Monday, April 27 2026 15:07
Karina Melikyan

Industrial  price index rises alongside growth in  manufacturing   sector

Industrial  price index rises alongside growth in  manufacturing   sector

ArmInfo.In Armenia, the industrial producer price index (PPI) rose to 109.2% in January–March 2026, compared to 102.1% during the same period in 2025.

This increase occurred against a backdrop of significant recovery in the industrial sector's annual dynamics, which shifted from an 18.5% decline to 13.4% growth, reaching a total volume of 748 billion drams ($1.98 billion), as evidenced by preliminary data from the Statistical Committee of the Republic of Armenia.  According to the  statistics, the industrial PPI also saw a year-over-year increase in March 2026, rising to 109.5% from 101.9% in March 2025. During this period, industrial performance also trended upward, moving from a 16.9% contraction to 7% growth.

Notably, the consumer market in Armenia also experienced inflation  during these periods. Specifically, inflation reached 4.2% in  January–March 2026 compared to the same period in 2025, and 4.5% in  March 2026 year-over-year—up from 2.5% and 3.3% respectively in the  previous year.  Consumer inflation was primarily driven by rising  food prices, which increased by 7% in January–March 2026 and 7.8% in  March 2026 compared to the corresponding periods in 2025. This  follows a similar upward trend from the previous year, when food  price growth stood at 4.1% and 5.4%. Concurrently, the cost of  services continues to rise, showing an increase of 2.8% in the first  quarter of 2026 and 2.6% in March 2026, maintaining a steady pace  compared to the previous year's rates of 2.7% and 2.9%.

It is worth noting that this is accompanied by an acceleration in  economic activity growth in Armenia in January-March 2026 from 4.1%  to 7.1% per annum, and in March 2026 to March 2025 - from 3.7% to  6.6%. At the same time, an improvement in the annual dynamics of  foreign trade turnover in January- March 2026 is observed from a  54.2% decline to 4.6% growth, as a result of the dynamics of both  exports and imports, which went from a 61.8-47.9% decline to 4.5-4.6%  growth. Compared to March 2025, the volume of foreign trade slowed  down by 6.8% in March 2026, due to a decrease in exports by 12.6% and  imports by 3.2%. This slowdown was less severe than the previous  year, when in March 2025, compared to March 2024, foreign trade  turnover fell by 31.8% due to a reduction in exports by 65.4% and  imports by 51.2%. (The average exchange rate of the dram in Q1 2026  was AMD 378.30  / $ 1, compared to AMD 395.42 / $ 1 in Q1 2025).