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Transcript
Europe and the Crisis
Rainer Kattel
Tallinn University of Technology
Estonia
Real effective exchange rate, 1999=100
180
170
160
150
Czech Republic
140
Germany
130
Estonia
Hungary
120
Poland
110
Slovenia
100
Slovakia
90
80
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
CEE the new epicenter of the crisis
How come?
• Foreign savings led growth strategy during the last 2
decades
– FDI (1/3 of emerging market FDI in 2000s), key destination
finance and real estate (up to 2/3 at peak)
– Massive cross-border lending by newly foreign owned (up
to 97%) financial sector, much of it in foreign currency (up
to 80%), much of into real estate
– Exports (up to 80% of GDP) through European production
outsourcing
• Aided by generally neoliberal macro-economic policies
(and by currency pegs in the Baltics)
• Highly pro-cyclical environment
Such growth strategy brought …
• Transformation of domestic banking
– Forex lending to households, mortgages
– Severing linkages with production sector
• Lagging productivity due to specialization into
low value added production activities
– Low domestic linkages
– Weak knowledge production
• Loss of competitiveness through rapid
currency appreciations
EE as variations of Ponzi schemes
• On the eve of the crisis, foreign financing gap
(current account balance + FDI) was very high,
esp in the Baltics up to 10% of GDP
• Slowing cross-border flows, fdi and exports in
2008, 2009 and beyond, turned in particular the
Baltics into Ponzi schemes with collapsing
domestic demand
• Foreign ownership of banks seems to have
slowed down financial flow reversals plus banks
benefit from their domestic bail-outs/stimulus
conclusions
Germany exports its unemployment to the rest of the
EU
EU periphery exports its unbalances to the of the EU
Both result in strong deflationary and recessional
pressures
Structural change and industrial upgrading key, yet
currently push for more neoliberal reforms
If euro continues, the EU needs to become a federal
state