A recent report by the Vienna Institute for International Studies (WIIW) highlights a significant gap between Albania’s economic growth and social welfare. While GDP per capita could reach the EU average within about three decades under optimistic projections, poverty reduction is progressing far more slowly — taking more than 100 years to close the gap. The study underscores that rising income does not automatically translate into better living conditions for the most vulnerable populations.
The report points to structural inequalities, showing that growth is concentrated in specific sectors like construction and energy, benefiting certain regions and groups while leaving rural areas and peripheral cities trapped in persistent poverty.
Meanwhile, central and coastal regions are catching up faster with EU standards, creating a stark regional divide. Population decline further inflates GDP figures, masking the stagnation in real welfare for average households.
Experts warn that without radical reforms in pensions, minimum wage policies, and wealth redistribution, GDP growth risks remaining a statistical illusion. Even with full EU membership, Albania could take a century or more to achieve meaningful social convergence, leaving generations of citizens without real improvements in their standard of living.

