Monday, April 27 2026 13:30
Karina Melikyan

Armenia`s economic activity growth accelerated to 7.1% in  January-March 2026, driven by  construction and industrial sectors

Armenia`s economic activity growth accelerated to 7.1% in  January-March 2026, driven by  construction and industrial sectors

ArmInfo. In Armenia, economic activity growth accelerated to 7.1% annually in January-March 2026 (up from 4.1% in the same period of 2025), driven  by the construction and industrial sectors. According to preliminary  data from the RA Statistics Committee, there was also an improvement  in foreign trade dynamics, with a significant recession giving way to  moderate growth.

According to statistics, the acceleration of economic activity in January-March 2026 was mainly attributed to the annual dynamics of the industrial sector, which shifted from an 18.5% decline to 13.4% growth, and an even faster acceleration in the construction sector, from 13.6% to 22%. Additionally, annual growth in the energy sector also accelerated, from 3.8% to 7.7%. On the other hand, annual growth in trade continued to slow, from 6% to  2.1%, as did the services sector, from 11.5% to 7.4%. In the  agricultural sector, there was a worsening in annual dynamics,  transitioning from 10.5% growth to a 5.2% decline.

According to statistics for January-March 2026, the trade sector  retained the lead in absolute terms, with a volume of 1.4 trillion  drams ($3.8 billion). The services sector ranks second in terms of  volume with 981.7 billion drams ($2.6 billion), followed by the  industrial sector with 748 billion drams ($1.98 billion), the  agricultural sector with 96.4 billion drams ($254.7 million), and the  construction sector with 95.6 billion drams ($252.8 million). Power  generation in January-March 2026 amounted to 2,664.8 million kWh,  with 840.9 million kWh generated in March alone.

At the same time, economic activity also accelerated in March 2026  compared to March 2025, reaching 6.6% (from 3.7% a year earlier). In  March alone, growth accelerated from 4.6% to 11.6% (the same as in  March a year earlier, from 5.8% to 11.9%). Moreover, in March 2026,  the industrial sector's dynamics worsened, reversing from 12.2%  growth to a 2% decline, while a year earlier in the same month, the  dynamics had recovered from a 0.9% decline to 15.9% growth. Other  sectors, however, demonstrated growth in March, with the highest  double-digit growth in construction (34.4%, with a slowdown),  followed by trade (14.1%, with a slowdown), services (12.6%, with a  recovery), and energy (7.1%, with a recovery).  On a year-over-year  basis (March 2026 to March 2025), all sectors demonstrated an upward  trend. The construction sector showed the highest annual growth rate  of 24%, followed by the energy sector (9%), services (7.8%),  industrial sector (7%), and trade (0.2%). A year earlier, in March  2025 compared to March 2024, almost all sectors, except for the  industrial sector (16.9%) and energy complex (2.2%), which  experienced decline, showed growth: construction by 15.5%, services  by 10.1%, and trade by 3.2%.

Against this backdrop, Armenia's foreign trade turnover in  January-March 2026 amounted to 1.8 trillion drams ($4.7 billion), an  increase of 4.6% year-on-year (compared to a 54.2% decline a year  ago). This is due to the growth of both export and import dynamics by  4.5% and 4.6% per annum, respectively (from a decline of 61.8% and  47.9% a year ago). As a result, the absolute value of exports  amounted to 665.7 billion drams ($1.8 billion), and imports - 1.1  trillion drams ($2.9 billion).

In March 2026, compared to March 2025, foreign trade turnover  decreased by 6.8% due to a decline in both exports by 12.6% and  imports by 3.2%. This was a more impressive rate observed a year  earlier in March 2025 compared to March 2024, when foreign trade  turnover fell by 31.8% due to a significant decline in both exports  by 65.4% and imports by 51.2%. 

It should be noted that, starting in 2023, the methodology for  calculating power generation volumes in statistical reports has  changed; specifically, the volume of electricity generated by  autonomous generators has also been included. For the agricultural  sector, data is published only in quarterly and annual statistical  reports. (The average dram exchange rate in the first quarter of 2026  was AMD 378.30/$1, compared to AMD 395.42/$1 in Q1 2025.)