Private Consumption in Latvia
The Latvian economy recorded an average growth rate of 2.8% in private consumption in the decade to 2022, above the Euro Area's average of 1.0%. In 2022, private consumption growth was 6.0%. For more private consumption information, visit our dedicated page.
Latvia Private consumption Chart
Note: This chart displays Private Consumption (annual variation in %) for Latvia from 2014 to 2024.
Source: Macrobond.
Latvia Private consumption Data
2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Private Consumption (ann. var. %) | -4.8 | 8.1 | 5.1 | -1.0 | 0.5 |
GDP declines at a milder rate in Q4
Economy remains in decline in Q4: GDP contracted by 0.4% year on year in the fourth quarter, an improvement from the 1.0% contraction logged in the third quarter. On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, economic activity flatlined in Q4, improving slightly from the previous quarter's 0.2% decrease and marking the best result since Q3 2023. In 2024 as a whole, the economy contracted 0.4%, in sharp contrast to 2023’s 2.9% rise.
Domestic momentum remains subdued: Household spending growth fell to 0.2% in Q4, marking the weakest expansion in a year (Q3: +0.9% yoy). Public spending growth was the slowest since Q2 2023, expanding 6.1% (Q3: +7.7% yoy). Moreover, fixed investment contracted 9.2% in Q4, marking the worst result since Q2 2016 (Q3: -4.1% yoy). On the external front, exports of goods and services stabilized year on year in the final quarter, marking a two-year high (Q3: -0.4% yoy). In addition, imports of goods and services rebounded, growing 0.3% in Q4 (Q3: -0.3% yoy).
Recovery in 2025: The economy should return to growth in 2025. The ECB’s monetary policy loosening cycle and stronger EU demand should underpin an acceleration in private spending growth plus rebounds in fixed investment and exports. That said, government spending is set to lose steam, and an EU–U.S. trade war poses a downside risk to overall growth.
Panelist insight: EIU analysts said: “The economy is poised to return to growth in 2025 […]. We expect the labour market to remain tight in the forecast period, upholding domestic demand, further strengthened by the continuation of energy support measures and the ongoing loosening of monetary policy by the ECB. Steady disbursement of EU funds will support government spending and investment projects, while cheaper borrowing should enable an acceleration in credit growth.”
How should you choose a forecaster if some are too optimistic while others are too pessimistic? FocusEconomics collects Latvian private consumption projections for the next ten years from a panel of 8 analysts at the leading national, regional and global forecast institutions. These projections are then validated by our in-house team of economists and data analysts and averaged to provide one Consensus Forecast you can rely on for each indicator. By averaging all forecasts, upside and downside forecasting errors tend to cancel each other out, leading to the most reliable private consumption forecast available for Latvian private consumption.
Download one of our sample reports to visualize what a Consensus Forecast is and see our Latvian private consumption projections.
Want to get access to the full dataset of Latvian private consumption forecasts? Send an email to [email protected].
Latest Global GDP News
-
Hong Kong: Economy records fastest growth since Q4 2023 in the first quarter GDP reading: GDP growth sped up to 3.1% year on year in the first quarter from 2.5% in the fourth... -
Portugal: Growth eludes the Portuguese economy in Q1 Portugal’s economy switches to be the Euro area’s worst performer: According to a preliminary reading, the economy lost its footing... -
Canada: Economic activity drops in February GDP reading: GDP slid 0.2% in month-on-month seasonally adjusted terms in February, which contrasted January’s 0.4% increase. February’s figure was... -
United States: Economy records sharpest contraction since Q1 2022 in Q1 Tariff threat distorts economic picture: GDP contracted 0.3% in seasonally adjusted annualized rate terms (SAAR) in the first quarter, contrasting... -
Italy: Economy sees strongest expansion in two years in Q1 GDP growth positively surprises markets: According to a preliminary estimate, GDP growth accelerated to 0.3% in seasonally and calendar-adjusted quarter-on-quarter... -
Austria: Economic activity records best reading since Q2 2022 in Q1 GDP rebounds in Q1: According to a preliminary reading, economic activity bounced back after three quarters of contraction, growing 0.2%... -
France: Economy rebounds in Q1 but remains soft Inventories flatter GDP reading: According to a preliminary reading, GDP bounced back 0.1% on a seasonally adjusted quarter on quarter...