Skip to content

Economy of San Marino vs Uganda compared: GDP & Debt

Updated on by Georank team

San Marino has a GDP of $1.83B compared to $53.7B for Uganda, ranking 181/197 and 89/197 by economy size, respectively.

San Marino has $1.31B in government debt (64.1% of GDP), compared to $27.8B (54% of GDP) in Uganda.

The chart below compares the two countries' GDP growth in both current (nominal) and constant dollars, accounting for inflation over time.

San Marino
GDP, current $

GDP, constant 2015 $
Uganda
GDP, current $

GDP, constant 2015 $
Year GDP
San Marino Uganda
Current $ Constant $ Current $ Constant $
1960 - - $423,145,605 -
1961 - - $441,667,335 -
1962 - - $449,158,233 -
1963 - - $516,315,231 -
1964 - - $589,247,687 -
1965 - - $884,502,310 -
1966 - - $925,381,492 -
1967 - - $967,240,655 -
1968 - - $1,037,379,252 -
1969 - - $1,168,556,629 -
1970 - - $1,259,554,809 -
1971 - - $1,417,191,656 -
1972 - - $1,490,970,181 -
1973 - - $1,701,829,789 -
1974 - - $2,098,944,967 -
1975 - - $2,359,555,556 -
1976 - - $2,447,300,000 -
1977 - - $2,936,470,588 -
1978 - - $2,420,260,870 -
1979 - - $2,139,025,000 -
1980 - - $1,244,610,000 -
1981 - - $1,337,300,000 -
1982 - - $2,177,500,000 $4,983,495,459
1983 - - $2,240,333,333 $5,269,775,231
1984 - - $3,615,647,477 $5,251,611,545
1985 - - $3,519,695,444 $5,077,973,311
1986 - - $3,923,244,050 $5,097,781,822
1987 - - $6,269,522,042 $5,299,750,982
1988 - - $6,508,931,652 $5,737,885,293
1989 - - $5,276,480,799 $6,102,926,184
1990 - - $4,304,399,310 $6,498,038,179
1991 - - $3,321,729,160 $6,858,945,425
1992 - - $2,857,457,762 $7,093,408,658
1993 - - $3,220,439,044 $7,684,026,613
1994 - - $3,990,430,447 $8,176,083,687
1995 - - $5,755,818,842 $9,118,233,745
1996 - - $6,044,585,327 $9,945,450,358
1997 $976,606,694 $1,248,966,330 $6,269,333,313 $10,452,668,512
1998 $1,048,316,128 $1,342,209,396 $6,584,815,847 $10,965,399,652
1999 $1,109,473,368 $1,463,670,758 $5,998,563,258 $11,848,547,280
2000 $1,007,661,367 $1,495,569,702 $6,193,246,837 $12,220,817,656
2001 $1,059,529,812 $1,578,997,708 $5,840,503,869 $12,854,303,430
2002 $1,148,872,072 $1,583,905,238 $6,178,563,591 $13,976,829,356
2003 $1,462,590,267 $1,645,249,360 $6,606,884,275 $14,881,585,674
2004 $1,715,340,543 $1,720,089,190 $7,939,487,548 $15,894,609,936
2005 $1,786,514,058 $1,761,803,193 $9,239,221,763 $16,901,146,461
2006 $1,909,765,165 $1,829,281,727 $9,977,647,683 $18,723,891,905
2007 $2,188,654,628 $1,959,331,267 $11,902,564,495 $20,299,025,449
2008 $2,403,213,305 $1,949,516,207 $14,440,404,132 $22,066,817,214
2009 $2,064,277,126 $1,748,307,486 $25,127,805,567 $23,567,695,615
2010 $1,881,191,925 $1,652,610,655 $26,673,441,431 $24,896,350,765
2011 $1,813,717,439 $1,515,199,821 $27,871,725,241 $27,234,530,260
2012 $1,604,701,299 $1,408,461,048 $27,305,915,911 $28,279,643,268
2013 $1,678,741,475 $1,397,419,106 $28,915,786,517 $29,294,007,440
2014 $1,673,911,426 $1,387,604,047 $32,612,397,257 $30,789,849,488
2015 $1,419,401,071 $1,419,401,071 $32,387,183,730 $32,387,183,730
2016 $1,468,343,140 $1,452,677,592 $29,203,988,696 $33,935,615,079
2017 $1,528,620,346 $1,456,429,357 $30,744,473,841 $34,998,276,802
2018 $1,655,353,653 $1,478,187,033 $32,927,025,620 $37,204,541,497
2019 $1,616,232,125 $1,508,721,723 $35,353,061,008 $39,600,047,064
2020 $1,544,714,493 $1,408,423,248 $37,600,368,240 $40,768,765,796
2021 $1,855,396,000 $1,604,162,946 $40,529,788,744 $42,210,585,953
2022 $1,831,700,577 $1,730,866,818 $45,565,333,216 $44,147,216,890
2023 - - $48,768,955,859 $46,503,341,915
2024 - - $53,651,874,314 $49,356,997,179

