Lost lawsuits cost the state almost €10 million in the first half of the year, according to reports from the Protector of Property and Legal Interests…
Browsing: financial
The highest pension paid in Montenegro currently amounts to €3,508.48 — roughly equivalent to three and a half average monthly salaries in the country. Nearly six…
All pensioners in Montenegro whose minimum pensions have been frozen at 450 euros for the past two years will receive regular annual increases next year, just…
Foreign direct investment has been one of Montenegro’s economic engines for more than two decades. Investors from Europe, the Middle East, North America, and Asia have…
Governor of the Central Bank of Montenegro (CBCG) Irena Radović and her team held a meeting today with the management of commercial banks to discuss current…
Podgorica, Montenegro’s capital and largest city, is the country’s economic, administrative, financial and logistical centre. It is home to the main institutions of government, the national…
Montenegro stands on the threshold of the most consequential development opportunity in its modern history: access to large-scale, structured European Union funding. As the country advances…
Montenegro’s capital market is small, thinly traded, and structurally underdeveloped, yet it carries outsized importance for the country’s economic future and its ambitions to join the…
Montenegro’s ambition to join the European Union is one of the most persistent and strategically important political, economic, and social objectives in the country’s modern history.…
Montenegro’s financial sector is entering one of the most transformative periods in its modern history. After two decades of evolving from a post-transition banking environment into…


