Monday, May 11 2026 14:48
Alina Hovhannisyan

Deputy Minister of Economy: Armenia`s industry showing clear signs of  stabilization, recovery, and sustainable growth

 Deputy Minister of Economy: Armenia`s industry showing clear signs of  stabilization, recovery, and sustainable growth

ArmInfo.  Armenia's industry is showing clear signs of stabilization, recovery, and sustainable growth. Edgar Zakaryan, Deputy Minister of Economy of Armenia,  expressed this opinion on his Facebook page.

He noted that after 1991, Armenia's industrial sector experienced a  deep recession and systemic degradation for nearly three decades.

According to the Deputy Minister, starting in 2018, the government  has gradually begun implementing a policy of industrial recovery, or  more precisely, an industrial revival policy. "While up until 2025,  and even throughout 2025 itself, the industry continued to develop  amidst high levels of external market instability, fluctuations in  global metal prices, and global economic uncertainty, a significant  stabilization of industrial activity has already been recorded in the  first months of this year.

It is particularly important that the manufacturing industry-the  economic sector that generates high added value, export potential,  and technological development-remains the main driver of growth,"  Zakaryan noted.

In recent months, he noted, positive dynamics have been observed in  the food industry, certain areas of metallurgy, and a number of  manufacturing subsectors.

In this vein, Zakaryan noted that in recent years, the government's  economic policy has been purposefully focused on restoring and  strengthening the manufacturing economy. "As a result, even amid  external risks, Armenia continues to maintain macroeconomic stability  and the potential for industrial recovery," the deputy head of the  department emphasized.

At the same time, Zakaryan emphasized the need to realistically  assess the existing challenges. Among the latter, he cited  instability in foreign markets, geopolitical processes, and changes  in the global economy.  "However, the difference is that today  Armenia faces these risks with a more competitive economy, a more  organized public administration system, and a higher level of  institutional resilience.

Our goal is not simply to ensure high economic growth.

Our strategic objective is to build a productive, export-oriented,  and technologically advanced Armenia, where industry will become not  only the driving force of the economy but also one of the most  important pillars of national economic sovereignty," he concluded.

It is worth noting that, according to the Statistical Committee of  the Republic of Armenia, Armenia's industrial sector grew by 13.4% in  the first quarter of 2026 (from an 18.5% decline in the same period  of 2025), reaching 748 billion drams ($1.9 billion).

The manufacturing industry also reversed its annual dynamics from a  26% decline to a 9.5% growth, with a volume of 458.4 billion drams.