Economic indicators

San Marino Uganda
Gross domestic product
$1.83B
2022
$53.7B
2024
GDP rank
181/197
2022
89/197
2024
GDP growth
-1.28%
2021-2022
10%
2023-2024
GDP per capita
$54,265
2022
$1,073
2024
GDP per capita rank
20/197
2022
173/197
2024
GDP per capita, PPP
$75,941
2022
$3,276
2024
Government debt
$1.31B
2022
$27.8B
2024
Debt-to-GDP ratio
64.1%
2025
54%
2025
Government debt per person
$38,712
2022
$556
2024
Government debt per person rank
15/185
2022
162/185
2024
Average annual personal income after taxes
$44,308
2025
$1,648
2025
Income share by richest 10% n/a
34.5%
2019
Income share by poorest 10% n/a
2.4%
2019
Government expenditure, % of GDP
22.1%
2025
21.4%
2025
Consumer prices inflation
2%
2024-2025
3.8%
2024-2025
Central bank interest rate n/a
9.75%
2024
Unemployment rate
4.91%
2022
3.42%
2021
Population
33996
52490669

GDP per capita in San Marino vs Uganda

San Marino's GDP per capita is $54,265, ranking 20/197, compared to $1,073 in Uganda, ranking 173/197. Adjusted for purchasing power (GDP per capita PPP), San Marino ranks 17th at $75,941, while Uganda ranks 175th at $3,276.

