Government Consumption in Ecuador
The economy of Ecuador recorded an average growth rate of 1.3% in government consumption in the decade to 2024. In 2024, government consumption growth was -1.2%.
Ecuador Government Consumption Chart
Note: This chart displays Government Consumption (ann. var. %) for Ecuador from 2014 to 2025.
Source: Macrobond.
Ecuador Government Consumption Data
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Government Consumption (ann. var. %) | 0.5 | 1.4 | 1.7 | -1.2 | 0.6 |
Economic growth ebbs in the third quarter of 2025
GDP expands at a softer pace: Ecuador's GDP grew 2.4% on a seasonally adjusted year-on-year basis in Q3 (Q2: +4.3% yoy s.a.), marking the weakest expansion in 2025 to date. On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, the economy contracted 2.2% in Q3, following a 0.1% contraction in the prior quarter.
Plunging exports weigh on GDP growth: Compared with the prior period's data, figures in Q3 softened for fixed investment (+6.5% in annual terms vs +7.5% in Q2) and exports of goods and services (-4.2% vs +7.9% in Q2). In contrast, readings strengthened for private consumption (+10.2% vs +8.7% in Q2), government consumption (+0.9% vs +0.4% in Q2) and imports of goods and services (+16.6% vs +16.0% in Q2). Exports were hit hard by lower oil shipments after two major pipelines were forced offline in July by extreme weather. Household spending, by contrast, powered the expansion, climbing at its fastest pace since Q2 2023 on the back of 10-year-high remittance inflows.
GDP to cool in 2026 compared to 2025: Our panelists expect economic growth to have picked up in annual terms during Q4, driven by still-robust remittances, improved financing conditions and the reopening of pipelines. Looking at 2026, GDP growth is expected to lose momentum compared with 2025, mainly due to an unfavorable base effect following the post-drought recovery in 2025. The main drag on growth will come from exports, as the gradual shutdown of the ITT oil field continues in 2026; crude oil accounts for about a third of Ecuador’s merchandise shipments. Moreover, high crime rates will likely continue to weigh on the economy.
Panelist insight: Commenting on the outlook, EIU analysts stated: “Although mining and other non-oil shipments will support export growth towards the end of the forecast period, the winding down of production at the ITT oilfield will partly offset this. Trade and immigration restriction policies under the Trump administration in the US will also curb growth in remittances inflows and exports.”
How should you choose a forecaster if some are too optimistic while others are too pessimistic? FocusEconomics collects Ecuadorian government consumption projections for the next ten years from a panel of 8 analysts at the leading national, regional and global forecast institutions. These projections are then validated by our in-house team of economists and data analysts and averaged to provide one Consensus Forecast you can rely on for each indicator. By averaging all forecasts, upside and downside forecasting errors tend to cancel each other out, leading to the most reliable government consumption forecast available for Ecuadorian government consumption.
Download one of our sample reports to visualize what a Consensus Forecast is and see our Ecuadorian government consumption projections.
Want to get access to the full dataset of Ecuadorian government consumption forecasts? Send an email to info@focus-economics.com.
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