
In Serbia we focus on:
The EBRD latest Serbia Strategy was adopted on 27 February 2018
- Serbia private sector diagnostic
- The EBRD’s latest Serbia Strategy
- Report on the invitation to the public to comment on the Serbia Strategy
- The EBRD in Serbia: Results snapshot
Current EBRD forecast for Serbia’s Real GDP Growth in 2023: 1.8%
Current EBRD forecast for Serbia’s Real GDP Growth in 2024: 3.5%
Growth moderated to 1.2 per cent year on year in the first half of 2023 as household consumption and retail trade contracted in line with elevated inflation. Agriculture posted strong annual growth rates, from a low base in 2022, a year which was marked by drought, while industrial output was muted, reflecting weak external demand. Following a protracted contraction in construction, the sector rebounded and supported growth in the second quarter of 2023 as several large public infrastructure projects were launched. The current account deficit narrowed significantly in the first half of 2023 thanks to declining imports, lower global energy prices, and significant electricity exports. Inflation remained elevated, at 12.5 per cent in July 2023, peaking later in Serbia than in other Western Balkans economies and the eurozone. Inflation has been slower to decelerate, partly because of upward adjustments in regulated energy prices, a structural benchmark under the Stand-By-Arrangement (SBA) with the IMF. The first review under the SBA was completed in July 2023, with energy sector reforms progressing as envisaged but with a delay in adopting a new law on state-owned enterprises, one of the benchmarks of the programme. Fiscal policy remained expansionary, as the authorities increased pensions and some public sector wages, set a price cap on 20 essential food and household items and provided one-off financial support to individuals. An increase in excise duties on fuel, tobacco, alcohol and coffee from October 2023 is expected to boost revenues. GDP growth is forecast to reach 1.8 per cent in 2023, reflecting muted global growth prospect and high inflation, before rising to 3.5 per cent in 2024, a rate closer to the medium-term potential.