San Marino
GDP per capita

GDP per capita, PPP
Uganda
GDP per capita

GDP per capita, PPP
Year Current $
San Marino Uganda
GDP per capita GDP per capita, PPP GDP per capita GDP per capita, PPP
1960 - - $55.4 -
1961 - - $56.2 -
1962 - - $55.5 -
1963 - - $62 -
1964 - - $68.6 -
1965 - - $100 -
1966 - - $101.4 -
1967 - - $102.8 -
1968 - - $106.9 -
1969 - - $116.7 -
1970 - - $122 -
1971 - - $133.5 -
1972 - - $137 -
1973 - - $152.7 -
1974 - - $183.7 -
1975 - - $201.2 -
1976 - - $203.3 -
1977 - - $237.6 -
1978 - - $190.7 -
1979 - - $164.5 -
1980 - - $93.8 -
1981 - - $98.6 -
1982 - - $157 -
1983 - - $157.5 -
1984 - - $247.5 -
1985 - - $234.3 -
1986 - - $253.6 -
1987 - - $393 -
1988 - - $395 -
1989 - - $310 -
1990 - - $245 $666
1991 - - $183 $703
1992 - - $152.1 $719
1993 - - $165.6 $770
1994 - - $198.4 $809
1995 - - $278.5 $897
1996 - - $284.7 $969
1997 $37,853 $44,426 $286.8 $1,007
1998 $40,127 $47,679 $292.5 $1,037
1999 $41,932 $52,064 $257.9 $1,100
2000 $37,601 $53,713 $258.1 $1,124
2001 $39,035 $57,252 $236 $1,173
2002 $41,791 $57,584 $242 $1,255
2003 $52,530 $60,224 $250.7 $1,320
2004 $58,232 $61,114 $292.4 $1,405
2005 $59,878 $63,739 $330 $1,497
2006 $63,271 $67,434 $347 $1,660
2007 $70,124 $71,744 $401 $1,795
2008 $75,902 $71,724 $473 $1,931
2009 $62,429 $61,970 $799 $2,015
2010 $56,543 $58,926 $823 $2,092
2011 $55,601 $56,240 $836 $2,268
2012 $47,946 $51,274 $795 $2,032
2013 $50,808 $50,770 $818 $2,045
2014 $51,260 $52,909 $896 $2,134
2015 $43,147 $52,247 $863 $2,190
2016 $44,359 $53,033 $753 $2,165
2017 $45,192 $52,463 $765 $2,158
2018 $47,951 $54,461 $792 $2,312
2019 $46,627 $57,444 $822 $2,441
2020 $44,427 $55,207 $846 $2,532
2021 $54,169 $64,745 $883 $2,685
2022 $54,265 $75,941 $963 $2,919
2023 - - $1,002 $3,098
2024 - - $1,073 $3,276

Spending and national debt comparison

In 2024, San Marino's government spending was $397M, accounting for 22.1% of its GDP, while Uganda's spent $11B, or 21.4% of GDP.

Debt-to-GDP ratio is 64.1% in San Marino and 54% in Uganda, ranking 69/185 and 100/185, respectively.

San Marino
Government spending

Government debt
Uganda
Government spending

Government debt
Year % of GDP
San Marino Uganda
Government spending Government debt Government spending Government debt
1997 - - 13.9% 44.2%
1998 - - 14% 45.1%
1999 - - 14.7% 47.7%
2000 - - 15.2% 48.5%
2001 - 11.6% 16.2% 51.4%
2002 - 17.2% 16.8% 54.7%
2003 - 16.1% 16.5% 55.1%
2004 19% 16.9% 15.6% 49%
2005 19.3% 14.5% 14.5% 42.6%
2006 19.7% 14.2% 13.7% 27.8%
2007 20.7% 12.6% 13.2% 17%
2008 22% 15.5% 12.9% 15.7%
2009 24.8% 20.1% 11.8% 14.8%
2010 24.4% 20% 15.4% 18.4%
2011 25.4% 16.6% 13.2% 18%
2012 30.6% 17.2% 13.1% 19.5%
2013 30.2% 23.2% 13.3% 22.1%
2014 23.7% 21% 13.6% 24.8%
2015 26.3% 19.3% 14.9% 28%
2016 23.4% 21.4% 15.2% 31.3%
2017 25.6% 56.6% 16.3% 33.6%
2018 24.5% 56.7% 16.2% 34.9%
2019 22.4% 56.2% 18.3% 37.5%
2020 59.2% 69.8% 21.4% 46.3%
2021 37.1% 77.2% 21.4% 50.3%
2022 21.7% 71.3% 20.2% 50.2%
2023 21.9% 69.9% 19% 50.2%
2024 22.4% 65.2% 20.5% 51.8%
2025 22.1% 64.1% 21.4% 54%

Government deficit by year

In 2022, San Marino's government surplus, the difference between spending and revenue, was $7.76M, equivalent to 0.42% of GDP. This compares to Uganda's deficit of -$2.72B, or -5.96% of GDP.

Over the past 19 years, San Marino recorded a fiscal deficit in 12 of those years, while Uganda ran a deficit in 18 years. On average, San Marino posted an annual deficit equal to -3.96% of GDP, compared to deficit of -3.05% of GDP for Uganda.

