News Releases

Index of Industrial Production: June 2025

NR 142/2025
Release Date: 08 August 2025
Cut-off Date: 04 August 2025

Beverage,Factory,Interior.,Conveyor,With,Bottles,For,Juice,Or,Water.
  • In June 2025, industrial output increased by 5.9 per cent when compared to June 2024.
  • The largest annual upward change in industrial production was registered in the production of rubber, plastic and other non-metallic mineral products (9.2 per cent).
  • When compared to the corresponding month of 2024, the highest increase in production occurred in capital goods (15.7 per cent).
  • When compared to May 2025, the total industrial production went up by 1.7 per cent.

Index of Industrial Production: June 2025

Index of Industrial Production: June 2025

NR 142/2025
Release Date: 08 August 2025
Cut-off Date: 04 August 2025

In June 2025, industrial output increased by 5.9 per cent when compared to June 2024.
Beverage,Factory,Interior.,Conveyor,With,Bottles,For,Juice,Or,Water.

The monthly Index of Industrial Production (IIP) is a business cycle indicator. It provides an early measure of change in the volume of industrial output produced by domestic businesses in the manufacturing, energy, and quarrying sectors in Malta.

Total industrial output – annual comparison

In June 2025, the index of industrial production increased by 5.9 per cent when compared to the corresponding month in 2024. When excluding energy, the index went up by 5.8 per cent (Table 1 and Chart 1).

Manufacturing output – annual comparison by selected aggregates

In June 2025, manufacturing output increased by 5.9 per cent. The largest upward change was registered in the production of rubber, plastic and other non-metallic mineral products (9.2 per cent), followed by the production of computer, electronic and optical products, and motor vehicles (8.7 per cent) and the production of other manufacturing (7.6 per cent). On the other hand, a decrease of 1.6 per cent was recorded in the production of chemical and pharmaceutical products (Chart 2).

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Industrial output – annual comparison by main industrial groupings

The Main Industrial Groupings (MIGs) provide an alternative statistical breakdown of economic activities classified according to end-use categories. They combine several NACE divisions, groups and classes together (see methodological table for further information).

In June 2025, increases in production were registered across all the main industrial groupings. The highest increase was recorded in capital goods (15.7 per cent), followed by intermediate goods (5.3 per cent), energy (3.6 per cent) and consumer goods (0.1 per cent) (Chart 3).

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Seasonally adjusted industrial production – monthly comparison

A clearer picture of the economic developments can be obtained when indices are adjusted for seasonal effects. These recurring effects are removed from the index series to enable month-to-month comparisons (see methodological points 5 and 6).

The seasonally adjusted index of industrial production for June 2025 went up by 1.7 per cent when compared to May 2025 and stood at 119.5 index points (2021=100) (Table 3 and Chart 4).

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Methodological Notes

1. The Index of Industrial Production is a Principal European Economic Indicator (PEEI) and is compiled in accordance with Commission Regulation (EU) 2019/2152 and Commission Implementing Regulation 2020/1197 of the European Parliament and of the Council on European Business Statistics. The NSO has also adopted methodologies and guidelines recommended by Eurostat and the United Nations.

2. The Maltese Index of Industrial Production is calculated using a Laspeyres-type index (2021=100). Aggregation weights are updated every five years and the gross value added is used as the weighting variable. The whole series is available from the year 2000 onwards.

3. The sample covers 80 per cent of the total industrial turnover, and around 200 business units are surveyed. A combination of cut-off and stratified random sampling techniques is used. The volume of industrial production is calculated using three methods: physical quantities of output, deflated turnover, and number of hours worked.

4. In this news release, Energy refers only to NACE D35 – Electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply. It excludes B05 – Mining of coal and lignite; B06 – Extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas; C19 – Manufacture of coke and refined petroleum products; and E36 – Water collection, treatment, and supply. The index also excludes electricity supplied via the Malta-Sicily Interconnector.

5. Year-on-year comparisons refer to indices that are calendar adjusted, while month-on-month comparisons refer to calendar and seasonally adjusted index numbers. These adjustments aid the interpretation of data by removing regularly recurring variations from a time series. The officially recommended software JDemetra+ is used to adjust all series in this news release.

6. The calendar effect is the variation caused by the changing number of working/trading days, fixed and moving holidays, leap year and other calendar-related phenomena. The seasonal effect is the variation caused by any pattern that repeats on a regular basis in the same period each year.

7. The average weighted response rate for this indicator is around 80 per cent. The data is to be considered as provisional and therefore subject to revision.

8. The aggregation weights (gross value added) of the various categories used for the calculation of the Index of Industrial Production for the year 2021 (base year) are as follows:

NACE Section NACE Divisions Description Share
B8 Mining and Quarrying0.01
C13, 14, 25, 27, 28 and 31 to 33 Other manufacturing0.31
10 and 11 Food products and beverages0.13
26 and 29 Computer, electronic and optical products and motor vehicles 0.17
22 to 23 Rubber, plastic products and other non-metallic mineral products0.13
16 to 18 Wood, paper products and printing 0.11
20 and 21 Chemicals and pharmaceuticals products0.09
D35 Energy0.07
Total (Sections B, C and D)1.00
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Main Industrial Grouping Description Example
Capital goods Capital goods are physical assets used by businesses to produce consumer (final) goods. Machinery equipment
Intermediate goods Intermediate goods, also called semi-finished goods, are products used as inputs to produce a consumer (final) good. Rubber and plastic products
Consumer goods Consumer goods, also called final goods, are products that are readily available for consumption by consumers. These goods do not undergo further transformation in production. Food products and beverages
Energy Energy refers to the production of electricity. Electricity excluding supply imported via the Malta-Sicily Interconnector

9. The calculation of the percentage changes from the indices table may slightly differ from the published percentage changes due to rounding.

10. More information relating to this news release may be accessed at:

Sources and Methods
Statistical Concepts 
Metadata 
Classifications 

11. For an updated time-series which includes past data, please refer to the Selected Indicators for this domain.

12. A detailed news release calendar is available online.

13. References to this news release are to be cited appropriately. For guidance on access and re-use of data please visit our dedicated webpage.

14. For further assistance send your request through our online request form.

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