to external market c…

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Economic overview

Economic Overview

Bulgaria, a former communist country that entered the EU in 2007, has an open economy that historically has demonstrated strong growth, but its per-capita income remains the lowest among EU members and its reliance on energy imports and foreign demand for its exports makes its growth sensitive to external market conditions. The government undertook significant structural economic reforms in the 1990s to move the economy from a centralized, planned economy to a more liberal, market-driven economy. These reforms included privatization of state-owned enterprises, liberalization of trade, and strengthening of the tax system - changes that initially caused some economic hardships but later helped to attract investment, spur growth, and make gradual improvements to living conditions. From 2000 through 2008, Bulgaria maintained robust, average annual real GDP growth in excess of 6%, which was followed by a deep recession in 2009 as the financial crisis caused domestic demand, exports, capital inflows, and industrial production to contract, prompting the government to rein in spending. Real GDP growth remained slow - less than 2% annually - until 2015, when demand from EU countries for Bulgarian exports, plus an inflow of EU development funds, boosted growth to more than 3%. In recent years, strong domestic demand combined with low international energy prices have contributed to Bulgaria’s economic growth approaching 4% and have also helped to ease inflation. Bulgaria’s prudent public financial management contributed to budget surpluses both in 2016 and 2017. Bulgaria is heavily reliant on energy imports from Russia, a potential vulnerability, and is a participant in EU-backed efforts to diversify regional natural gas supplies. In late 2016, the Bulgarian Government provided funding to Bulgaria’s National Electric Company to cover the $695 million compensation owed to Russian nuclear equipment manufacturer Atomstroyexport for the cancellation of the Belene Nuclear Power Plant project, which the Bulgarian Government terminated in 2012. As of early 2018, the government was floating the possibility of resurrecting the Belene project. The natural gas market, dominated by state-owned Bulgargaz, is also almost entirely supplied by Russia. Infrastructure projects such as the Inter-Connector Greece-Bulgaria and Inter-Connector Bulgaria-Serbia, which would enable Bulgaria to have access to non-Russian gas, have either stalled or made limited progress. In 2016, the Bulgarian Government established the State eGovernment Agency. This new agency is responsible for electronic governance, coordinating national policies with the EU, and strengthening cybersecurity. Despite a favorable investment regime, including low, flat corporate income taxes, significant challenges remain. Corruption in public administration, a weak judiciary, low productivity, lack of transparency in public procurements, and the presence of organized crime continue to hamper the country's investment climate and economic prospects.

Industries
  • Electricity, gas, water
  • food, beverages, tobacco
  • machinery and equipment, base metals, chemical products, coke, refined petroleum, nuclear fuel
GDP - per capita (PPP)

$20,100.00 (USD)

GDP - real growth rate

3%

GDP & growth

GDP - Gross Domestic Product (PPP)

$155,060,000,000 (USD)

GDP Per Capita

$20,100.00 (USD)

GDP - real growth rate

3%

GDP - official exchange rate

$50,450,000,000 (USD)

GDP - composition, by end use
  • Household Consumption: 60.8%
  • Government Consumption: 15.9%
  • Investment in Fixed Capital: 20.4%
  • Investment in Inventories: 0.1%
  • Exports of Goods and Services: 69.1%
  • Imports of Goods and Services: -66.3%
GDP by Sector- agriculture

5.1%

GDP by Sector- Industry

27.5%

GDP by Sector- services

67.5%

Industrial Growth Rate

2.8%

Prices & money

Inflation Rate

-0.7%

Exchange Rate per US Dollar

1.802

Currency Name and Code

Bulgarian Lev (BGN)

Fiscal Year

Calendar Year

Commercial Bank Prime Lending Rate

6.6%

Employment & labor

Labor Force

2,525,000

Unemployment Rate

8.9%

Major Industries
  • Electricity, gas, water
  • food, beverages, tobacco
  • machinery and equipment, base metals, chemical products, coke, refined petroleum, nuclear fuel
Agriculture Products

Vegetables, fruits, tobacco, wine, wheat, barley, sunflowers, sugar beets; livestock

Population Below Poverty Line

21.8%

Public finance

Annual Budget

$18,440,000,000 (USD)

Public Debt (% of GDP)

26.7%

Budget Surplus or Deficit - percent of GDP

-1.5%

Taxes and other revenues - percent of GDP

36.6%

More about Bulgaria

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