Economic Trivia

The manufacturing and financial sectors account for more than half of San Marino's GDP.

Trade Source: United Nations Comtrade
Note: Top 3 trade partners are calculated by imports + exports.

Data unavailable

Top Industries Source: CIA World Factbook

Tourism; Banking; Textiles; Electronics

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) [1]

GDP, PPP (current international) $2,294,085,340 (2021)
GDP Growth Rate (annual %) 8.463% (2021)
GDP Per Capita, PPP (current international) $67,983 (2021)
Click on a row to display its 5-year graph on the right.

GDP Country Rank 180/197 (2021)

GDP Composition %

Note: GDP composition percentage may exceed 100. Manufacturing is included in the Industry figures and is also reported separately because it plays a critical role in many economies.

Economic Indicators [1]

Inflation, consumer prices (annual %) 1.046% (2017)
External debt stocks, total (DOD, current US$) Data unavailable
Total tax rate (% of commercial profits) 36.2% (2019)
Real Interest Rate (5 year average %) -3.191% (2021)
Manufacturing, value added (% of GDP) 32.774% (2021)
Current Account Balance (BoP, current US$) Data unavailable
Click on a row to display its 5-year graph on the right.

Labor and Employment [1]

Labor Force, Total Data unavailable
Employment in Agriculture (% of total employment) 0.33% (2015)
Employment in Industry (% of total employment) 32.56% (2015)
Employment in Services (% of total employment) 67.11% (2015)
Unemployment Rate 2.6% (2007)
Click on a row to display its 5-year graph on the right.

Trade [1]

Imports of goods and services (current US$) $2,934,397,278 (2021)
Exports of goods and services (current US$) $3,419,735,539 (2021)
Total Merchandise Trade (% of GDP) Data unavailable
FDI, net inflows (BoP, current US$) $390,000 (2007)
Commercial Service Exports (current US$) $887,114,864 (2021)
Click on a row to display its 5-year graph on the right.

Economic Snapshot [1]

Note: Percentile ranks are calculated using the latest available data for all countries within the last 5 years.

How to interpret the graph: The purpose of this graph is to take a snapshot of a country’s economy in comparison to other economies. For example, San Marino’s Exports rank is higher than (please wait...) of the countries in the dataset. For Exports, FDI and GDP measures, a higher rank (closer to 100%) indicates a stronger economy. Conversely, for Unemployment and Inflation, a lower rank (closer to 0%) indicates a stronger economy.

Due to unavailable data the following indicators have been omitted:
  • Exports
  • FDI, net inflows
  • GDP Growth Rate
  • GDP Per Capita
  • Inflation
  • Unemployment

Sources

  1. The World Bank