Estonia
The light green area is the rest of the European Union
Estonia was the 99th largest economy in the world by nominal GDP in 2018. It has a population of 1.325m. GDP per capita is $22,928. It is a small open economy with trade at 147 percent of GDP in 2018. Over the last twenty years it has benefitted from an ambitious reform agenda. It is ranked 29th in the World Bank's Human Capital Index and 26th in terms of Economic Complexity. It is a member of the EU and OECD. Services was the largest economic sector in 2018 (59 percent of GDP), followed by manufacturing (13.4 percent), and agriculture (2.2 percent). In 2017, the largest export sectors were services (30.45 percent), agriculture (14.7 percent), electronics (12.9 percent), and machinery (8.2 percent). The largest individual exports were ICT services (13.6 percent), transport services (8.9 percent), travel and tourism (7.3 percent), transmission apparatus for radio, telephone, and TV (4.67 percent), and refined petroleum (4.33 percent). Its largest export partners were Finland (14 percent), Sweden (11.6 percent), Russia (10 percent), Latvia (8.2 percent), and Germany (6.7 percent). The largest goods imports were refined petroleum (7.45 percent), and cars (6.21 percent). After gaining independence for the first time in 1920 from the Russian empire, Estonia reorientated itself to the Western Europe. Agriculture was the biggest sector, but manufacturing had been growing since the turn of the century i.e. textiles. During World War Two it was first annexed by the Soviet Union before being occupied by Nazi Germany. After World War Two, Estonia was incorporated into the Soviet Union and its command economy. Under Soviet control, Estonia experienced nationalisation, collectivisation, urbanisation, and mass deportations. Industrialisation was intensified with Russian immigration providing additional labour. By the 1980s, the economy was struggling, and infrastructure was crumbling. Estonia regained its independence in 1991 following the 'Singing Revolution' and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. From 1991, the government pursued an ambitious reform agenda. Macroeconomic stability was the first objective followed by privatisations, and the opening of the economy to free trade and entrepreneurship. The government has also worked hard to improve business conditions, including the rule of law and property rights, in order to attract FDI. The government has also championed innovation, revolutionising its administration through digitisation and improving the education system. Estonia was hit hard by the global financial crisis as exports decreased and the local housing market deflated but the economy has since recovered with strong productivity growth.