Lithuania is set to be raised by €150 million in 2017 according to a draft of 2017-2019 state budgets developed by the Finance Ministry.
GDP
197 straipsnių
Lithuania's economy is growing without raising greenhouse gas emissions, suggesting that the country's development is environmentally sustainable, says climatologist Arūnas Bukantis.
After years of under-investment, a once-comatose Lithuanian army must now learn to walk again, and do so quickly, say high-ranking officials.
Russia’s economy will likely contract gradually over the next three to four years and then become increasingly socialized, as the government implements price and currency controls, monopolizes foreign trade, embarks on a large-scale nationalization of private industries, and increasingly regulates s...
It will take three to four years for Lithuania's economy to reach where Estonia is today, says Rokas Grajauskas, economist for Danske Bank.
Corruption could be costing the Lithuanian economy up to €8 billion a year, according to a new study of studies published by the European Union.
The strength of the country's economy as measured in GDP per capita has the largest impact on happiness in Lithuania and countries around the world, according to the UN.
Lithuania remains among the countries with the largest share of national income coming from remittances even though the level of remittances dropped by 22.1% in 2015.
Lithuania’s Ministry of Finance has significantly revised down its forecasts for GDP growth in 2016 to 2.5% for the year, down from the 3.2% growth predicted last year.
Gitanas Nausėda, Žygimantas Mauricas and Nerijus Mačiulis, all economists at leading commercial banks in Lithuania, are optimistic about Lithuania's economy in the coming year but they highlighted some of the greatest economic risks Lithuania faces in the coming year - most of them international rat...
Lithuanians are happier than either Latvians or Estonians, but not as happy as people in Russia or Poland, according to the World Happiness Index. The world's happiest people live in the Nordics and Switzerland.
If not for the impact of the economic crisis in Russia, Lithuania's economy would have grown by 4.2% rather than 1.6% last year, according to Nordea bank economists.