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Serbia's economy ranking: GDP & GDP per capita, debt

Updated on by Georank team

Serbia ranked 75/197 by economy size with a GDP of $89.1B and 74/197 by GDP per capita at $13,524. Serbia has $39.6B in government debt, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of 44.4%.

In 2025, Serbia made up 0.08% of the world's economy, compared to 0.06% in 1995.

The chart below shows GDP in nominal terms, GDP adjusted for inflation (in constant dollars), and a bar chart of year-over-year inflation-adjusted growth.

GDP, current $
GDP, constant 2015 $
GDP growth
Year GDP GDP growth
Current $ Constant $
1995 $17,921,892,655 $22,980,131,489 -
1996 $23,277,430,168 $24,396,847,843 29.9%
1997 $27,153,408,995 $26,576,270,133 16.7%
1998 $21,004,077,441 $27,996,145,144 -22.6%
1999 $20,878,694,851 $25,105,401,157 -0.6%
2000 $7,326,373,882 $26,625,556,359 -64.9%
2001 $13,599,378,662 $28,430,374,779 85.6%
2002 $17,930,583,571 $30,290,019,296 31.8%
2003 $23,593,044,418 $31,671,150,129 31.6%
2004 $26,845,632,342 $33,788,958,042 13.8%
2005 $28,334,256,181 $35,783,688,498 5.55%
2006 $33,298,057,362 $37,179,489,902 17.5%
2007 $44,888,028,946 $40,091,414,195 34.8%
2008 $54,220,641,202 $42,160,489,092 20.8%
2009 $46,955,984,410 $40,835,549,150 -13.4%
2010 $43,536,629,233 $41,493,398,683 -7.28%
2011 $51,251,098,408 $41,515,918,179 17.7%
2012 $45,103,269,969 $41,331,605,757 -12%
2013 $50,455,529,604 $41,518,250,511 11.9%
2014 $49,114,321,280 $40,769,149,069 -2.66%
2015 $41,297,410,635 $41,297,410,635 -15.9%
2016 $42,225,495,910 $42,526,090,284 2.25%
2017 $45,972,834,714 $43,531,149,260 8.87%
2018 $52,787,520,249 $45,555,064,903 14.8%
2019 $53,864,693,665 $47,719,025,212 2.04%
2020 $55,874,017,669 $47,265,683,024 3.73%
2021 $66,159,884,073 $51,022,858,875 18.4%
2022 $66,797,564,758 $52,365,263,375 0.96%
2023 $81,342,660,752 $54,380,001,765 21.8%
2024 $89,083,506,277 $56,488,865,192 9.52%

Economic Statistics of Serbia

Serbia Rank
Gross domestic product
$89.1B
2024
75/197
GDP growth
9.52%
2023-2024
45/196
GDP per capita
$13,524
2024
74/197
GDP per capita, PPP
$31,867
2024
69/197
Government debt
$39.6B
2024
81/185
Debt-to-GDP ratio
44.4%
2025
117/185
Government debt per person
$6,015
2024
74/185
Average annual personal income after taxes
$11,469
2025
67/197
Market capitalization of domestic companies
$4.06B
2011
81/100
Income share by richest 10%
24.7%
2022
123/169
Income share by poorest 10%
2.4%
2022
110/169
Government expenditure, % of GDP
43.4%
2025
42/195
Consumer prices inflation
4.67%
2023-2024
58/195
Central bank interest rate
5.75%
2024
56/105
Unemployment rate
7.24%
2024
62/196
Population
6541064
109/197

Serbia's GDP per capita

Serbia has a GDP per capita of $13,524, ranking 74/197, a GDP per capita based on purchasing power parity (PPP) of $31,867, ranking 69/197, and a median annual after tax income of $11,469, ranking 67/197.

GDP per capita
GDP per capita, PPP
Year Current $
GDP per capita GDP per capita, PPP
1995 $2,349 $5,021
1996 $3,054 $5,433
1997 $3,574 $6,039
1998 $2,775 $6,459
1999 $2,769 $5,895
2000 $975 $6,414
2001 $1,812 $6,803
2002 $2,391 $7,563
2003 $3,154 $8,024
2004 $3,597 $8,716
2005 $3,808 $9,398
2006 $4,493 $10,466
2007 $6,081 $11,686
2008 $7,377 $13,123
2009 $6,414 $13,031
2010 $5,971 $13,322
2011 $7,082 $14,298
2012 $6,263 $14,506
2013 $7,040 $15,247
2014 $6,887 $15,296
2015 $5,820 $15,550
2016 $5,982 $16,455
2017 $6,548 $17,285
2018 $7,560 $18,469
2019 $7,756 $20,587
2020 $8,099 $21,013
2021 $9,681 $23,406
2022 $10,023 $26,242
2023 $12,282 $28,748
2024 $13,524 $31,867

Serbia's government spending, deficit, and chart

This chart shows Serbia's government spending, budget balance, and debt over time, each expressed as a share of GDP.

