Home/Countries/Romania/Domestic Credit to Private Sector (% of GDP)

RomaniaDomestic Credit to Private Sector (% of GDP)

Category: FinanceSource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #124 of 167Updated April 2026
Latest Value
22.7%
2024
YoY Change
-2.2%
20232024
Global Rank
#124
of 167 countries
Maximum
38.3%
2010
Minimum
7.1%
2000
CAGR
+5.0%
25 years
Last
22.7%
Previous
23.3%
Highest
38.3%
Lowest
7.1%
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators

Romania's domestic credit to private sector (% of gdp) was 22.7% in 2024, ranking #124 out of 167 countries. This represents a -2.2% change from 2023. Over the past 25 years, the highest recorded value was 38.3% (2010) and the lowest was 7.1% (2000). Data sourced from the World Bank World Development Indicators.

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
202422.7%-2.2%
202323.3%-7.8%
202225.2%-4.8%
202126.5%+2.5%
202025.9%+4.6%
201924.7%-3.8%
201825.7%-3.7%
201726.7%-6.6%
201628.6%-4.5%
201529.9%-3.8%
201431.1%-9.0%
201334.2%-5.0%
201236.0%-3.9%
201137.4%-2.2%
201038.3%+3.5%
200937.0%+3.0%
200835.9%+5.6%
200734.0%+30.7%
200626.0%+29.6%
200520.1%+27.1%
200415.8%+11.7%
200314.1%+40.1%
200210.1%+16.6%
20018.7%+21.4%
20007.1%

Top Countries — Domestic Credit to Private Sector (% of GDP)

#CountryValueYear
1Hong Kong SAR, China231.0%2024
2United States200.9%2024
3Japan196.8%2024
4China194.2%2024
5Korea, Rep.160.3%2024
6Thailand148.0%2024
7Denmark144.1%2024
8New Zealand141.2%2023
9Macao SAR, China129.6%2024
10Australia129.3%2024
View all 167 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

Domestic credit to private sector refers to financial resources provided to the private sector by financial corporations, such as through loans, purchases of nonequity securities, and trade credits and other accounts receivable, that establish a claim for repayment. For some countries these claims include credit to public enterprises. The financial corporations include monetary authorities and deposit money banks, as well as other financial corporations where data are available (including corporations that do not accept transferable deposits but do incur such liabilities as time and savings deposits). Examples of other financial corporations are finance and leasing companies, money lenders, insurance corporations, pension funds, and foreign exchange companies. This indicator is expressed as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which is the total income earned through the production of goods and services in an economic territory during an accounting period.

Methodology

Data compiled by International Financial Statistics database, International Monetary Fund (IMF); World Development Indicators Database, World Bank (WB); National Accounts data files, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsCoverage: 20002024View original source →