Print this page
Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Despite Optimistic Growth Estimates, Georgia's Economy Is Entering A Period of Insecurity Featured

Published in Analytical Articles

By Tomáš Baranec and Giorgi Khishtovani

Long-term rapid GDP growth is one of the pillars on which the Georgian government builds its legitimacy amid social and political instability following the October 2024 parliamentary elections. The numbers seemingly confirm the government’s argument. Georgia's GDP growth was 7.8 percent in 2023 and 9.7 percent in 2024. In 2025, overall growth is expected at 7.5 percent and International financial institutionsexpect GDP growth at 5-5.5 percent for 2026. The growth of recent years, however, was driven by several temporary and random factors rather than structural reforms. Numerous indicators suggest that growth in 2025 was artificially inflated and that the Georgian economy is in fact entering a turbulent phase.

shutterstock1430997941

BACKGROUND:

Georgia’s high GDP growth after 2020 was driven by three primary and two secondary factors. The first, most short-term, primary factor was natural growth after a sharp decline during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. After a contraction caused by the pandemic in 2020, when GDP fell by 6.3 percent, GDP grew by 10.6 percent the following year. The economy grew rapidly, primarily due to the fading of the initial shock from the pandemic and adaptation of the labour market and supply chains to the new pandemic reality.

While the effect of adaptation to the pandemic gradually faded, two other strong primary factors of GDP growth emerged, both associated with the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the spring of 2022. These were the mass arrival of Russian citizens and the opening of a transport corridor for sanctioned goods to Russia via Georgia. Following 2022, more than 80,000 Russian citizens settled in Georgia, mostly IT professionals, small businesspeople, and other members of higher-income groups. Their arrival stimulated overall demand, particularly growth in housing prices and development of the construction and IT sectors. In addition, Russian capital in the form of deposits from Russian citizens began flowing into Georgian banks in large quantities in 2022.

After 2022, Georgia became one of several transport corridors for the (re)export of sanctioned goods to Russia. Official statistics indicate Georgia’s role as an export corridor for passenger cars. In 2025, Kyrgyzstan (export from Georgia US$ 1.49 billion) and Kazakhstan (export from Georgia US$ 909 million) became Georgia’s main trading partners, and the main official export destinations for passenger cars from Georgia. The export value of this commodity reached US$ 2.81 billion. Passenger cars were also the largest import item to Georgia with a total value of US$ 3.87 billion. It should be noted that the “Georgian corridor” is partly absent from Kyrgyz and Kazakh statistics. While there is an immense increase of Georgian exports to Asia, the corresponding imports from Georgia are missing in the statistics of these countries. For instance, Kyrgyzstan’s official imports from Georgia are at least ten times lower than exports from Georgia to Kyrgyzstan.

The war in Ukraine also became the impetus for the emergence of two secondary factors of GDP growth in Georgia: foreign students and Russian tourists. Before the war, universities in eastern Ukraine were the main competitors of Georgian universities for international students, especially from India. After the war broke out, large numbers of students instead came to Georgia, increasing by an average of 20 percent year-on-year. In the 2024-2025 academic year, 37,100 international students studied in Georgia, more than double the 17,500 foreign students in Georgian universities in 2021-2022. This factor is an often overlooked yet significant secondary driver of Georgia’s GDP growth over the past few years.

Moreover, unlike many Western countries, Georgia has not banned flights to Russia, thereby stimulating growth in tourism. Russians represented 23.32 percent of total visits to the country in 2025.

Increased state revenues are an additional element that have contributed to strong growth figures and increased government spending in the years 2021-2025. Central government tax revenues rose from US$ 3.5 billion in 2021 to US$ 8.0 billion in 2025, reflecting a 128 percent increase, while state budget appropriations increased from US$ 6.19 billion to 10.3 billion, a 66.3 percent rise.  

IMPLICATIONS:

Several trends indicate that the main drivers of Georgia’s growth have already peaked and are beginning to fade. The economic growth in 2025 was likely inflated mainly by the International Company Status Act adopted in 2020. The Act grants certain types of companies in the IT and maritime sectors the opportunity to qualify for significant tax breaks. The changes adopted in 2020 allow foreign IT companies to register in Georgia, having to pay only a 5 percent corporate tax and 5 percent on employee wages. The ultimate catalyst for growth under the legislation was the arrival of Russian and Belarusian IT experts in 2022. In parallel with this law, the government also introduced simplified permanent residence for employees in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) sector in 2025.