Over the past 26 years, Serbia recorded a fiscal deficit in 21 years — average annual deficit equal to -2.1% of GDP. In 2024, government spending reached $37.8B (43.4% of GDP), with a deficit of -2.77%.

The national debt reached $39.6B, ranking 81st out of 185 countries by total size, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of 44.4%, ranking 117th.

Government spending
Government debt
Deficit/surplus
Year % of GDP
Government spending Government debt Government deficit/surplus
2000 28% 200.6% -0.15%
2001 30.5% 95.9% 0.32%
2002 38.6% 68.4% -2.33%
2003 37.6% 64.4% -2.39%
2004 37.8% 57.6% 0.06%
2005 38.9% 50.1% 1.02%
2006 41.3% 37% -0.9%
2007 40.6% 30% -0.8%
2008 43.7% 29.4% -4.25%
2009 41.1% 32.6% -3.3%
2010 41.2% 38.2% -3.35%
2011 40% 42% -3.75%
2012 43.3% 51.7% -6.11%
2013 40.6% 54.1% -4.79%
2014 42.9% 63.5% -5.61%
2015 41% 67.1% -3.25%
2016 40.3% 65% -1.08%
2017 38.5% 55.3% 1.32%
2018 39% 51.1% 0.78%
2019 40.2% 49.5% -0.004%
2020 46% 54.3% -6.91%
2021 44.4% 53.6% -3.16%
2022 41.4% 50.9% -0.14%
2023 40.6% 45.7% -1.21%
2024 42.4% 44.5% -1.73%
2025 43.4% 44.4% -2.77%

Inflation rate by year

Over the past 20 years, Serbia has had an average annual inflation rate of 6.66%. In 2024, inflation was 4.67%. The bar chart below shows consumer price inflation by year.

Year Inflation
1995 82.7%
1996 95.6%
1997 23.3%
1998 30.2%
1999 42.5%
2000 71.1%
2001 95%
2002 19.5%
2003 9.88%
2004 11%
2005 16.1%
2006 11.7%
2007 6.39%
2008 12.4%
2009 8.12%
2010 6.14%
2011 11.1%
2012 7.33%
2013 7.69%
2014 2.08%
2015 1.39%
2016 1.12%
2017 3.13%
2018 1.96%
2019 1.85%
2020 1.58%
2021 4.09%
2022 12%
2023 12.4%
2024 4.67%

Balance of trade

Serbia Rank
Current account balance
-$4.31B
2024
162/189
Current account balance, % of GDP
-4.84%
2024
134/189
Goods imports
$39.6B
2024
61/188
Goods exports
$32.2B
2024
66/188
Service imports
$12.7B
2024
59/188
Service exports
$15.6B
2024
57/188
Imports of goods and services, % of GDP
58.8%
2024
52/180
Exports of goods and services, % of GDP
52.7%
2024
49/193

Serbia's top 10 trading partners

Serbia's biggest trading partner accounting for 13%% of all exports and imports is Germany, with a trade balance between the two of -$601M — Serbia exports $5.5B worth of goods and services to Germany and imports $6.1B.

Below is the list of the top 10 trade partners of Serbia.

Rank Country Trade value Share of total trade Export to Import from Top export to Top import from
1 Germany $11.6B 13% $5.5B $6.1B Machinery & equipment Machinery & equipment
2 China $7.63B 8.51% $1.77B $5.86B Raw materials & minerals Machinery & equipment
3 Italy $5.32B 5.93% $2.11B $3.21B Textiles & consumer goods Machinery & equipment
4 Turkey $4.03B 4.5% $1.34B $2.69B Metals Machinery & equipment
5 Bosnia $3.77B 4.2% $2.51B $1.26B Processed food, beverages & tobacco Raw materials & minerals
6 Hungary $3.61B 4.02% $1.63B $1.98B Machinery & equipment Raw materials & minerals
7 Russia $2.86B 3.19% $1.25B $1.61B Machinery & equipment Raw materials & minerals
8 Romania $2.76B 3.08% $1.61B $1.15B Raw agricultural goods Raw materials & minerals
9 United States $2.7B 3.01% $1.7B $992M IT & IP services Machinery & equipment
10 Austria $2.66B 2.97% $1.17B $1.5B Machinery & equipment Machinery & equipment

Serbia's top 10 exports

Serbia Rank
Machinery & equipment $9.44B 46/193
Transport & tourism services $5.72B 62/188
Raw materials & minerals $4.45B 77/193
Metals $3.95B 51/192
IT & IP services $3.92B 34/183
Business & finance services $3.77B 48/188
Processed food, beverages & tobacco $3.24B 49/192
Textiles & consumer goods $2.97B 51/193
Chemicals & pharma $2.81B 54/193
Raw agricultural goods $2.02B 58/193