Deficit/surplus
San Marino

Uganda
Year Deficit/surplus, % of GDP
San Marino Uganda
1997 - -0.83%
1998 - -0.7%
1999 - -1.24%
2000 - -0.62%
2001 - -0.99%
2002 - -2.07%
2003 - -0.97%
2004 2.44% 0.34%
2005 3.58% -0.17%
2006 1.51% -0.64%
2007 1.83% -0.82%
2008 0.18% -1.99%
2009 -2.46% -1.61%
2010 -2.24% -4.64%
2011 -4.05% -2.04%
2012 -7.08% -2.39%
2013 -7.74% -3.19%
2014 1.06% -2.74%
2015 -3.32% -2.59%
2016 -0.19% -2.64%
2017 -3.49% -3.83%
2018 -1.56% -3.02%
2019 -0.11% -4.82%
2020 -37.6% -7.76%
2021 -16.4% -7.44%
2022 0.42% -5.96%
2023 -0.73% -4.86%
2024 -1.85% -5.85%
2025 -1.71% -6.7%

Inflation comparison by year

Over the past 23 years, San Marino has recorded an average annual inflation rate of 1.95%, compared with 6.5% in Uganda. In 2025, inflation was 2% in San Marino and 3.8% in Uganda.

Inflation
San Marino

Uganda
Year Inflation
San Marino Uganda San Marino Uganda
1996 - 7.5%
1997 - 7.7%
1998 - 5.8%
1999 - 5.8%
2000 - 3.4%
2001 - 1.9%
2002 - -0.3%
2003 1.3% 8.7%
2004 1.4% 3.7%
2005 1.7% 8.6%
2006 2.1% 7.2%
2007 2.5% 6.1%
2008 4.1% 12%
2009 2.4% 13%
2010 2.4% 4%
2011 2.2% 18.7%
2012 2.8% 14%
2013 1.6% 5.5%
2014 1.1% 4.3%
2015 0.1% 3.7%
2016 0.6% 5.2%
2017 1% 5.6%
2018 1.2% 2.5%
2019 0.5% 2.1%
2020 -0.1% 2.8%
2021 1.6% 2.2%
2022 5.3% 7.2%
2023 5.9% 5.4%
2024 1.2% 3.3%
2025 2% 3.8%

Balance of trade

San Marino Uganda
Current account balance
$284M
2022
-$4.2B
2024
Current account balance ranking
61/189
2022
161/189
2024
Current account balance, % of GDP
+15.5%
2022
-7.83%
2024
Goods imports
$2.32B
2022
$11.7B
2024
Goods exports
$2.73B
2022
$8.67B
2024
Service imports
$849M
2022
$4.31B
2024
Service exports
$891M
2022
$2.39B
2024
Imports of goods and services, % of GDP
173%
2022
24.6%
2024
Exports of goods and services, % of GDP
197.4%
2022
16.9%
2024

Economic freedom indices

The indices of economic freedom below are issued by the Heritage Foundation. Higher scores indicate stronger economic health.

San Marino Uganda
Economic freedom 76 51.3
Economic freedom ranking 16/197 154/197
Property rights n/a 47.4
Government integrity n/a 24.1
Judicial effectiveness n/a 29.2
Tax burden n/a 73.6
Government spending n/a 87.7
Fiscal health n/a 35.5
Business freedom n/a 50.3
Labor freedom n/a 54.8
Monetary freedom n/a 75.1
Trade freedom n/a 57.4
Investment freedom n/a 40
Financial freedom n/a 40

