Latvia
High-income euro-area economy shaped by Baltic logistics, wood products, services, and demographic pressure. Track transport, wood and food exports, wages, energy prices, credit, EU demand, and euro-area conditions.
Latvia
Overview
Latvia is a Baltic and Northern European economy. The profile should be read through transport and logistics, wood products, food processing, business services, and EU funds, the monetary setting described by its central bank, and external pressure from Estonia, Lithuania, Germany, Nordic finance, and energy prices. The current IMF values give the cycle; national sources explain how that cycle reaches households, firms, banks, and public budgets.
How to read Latvia
Start with the latest cycle, but do not stop there. IMF DataMapper current values put real GDP growth at 2.1 percent in 2025 and 2.2 percent in 2026. IMF DataMapper current values put average consumer-price inflation at 3.8 percent in 2025 and 3 percent in 2026. Those numbers tell you whether demand and prices are moving with or against the country's policy setting S6,S7.
Then move to structure. Latvia's profile is shaped by transport and logistics, wood products, food processing, business services, and EU funds. A good reading asks which of those channels is lifting output, which is absorbing labor, and which is most exposed to imported costs or foreign demand S1,S4,S5.
The final step is institutional. Euro-area member using the euro; monetary policy set through the Eurosystem. Parliamentary republic, EU member, NATO member, and euro-area member. Those two facts decide how quickly inflation, credit, fiscal pressure, and external shocks can be answered S2,S3,S4.