Moldova recorded a Current Account deficit of 11.60 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product in 2022. source: National Bank of Moldova

Current Account to GDP in Moldova averaged -8.37 percent of GDP from 1998 until 2022, reaching an all time high of -1.20 percent of GDP in 2002 and a record low of -19.70 percent of GDP in 1998. This page provides - Moldova Current Account to GDP - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news. Moldova Current Account to GDP - values, historical data and charts - was last updated on March of 2023.

Current Account to GDP in Moldova is expected to reach -10.00 percent of GDP by the end of 2023, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. In the long-term, the Moldova Current Account to GDP is projected to trend around -8.80 percent of GDP in 2024 and -6.40 percent of GDP in 2025, according to our econometric models.

Ok
Trading Economics members can view, download and compare data from nearly 200 countries, including more than 20 million economic indicators, exchange rates, government bond yields, stock indexes and commodity prices.

The Trading Economics Application Programming Interface (API) provides direct access to our data. It allows API clients to download millions of rows of historical data, to query our real-time economic calendar, subscribe to updates and receive quotes for currencies, commodities, stocks and bonds.

Please Paste this Code in your Website
width
height
Moldova Current Account to GDP



Related Last Previous Unit Reference
Current Account -633.56 -441.63 USD Million Sep 2022
Current Account to GDP -11.60 -7.70 percent of GDP Dec 2021
Capital Flows -467.44 -607.09 USD Million Jun 2022
Foreign Direct Investment 192.08 122.38 USD Million Sep 2022
External Debt 8885.50 8687.24 USD Million Sep 2022
Remittances 336.00 328.03 USD Million Sep 2022

Moldova Current Account to GDP
The Current account balance as a percent of GDP provides an indication on the level of international competitiveness of a country. Usually, countries recording a strong current account surplus have an economy heavily dependent on exports revenues, with high savings ratings but weak domestic demand. On the other hand, countries recording a current account deficit have strong imports, a low saving rates and high personal consumption rates as a percentage of disposable incomes.
Actual Previous Highest Lowest Dates Unit Frequency
-11.60 -7.70 -1.20 -19.70 1998 - 2021 percent of GDP Yearly