2022
Flag  
GDP
$72.8BCURRENT US$
Rnk 78 / 186
2012-2022
Flag
GDP GROWTH
10.8%CURRENT US$
Rnk 144 / 186
2022
Flag
 GDP
$70.3BCURRENT US$
Rnk 81 / 186
2012-2022
Flag
GDP GROWTH
63.8%CURRENT US$
Rnk 38 / 186
2022
Flag
GDP PC 
$7,905CURRENT US$
Rnk 85 / 186
2012-2022
Flag
GDP PC GROWTH
13.7%CURRENT US$
Rnk 101 / 186
2022
Flag
GDP PC
$24,827CURRENT US$
Rnk 45 / 186
2012-2022
Flag
GDP PC GROWTH
72.8%CURRENT US$
Rnk 17 / 186

About

Belarus-Lithuania Trade: In 2022, Belarus exported $778M to Lithuania. The main products that Belarus exported to Lithuania were Rapeseed Oil ($89.3M), Sawn Wood ($78.9M), and Other Vegetable Residues ($39M). Over the past 5 years the exports of Belarus to Lithuania have decreased at an annualized rate of 1.89%, from $856M in 2017 to $778M in 2022.

In 2014, Belarus exported services to Lithuania worth $13.6M, with Government services, n.i.e. ($6.79M), Computer and information services ($3.81M), and Royalties and license fees ($1.89M) being the largest in terms of value.

Lithuania-Belarus Trade: In 2022, Lithuania exported $1.5B to Belarus. The main products that Lithuania exported to Belarus were Cars ($597M), Packaged Medicaments ($67.8M), and Vaccines, blood, antisera, toxins and cultures ($47.6M). Over the past 5 years the exports of Lithuania to Belarus have increased at an annualized rate of 4.45%,  from $972M in 2017 to $1.5B in 2022.

In 2003, Lithuania exported services to Belarus worth $192M, with Travel ($121M), Transportation ($64M), and Communications services ($4.8M) being the largest in terms of value.

Comparison: In 2022,  Belarus ranked 32 in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI 0.82), and 100 in total exports ($10.4B). That same year, Lithuania ranked 30 in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI 0.93), and 62 in total exports ($46.9B).

Historical Data

Bilateral Trade by Products

Depth
Value

In 2022, Belarus exported $778M to Lithuania. The main products exported from Belarus to Lithuania were Rapeseed Oil ($89.3M), Sawn Wood ($78.9M), and Other Vegetable Residues ($39M). During the last 5 years the exports of Belarus to Lithuania have decreased at an annualized rate of 1.89%, from $856M in 2017 to $778M in 2022.

In 2017, Lithuania exported $1.5B to Belarus. The main products exported from Lithuania to Belarus were Cars ($597M), Packaged Medicaments ($67.8M), and Vaccines, blood, antisera, toxins and cultures ($47.6M). During the last 5 years the exports of Lithuania to Belarus have increased at an annualized rate of 4.45%, from $972M in 2022 to $1.5B in 2017.

Exports from Belarus (Flag) to Lithuania (Flag) (2022)

Exports from Lithuania (Flag) to Belarus (Flag) (2022)

Latest Data

Trade between Belarus (Flag) and Lithuania (Flag)

Belarus Exports

Lithuania Exports

Market Competitiveness

Color
Belarus
Top Destination
China$1.6B
Lithuania
Top Destination
Latvia$6.18B

This map shows whether countries import more from Belarus or Lithuania. Each country is colored based on the difference in imports they receive from Belarus and Lithuania or the difference in the growth in imports.

In 2022, countries that imported more from Belarus than Lithuania included China ($1.6B), Brazil ($377M), and Azerbaijan ($253M).

In 2022, countries that imported more from Lithuania than Belarus included Latvia ($6.18B), Germany ($3.54B), and Poland ($3.91B).

Difference in imports from Lithuania (Flag) and Belarus (Flag) (2022)

Comparative Advantage Belarus - Lithuania

Flow
Scale

This chart compares trade between Belarus and Lithuania by product, considering products traded by both, Belarus and Lithuania.

During 2022, Belarus had a large net trade with Lithuania in the exports of Wood Products ($150M), Metals ($147M), and Animal and Vegetable Bi-Products ($109M).

During 2017, Lithuania had a large net trade with Belarus in the exports of Transportation ($638M), Chemical Products ($247M), and Plastics and Rubbers ($122M).

Potential Exports

Potential Exports

Depth
View
Sort By
Top Product Potential Belarus Lithuania+$4.45MTractors
Top Product Potential Lithuania Belarus+$6.12MRefined Petroleum

We estimate the export potential of an economy for each product and destination using an extension of the bilateral relatedness model of Jun et al. (2019).This extended gravity model considers similarities among products and geographies and explains more than 50% of the variance in future trade flows.

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Economic Complexity

Competitive Landscape

This visualization shows the product space at the HS4 level with the flags of Belarus and Lithuania. This means that a dot/product with the flag of Belarus indicates it has a comparative advantage over Lithuania. Similarly, a dot/product with the flag of Lithuania indicates it has a comparative advantage over Belarus.

Product Space of Belarus (Flag) and Lithuania (Flag) (2022)

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