Estonia flag Estonia: Economic and Political Overview

The economic context of Estonia

Economic Indicators

After its recovery from the crisis, Estonian growth was affected by an unfavourable regional situation (European sanctions against Russia and the following counter-sanctions), but it grew at a fast pace in recent years until the breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic. After returning to growth in 2021, the country recorded two consecutive years of recession in 2022 (-0.5%) and 2023 (-3%). After eight quarters of contraction, real GDP remained flat in the second and third quarters of 2024, returning to positive territory only in the fourth quarter. However, GDP growth was still negative for the year as a whole, with a decline of -0.3%, according to Statistics Estonia. Weak demand in Estonia’s main trading partners, especially Finland, Sweden, and other Baltic economies, continues to limit export growth. Russia’s war in Ukraine has raised import costs, disrupted trade, and harmed investor confidence. Private consumption is expected to stay weak in 2025 due to tax hikes and the delayed minimum tax-free threshold, limiting purchasing power. Despite higher wages and lower interest payments, consumer confidence is low, and rising unemployment curbs spending. Investment will remain weak, with low capacity utilisation and muted demand, though lower funding costs may help. Exports should improve slightly, and easier monetary policy will help lift the economy from recession. Estonia’s GDP is projected to grow by 1.1% in 2025 and 2.6% in 2026, with consumption recovering as purchasing power improves (data EU Commission).

Estonia became a member of the European Union on May 1, 2004, and was the first former Soviet country to join the OECD in May 2010. This Baltic republic has managed to move from a state-run and centralized economy to a dynamic market economy, liberalized by a succession of governments observing strict budgetary orthodoxy and modernizing the country. The country has stood out, mainly thanks to its IT sector (the invention of Skype, mobile payment systems, internet voting, multifunctional electronic identity cards, and initiatives in the sphere of cybersecurity), as well as its performances in the green energy sector. Furthermore, Estonia enjoys relative energy independence through the exploitation of shale oil, of which the country is one of the world's largest producers and covers a large part of its electricity needs. In general, the country has stable public finances; in 2024, the general government fiscal deficit was estimated at 3% of GDP, up from 2.8% in 2023, due to the ongoing recession and continued military spending related to Russia’s war in Ukraine. In 2025, the deficit is expected to remain at 3.0% of GDP, with measures such as delaying the tax-free allowance increase to 2026, raising the personal income tax rate to 22%, increasing excise duties on alcohol, tobacco, and energy goods, introducing a new emissions-based car tax, and applying a 24% security surcharge on VAT to help contain it. However, expenditures are set to rise, mainly due to higher defence and social benefit spending. Public debt is forecast to increase from 20.2% of GDP in 2023 to 25.4% in 2026 (data EU Commission). Inflation for 2024 was 3.5%, with 1.6% driven by the increase in consumption taxes, according to official government data, and is expected to remain high in 2025 due to substantial tax increases in the new budget. HICP inflation is forecast at 3.6% for 2025, with a slowdown to 2.4% in 2026 as the impact of tax measures fades and demand weakens.

The unemployment rate rose to 7.5% in 2024, up from 6.4% the previous year, with employment expectations turning more negative. Employment is expected to decline in 2024 and 2025. However, population ageing is likely to limit further increases in unemployment, which is projected to average 7.7% in 2025 and 7.2% in 2026 (EU Commission). In 2024, the Estonian real GDP per capita (PPP) was estimated at USD 48,008 by the IMF, still below the EU average. According to the latest data published by Eurostat, about 24.2% of the population is at risk of poverty.

 
Main Indicators 2023 (E)2024 (E)2025 (E)2026 (E)2027 (E)
GDP (billions USD) 41.3043.0445.3147.5849.58
GDP (Constant Prices, Annual % Change) -3.0-0.91.62.32.0
GDP per Capita (USD) 30,13831,53133,22534,93136,444
General Government Balance (in % of GDP) -3.0-2.1-3.6-3.8-3.8
General Government Gross Debt (in % of GDP) 19.321.825.428.731.7
Inflation Rate (%) 9.13.42.01.92.0
Unemployment Rate (% of the Labour Force) 6.47.57.16.86.6
Current Account (billions USD) -0.72-1.46-1.48-1.50-1.53
Current Account (in % of GDP) -1.7-3.4-3.3-3.1-3.1

