
The more inflation, the less competitiveness
The tight labour market increases the risk that inflation will remain higher and growth lower, and the rising borrowing costs will weigh on investment outlooks.
The tight labour market increases the risk that inflation will remain higher and growth lower, and the rising borrowing costs will weigh on investment outlooks.
In an attempt to avoid an outright ban on sales of polluting vehicles, Warsaw will continue mining coal, which generates 70% of its power, until 2049.
Lithuania’s manufacturing generates 20% of the GDP and employs 13% of the labour pool. Automotive leads both in jobs created and expenditures.
Riga rebranded its national strategy aiming to increase the amount of attracted investments to 2.45 billion euro over the next three years.
Lithuania’s highly educated workforce, modern infrastructure, and favourable business environment generate massive start-up opportunities.
mRiik is the digital identity app that will allow you to have all the necessary documents (passport, ID card, driver’s license) in users’ phones.
Tietoevry is combining global business design and software engineering services within the three Baltic countries, with a total market size of EUR 3.6 billion.
Elevated inflation reduces purchasing power and increases the risk of low investment and deteriorating competitiveness.
Digital health will grow 30% annually over the next 5 years and reach 640 bn by 2026. Estonia is working on evidence-based digital therapeutic solutions.
Tallinn has not only consolidated its competitive IT sector and business environment: now finance and insurance firms lead the flow of FDI abroad.