More economic indicators

San Marino Uganda
Services, % of GDP
55.1%
2022
43.1%
2024
Industry, % of GDP
37.6%
2022
24.9%
2024
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing, % of GDP
0.01%
2022
24.7%
2024
GNI, Atlas method
$1.82B
2022
$50.9B
2024
GNI per capita, PPP
$69,360
2022
$3,200
2024
Total reserves including gold
$759M
2024
$3.36B
2018
Total reserves ranking
147/177
2024
114/177
2018
Net foreign direct investment
-$20.3M
2022
-$3.3B
2024
Net inflows of foreign direct investment
$85.9M
2022
$3.3B
2024
Net outflows of foreign direct investment
$65.6M
2022
$400K
2024
Servicing debt to the IMF, % of GNI
n/a
4.99%
2023
Poverty at national poverty lines n/a
20.3%
2019
Gross capital formation, % of GDP
23%
2022
22.3%
2024

GDP per capita map

GDP per capita

Compare countries by 7 more topics

Economy comparisons

Economy vs San Marino vs Uganda
Afghanistan Compare Compare
Albania Compare Compare
Algeria Compare Compare
Andorra Compare Compare
Angola Compare Compare
Antigua Compare Compare
Argentina Compare Compare
Armenia Compare Compare
Australia Compare Compare
Austria Compare Compare
Azerbaijan Compare Compare
Bahamas Compare Compare
Bahrain Compare Compare
Bangladesh Compare Compare
Barbados Compare Compare
Belarus Compare Compare
Belgium Compare Compare
Belize Compare Compare
Benin Compare Compare
Bhutan Compare Compare
Bolivia Compare Compare
Bosnia Compare Compare
Botswana Compare Compare
Brazil Compare Compare
Brunei Compare Compare
Bulgaria Compare Compare
Burkina Faso Compare Compare
Burundi Compare Compare
Cambodia Compare Compare
Cameroon Compare Compare
Canada Compare Compare
Cape Verde Compare Compare
Cayman Islands Compare Compare
CAR Compare Compare
Chad Compare Compare
Chile Compare Compare
China Compare Compare
Colombia Compare Compare
Comoros Compare Compare
Congo Compare Compare
Costa Rica Compare Compare
Croatia Compare Compare
Cuba Compare Compare
Curacao Compare Compare
Cyprus Compare Compare
Czech Republic Compare Compare
DR Congo Compare Compare
Denmark Compare Compare
Djibouti Compare Compare
Dominica Compare Compare
Dominican Republic Compare Compare
East Timor Compare Compare
Ecuador Compare Compare
Egypt Compare Compare
El Salvador Compare Compare
Equatorial Guinea Compare Compare
Eritrea Compare Compare
Estonia Compare Compare
Eswatini Compare Compare
Ethiopia Compare Compare
Fiji Compare Compare
Finland Compare Compare
France Compare Compare
Gabon Compare Compare
Gambia Compare Compare
Georgia Compare Compare
Germany Compare Compare
Ghana Compare Compare
Greece Compare Compare
Grenada Compare Compare
Guatemala Compare Compare
Guinea Compare Compare
Guinea-Bissau Compare Compare
Guyana Compare Compare
Haiti Compare Compare
Honduras Compare Compare
Hungary Compare Compare
Iceland Compare Compare
India Compare Compare
Indonesia Compare Compare
Iran Compare Compare
Iraq Compare Compare
Ireland Compare Compare
Israel Compare Compare
Italy Compare Compare
Ivory Coast Compare Compare
Jamaica Compare Compare
Japan Compare Compare
Jordan Compare Compare
Kazakhstan Compare Compare
Kenya Compare Compare
Kiribati Compare Compare
Kuwait Compare Compare
Kyrgyzstan Compare Compare
Laos Compare Compare
Latvia Compare Compare
Lebanon Compare Compare
Lesotho Compare Compare
Liberia Compare Compare
Libya Compare Compare
Liechtenstein Compare Compare
Lithuania Compare Compare
Luxembourg Compare Compare
Madagascar Compare Compare
Malawi Compare Compare
Malaysia Compare Compare
Maldives Compare Compare
Mali Compare Compare
Malta Compare Compare
Marshall Islands Compare Compare
Mauritania Compare Compare
Mauritius Compare Compare
Mexico Compare Compare
Moldova Compare Compare
Monaco Compare Compare
Mongolia Compare Compare
Montenegro Compare Compare
Morocco Compare Compare
Mozambique Compare Compare
Myanmar Compare Compare
Namibia Compare Compare
Nauru Compare Compare
Nepal Compare Compare
Netherlands Compare Compare
New Zealand Compare Compare
Nicaragua Compare Compare
Niger Compare Compare
Nigeria Compare Compare
North Korea Compare Compare
North Macedonia Compare Compare
Norway Compare Compare
Oman Compare Compare
Pakistan Compare Compare
Palau Compare Compare
Palestine Compare Compare
Panama Compare Compare
Papua New Guinea Compare Compare
Paraguay Compare Compare
Peru Compare Compare
Philippines Compare Compare
Poland Compare Compare
Portugal Compare Compare
Qatar Compare Compare
Romania Compare Compare
Russia Compare Compare
Rwanda Compare Compare
Saint Kitts Compare Compare
Saint Lucia Compare Compare
Saint Vincent Compare Compare
Samoa Compare Compare
Sao Tome Compare Compare
Saudi Arabia Compare Compare
Senegal Compare Compare
Serbia Compare Compare
Seychelles Compare Compare
Sierra Leone Compare Compare
Singapore Compare Compare
Slovakia Compare Compare
Slovenia Compare Compare
Solomon Islands Compare Compare
Somalia Compare Compare
South Africa Compare Compare
South Korea Compare Compare
South Sudan Compare Compare
Spain Compare Compare
Sri Lanka Compare Compare
Sudan Compare Compare
Suriname Compare Compare
Sweden Compare Compare
Switzerland Compare Compare
Syria Compare Compare
Taiwan Compare Compare
Tajikistan Compare Compare
Tanzania Compare Compare
Thailand Compare Compare
Togo Compare Compare
Tonga Compare Compare
Trinidad Compare Compare
Tunisia Compare Compare
Turkey Compare Compare
Turkmenistan Compare Compare
Tuvalu Compare Compare
Ukraine Compare Compare
UAE Compare Compare
United Kingdom Compare Compare
United States Compare Compare
Uruguay Compare Compare
Uzbekistan Compare Compare
Vanuatu Compare Compare
Vatican Compare Compare
Venezuela Compare Compare
Vietnam Compare Compare
Yemen Compare Compare
Zambia Compare Compare
Zimbabwe Compare Compare