Source: IMF – World Economic Outlook Database, October 2021

Main Sectors of Industry

Agriculture accounts for only 1.9% of the country's GDP and employs around 2.6% of the workforce (World Bank, latest data available). With rich reserves of shale oil, Estonia draws a considerable part of its energy production (around 60%) from this resource, which gives it self-sufficiency in terms of electricity. Arable land and permanent crops cover almost 1 million ha, with 2.4 million ha under forest and 226 ha of organic crops. The main crops include cereals, potatoes, and vegetables. Overall, Crops make up approximately 50% of agricultural output, with cereals representing nearly half of this share. Animal products account for just over 40%, with milk production being the largest contributor, at 23% of total agricultural output (EU Commission data). According to the latest figures from Statistics Estonia, in 2024, total cereal production decreased by 8.6% y-o-y (to 1.3 million tonnes), while the total agricultural output stood at EUR 1.28 billion, down by 1.9%.

The industrial sector represents around 21.7% of the GDP and accounts for 27.4% of total employment. The main industrial subsectors are the food industry (dairy products and meat processing), electronics & IT (a traditional sector), and the chemical and wood processing industries. Altogether, the export-oriented manufacturing sector alone contributes to an estimated 12% of the country’s GDP (World Bank). According to Statistics Estonia, in 2024, the total production of industrial enterprises fell by 4% in constant prices compared to the previous year. Among the three industrial sectors, output in manufacturing declined by 4.4%, remained unchanged in electricity production, and rose by 2.9% in mining.

The services sector is the most developed (in particular transport and logistics, biotechnology, and financial services) and accounts for roughly 64.5% of the Estonian GDP, employing 70% of the active population. The ICT segment shows the strongest performance, accounting for nearly 7% of total GDP and employment (the country invested in this sector and created TalTech’s School of Information Technologies and the Centre of Excellence in ICT Research – EXCITE). The tourism sector is also significant for the economy: According to Statistics Estonia, in 2024, Estonian accommodation establishments hosted 3.6 million tourists, marking a 5% increase compared to 2023, but still 5% below the pre-pandemic level. The country’s banking sector comprises 13 banks, of which nine are licensed credit institutions in Estonia and four are operating as branches of foreign credit institutions. The sector is largely controlled by foreign capital, which holds approximately 70% of the banking sector assets, equivalent to EUR 40 billion or 106% of the country’s GDP in 2023. The market is chiefly divided between Swedbank, SEB Bank, LHV Bank, and Luminor Bank (data European Banking Federation).

 
Breakdown of Economic Activity By Sector Agriculture Industry Services
Employment By Sector (in % of Total Employment) 2.6 27.4 70.0
Value Added (in % of GDP) 1.9 21.7 64.5
Value Added (Annual % Change) -0.6 -10.0 -0.8

Source: World Bank, Latest Available Data. Because of rounding, the sum of the percentages may be smaller/greater than 100%.

 

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Indicator of Economic Freedom

Definition:

The Economic freedom index measure ten components of economic freedom, grouped into four broad categories or pillars of economic freedom: Rule of Law (property rights, freedom from corruption); Limited Government (fiscal freedom, government spending); Regulatory Efficiency (business freedom, labour freedom, monetary freedom); and Open Markets (trade freedom, investment freedom, financial freedom). Each of the freedoms within these four broad categories is individually scored on a scale of 0 to 100. A country’s overall economic freedom score is a simple average of its scores on the 10 individual freedoms.}}

Score:
78,2/100
World Rank:
8
Regional Rank:
4

Economic freedom in the world (interactive map)
Source: Index of Economic Freedom, Heritage Foundation

 

Business environment ranking

Definition:

The business rankings model measures the quality or attractiveness of the business environment in the 82 countries covered by The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Country Forecast reports. It examines ten separate criteria or categories, covering the political environment, the macroeconomic environment, market opportunities, policy towards free enterprise and competition, policy towards foreign investment, foreign trade and exchange controls, taxes, financing, the labour market and infrastructure.

Score:
7.41/10
World Rank:
23/82

Source: The Economist Intelligence Unit - Business Environment Rankings 2020-2024

 

Country Risk

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Sources of General Economic Information

Ministries
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communication
Ministry of Finance
Statistical Office
Estonian Statistics
Central Bank
Central Bank of Estonia
Stock Exchange
Nasdaq Baltic
Economic Portals
Postimees
The Baltic Times
 

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Latest Update: May 2025