In the third quarter of 2025, the ICT sector grew by 21.1 percent; in the second quarter of 2025, by 37.1 percent; and in the first quarter of 2025, by 28.6 percent. In the third quarter of 2025, the sector reached 7.4 percent of the country’s GDP, from only 3 percent in 2020. While the state’s revenues from this scheme are rather insignificant, it does contribute to inflating growth statistics.

At the same time, almost all sectors relevant to the real economy and the state budget recorded a decrease in growth or a decline in the third quarter of 2025: energy (-3.3 percent), agriculture (-5.4 percent), construction (0.2 percent), trade (+3 percent) and manufacturing (+2,5 percent).

Other trends also contribute to the slowdown of the real Georgian economy. The number of people employed in the Georgian economy has decreased (most probably due to emigration) in the third quarter of 2025. Meanwhile, growth rates of imports are decreasing as compared to 2024. 

While state budget revenues increased by approximately 25 percent in 2024, they increased by only 10 percent in 2025, with 4 percent offset by current inflation. These trends contradict the estimated 2025 GDP growth rate.

The Georgian economy’s growth was not only an important PR tool for the Georgian government but also a practical means for maintaining its public support in the critical years of 2024 and 2025.

During its time in power, Georgian Dream has created a self-dependent layer of civil servants and citizens receiving various social benefits. Over the past two years, the ruling party has further strengthened their loyalty by increasing salaries and benefits. This was permitted by strong economic figures in 2022-2024. After 2025, Georgian Dream is starting to run short of resources to continue buying the support of these groups.

Most probably, the Georgian government is aware of the real slowdown in economic growth and the threats it poses to its legitimacy. It is currently taking several steps to address this threat. In the summer of 2025, the National Bank of Georgia managed to restore its dollar reserves to the same level as in 2024, before it started to sharply sell US$. 

Keeping a stable currency is one of Georgian Dream’s main priorities. The government has also become more careful in spending budgetary funds in comparison to previous years, and is actively building a financial reserve to limit the impact of slowing economic growth.

Georgian Dream’s ability to prepare for a period of economic turbulence will depend on several factors. These factors cannot currently be estimated accurately, however, the duration of Western sanctions against Russia stands out among the most relevant. Maintaining Georgia’s relevance as a transport corridor to Russia would significantly help Tbilisi weather the upcoming economic turbulence. On the other hand, a quick resolution of the conflict in Ukraine and the restoration of trade relations between Moscow and the West could, indirectly but significantly, weaken Georgian Dream’s position.

CONCLUSIONS:

The slowdown in the Georgian economy’s real growth will likely be the next big challenge for the ruling Georgian Dream party in the coming years, following the protest year of 2025. Unlike the mass protests, a significant deterioration in the population’s socio-economic situation could undermine support for the ruling party, even among its core electorate. Several current government actions indicate that Georgia’s de facto leader, Bidzina Ivanishvili, is aware of this threat and is taking steps to maintain the government’s capacity to support the existing social system. However, several key factors in this direction are shaped by other actors and trends and depend only marginally on the actions of the Georgian government. Of these, an end to the war in Ukraine could have the most severe negative impact. Moreover, the data accounted for here precedes the recent outbreak of war in Iran. The fallout from the conflict adds uncertainty to an already precarious economic situation in Georgia.

AUTHOR’S BIO: 

Tomáš Baranec is a Research Fellow and Head of the Caucasus Program of the Slovak think tank Strategic Analysis. He currently works as a field researcher on the Georgian-Ossetian ABL. Tomas studied Balkan, Central European and Eurasian Studies at Charles University in Prague. Giorgi Khishtovani is a Full Professor and Head of the Department of Finance at Ilia State University (Georgia). He holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Bremen (Germany), an MSc in Business Administration, and an LLM in Law from the University of Trier (Germany). His research focuses on political economy, governance, economic and fiscal policy.

 

Read 124 times Last modified on Tuesday, 24 March 2026