Montenegro’s business community operates in a paradox. On one hand, the country enjoys the euro, EU-aligned regulation, strong tourism inflows and steady investment interest. On the other, firms face intense inflationary pressure, political turnover, regulatory unpredictability and shrinking labour supply.
Local businesses interviewed by Analitika, Vijesti and Monitor highlight three dominant concerns:
Rising costs — driven by imported inflation, higher transport prices, more expensive energy and wage pressure from labour shortages.
Currency rigidity — euroisation protects from currency crashes, but removes policy flexibility; Montenegrin exporters struggle against EU competitors.
Political cycles — frequent government changes and unstable coalitions complicate long-term planning.
SMEs — the backbone of Montenegro’s economy — feel these pressures acutely. Many rely on seasonal revenues and do not have the financial buffers of large investors. Labour shortages in hospitality, construction, retail and logistics force employers to raise wages, but productivity does not always follow.
Businesses call for predictable regulation, targeted fiscal support, digitalisation, workforce development and incentives for domestic production. Some stress Montenegro’s need to expand beyond tourism, developing manufacturing niches, maritime services, logistics and digital industries.
For now, Montenegro’s business sector is resilient. But resilience has limits. “Business as usual” cannot sustain growth unless structural reforms catch up with economic realities. Montenegro stands at a moment where stability remains fragile — and future prosperity depends on how effectively the country reforms its foundations.