Serbia's top 10 imports

Serbia Rank
Machinery & equipment $10.8B 64/193
Raw materials & minerals $6.97B 62/193
Transport & tourism services $6.31B 59/188
Miscellaneous $5.93B 18/193
Chemicals & pharma $5.73B 61/193
Metals $3.81B 58/193
Textiles & consumer goods $3.05B 65/193
Business & finance services $2.66B 62/188
Processed food, beverages & tobacco $2.32B 67/193
IT & IP services $1.58B 51/182

Economic freedom indices

Serbia Rank
Economic freedom 64.4 71/197
Property rights 58.9 72/182
Government integrity 37.2 72/182
Judicial effectiveness 50.8 72/182
Tax burden 87.3 49/181
Government spending 40.2 153/180
Fiscal health 91.2 41/181
Business freedom 74.7 53/182
Labor freedom 66.6 24/182
Monetary freedom 68.5 122/180
Trade freedom 77.2 66/181
Investment freedom 70 40/181
Financial freedom 50 97/181

Serbia's economic freedom by year

Serbia is ranked 64/180 for economic freedom with a score of 64.4, compared to 147/163 and a score of 43.5 in 2003.

Economic freedom
Judicial effectiveness
Tax burden
Government spending
Fiscal health
Year Index
Economic freedom Judicial effectiveness Tax burden Government spending Fiscal health
2002 46.6 - 89.8 74.8 -
2003 43.5 - 79.8 89.2 -
2004 - - - - -
2005 - - - - -
2006 - - - - -
2007 - - - - -
2008 - - - - -
2009 56.6 - 85.9 46.3 -
2010 56.9 - 83.2 41.4 -
2011 58 - 83.6 41.9 -
2012 58 - 84.1 39.3 -
2013 58.6 - 84.2 40.3 -
2014 59.4 - 83.1 38.6 -
2015 60 - 82.4 27.1 -
2016 62.1 - 84.3 44.1 -
2017 58.9 40.2 83.3 40.3 46.9
2018 62.5 48.2 83.5 40.6 67
2019 63.9 44.8 82 45.1 90.1
2020 66 46.8 83.7 49.7 94.1
2021 67.2 50.6 92.5 49.6 94.6
2022 65.2 50.4 90.9 42.5 85.7
2023 63.5 37.8 87.9 37.6 73.5
2024 62.7 50.4 87.1 36.3 73.9
2025 64.4 50.8 87.3 40.2 91.2

More economic indicators

Serbia Rank
Services, % of GDP
58.5%
2024
84/191
Industry, % of GDP
23.3%
2024
105/194
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing, % of GDP
3.15%
2024
128/193
GNI, Atlas method
$76.2B
2024
80/194
GNI per capita, PPP
$29,870
2024
67/191
Total reserves including gold
$30.5B
2024
55/177
Net foreign direct investment
-$4.98B
2024
164/188
Net inflows of foreign direct investment
$5.64B
2024
43/193
Net outflows of foreign direct investment
$660M
2024
58/187
Servicing debt to the IMF, % of GNI
7.86%
2023
26/119
Poverty at national poverty lines
19.7%
2023
105/176
Gross capital formation, % of GDP
25.6%
2024
65/176

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GDP per capita map

GDP per capita

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The current account balance is the sum of net trade in goods and services, net earnings from cross-border investments, and net transfer payments. It reflects a country's economic transactions with the rest of the world and is a fundamental component of the balance of payments. A surplus indicates that a country exports more than it imports, while a deficit shows the opposite.

Gross National Income (GNI) measures a country's total income. It encompasses income earned by residents, businesses, and foreign sources, defined as employee compensation and investment profits. GNI adds product taxes not included elsewhere and subtracts subsidies. It accounts for income from residents working abroad but excludes earnings from foreigners within the country.

A negative value for Net Foreign Direct Investment indicates a country is a net receiver of investments, as foreign inflows exceed outflows after Balance of Payments adjustments. A positive value indicates a net provider, with outflows exceeding inflows. Inflows are credits (increasing foreign claims on domestic assets), while outflows are debits (increasing domestic assets abroad).

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net inflows) shows how much capital foreign investors bring into a country after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of overseas companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in the reporting country. A positive number means more capital entered the country than was withdrawn, while a negative number means foreign investors pulled out more than they invested.

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net outflows) shows how much capital residents of a country invest abroad after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of domestic companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in other countries. A positive number means more capital was invested abroad than withdrawn, while a negative number means residents pulled back more than they invested.

Principal and interest payments to the IMF in currency, goods, or services on long-term debt expressed as a share of GNI.

Formerly gross domestic investment, gross capital formation measures the share of a country’s economic output invested in fixed assets, including buildings, machinery, and infrastructure. It indicates how much of the economy is devoted to building productive capacity.