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ბიზნეს მედია - Bank of Georgia
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ADB Georgia Director highlights country's continued access to international capital markets as clear testament to its robust macroeconomic management

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In an exclusive interview with Business Insider Georgia, Lesley Bearman Lahm, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) country director for Georgia, highlighted the country's continued access to international capital markets as a clear testament to its robust macroeconomic management.

Lahm emphasised that the successful refinancing of Eurobonds, characterised by high investor demand and favourable pricing, reinforces the global financial community’s trust in Georgia’s fiscal credibility.

Responding to a question on ADB’s assessment of Georgia’s fiscal framework and public debt sustainability, Lahm emphasised that maintaining fiscal discipline will remain critical given elevated external uncertainties.

“Georgia’s fiscal framework is prudent and credible, and recent developments reflect continued fiscal discipline and effective public financial management. In 2025, the fiscal deficit declined to 1.2% of GDP, driven by strong revenue mobilisation and more moderate expenditure growth. At the same time, public debt decreased to below 35% of GDP, which is significantly lower than widely used prudential benchmarks. Georgia’s uninterrupted access to international capital markets, including the successful refinancing of Eurobonds amid high investor interest and favorable pricing, further underscores confidence in the country’s macroeconomic management and fiscal reliability”, Lahm stated.

On monetary and regulatory policy, Lahm said ADB assesses the approach of the National Bank of Georgia as firm and consistent under current conditions, highlighting persistent downside risks due to Georgia’s sensitivity to global and regional shocks, external price pressures, and high dollarisation.

Lahm also pointed to the strengthening of external buffers through the accumulation of foreign exchange reserves. As of February 2026, Georgia’s gross international reserves reached a record level of approximately $6.65 billion, exceeding commonly used adequacy benchmarks.

“This is particularly important given the high level of dollarization and the economy’s vulnerability to external shocks”, she added.

Regarding the financial sector, Lahm noted that Georgia’s banking system remains resilient. Measures implemented by the National Bank - including dedollarisation and effective macroprudential policies - have helped reduce currency-related credit risks and excessive indebtedness.

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Economy
image Annual inflation reached 5.9% in April - GeoStat

04.05.2026.17:26

According to the National Statistics Office of Georgia (GeoStat), inflation in April 2026 rose by 1.7% compared to the previous month, while the annual inflation rate stood at 5.9%.

Regarding core inflation, GeoStat reports that the figure reached 3.5% in April 2026, compared to the same period last year. The annual core inflation rate, excluding tobacco, was recorded at 3.2%.

“The monthly inflation figure was shaped primarily by price movements across the following categories:

Transport: Prices in this category rose by 4.9%, contributing 0.57 percentage points to monthly inflation. The increases were driven chiefly by the cost of operating personal vehicles (6.9%) and transport services (3.1%).

Housing, water, electricity and gas: Prices climbed by 5.8%, adding 0.53 percentage points to the overall index. Increases were recorded across the subcategories of electricity, gas and other fuels (9.9%), routine maintenance and repair of dwellings (1.9%), and actual rental payments for housing (1.4%).

Clothing and footwear: Prices rose by 5.3%, contributing 0.23 percentage points to monthly inflation, with both footwear (5.3%) and clothing (5.3%) subcategories seeing equal increases.

Food and non-alcoholic beverages: Prices edged up by 0.5%, adding 0.19 percentage points to monthly inflation. Rises were recorded in fruit and grapes (3.7%), vegetables (2.1%), sugar, jam and confectionery (2.1%), fish (1.6%), coffee, tea and cocoa (1.2%), meat and meat products (0.7%), bread and bakery products (0.5%), and oils and fats (0.1%). Meanwhile, prices fell in mineral and spring water, soft drinks and natural juices (–2.5%), and milk, cheese and eggs (–1.5%).”

 

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