The current account balance is the sum of net trade in goods and services, net earnings from cross-border investments, and net transfer payments. It reflects a country's economic transactions with the rest of the world and is a fundamental component of the balance of payments. A surplus indicates that a country exports more than it imports, while a deficit shows the opposite.

Gross National Income (GNI) measures a country's total income. It encompasses income earned by residents, businesses, and foreign sources, defined as employee compensation and investment profits. GNI adds product taxes not included elsewhere and subtracts subsidies. It accounts for income from residents working abroad but excludes earnings from foreigners within the country.

A negative value for Net Foreign Direct Investment indicates a country is a net receiver of investments, as foreign inflows exceed outflows after Balance of Payments adjustments. A positive value indicates a net provider, with outflows exceeding inflows. Inflows are credits (increasing foreign claims on domestic assets), while outflows are debits (increasing domestic assets abroad).

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net inflows) shows how much capital foreign investors bring into a country after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of overseas companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in the reporting country. A positive number means more capital entered the country than was withdrawn, while a negative number means foreign investors pulled out more than they invested.

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net outflows) shows how much capital residents of a country invest abroad after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of domestic companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in other countries. A positive number means more capital was invested abroad than withdrawn, while a negative number means residents pulled back more than they invested.

Principal and interest payments to the IMF in currency, goods, or services on long-term debt expressed as a share of GNI.

Formerly gross domestic investment, gross capital formation measures the share of a country’s economic output invested in fixed assets, including buildings, machinery, and infrastructure. It indicates how much of the economy is devoted to building productive capacity.