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Development and crisis: the economies of former communist countries turned EU members Károly Attila Soós Institute of Economics Budapest [email protected] Average GDP Growth Rates between 1998-2007 (Data in percent) Euro Area Bulgaria Czech R. Estonia Hungary Lithuania Latvia Poland Romania Slovakia Slovenia 0 2 4 6 8 The share of Central and Eastern European countries in the EU measured in GDP, at purchasing power parities Non-CEE, 17 countries, 88.5% Bulgaria Estonia Latvia Non-CEE Romania Slovenia Czech Republic Hungary Lithuania Poland Slovakia The share of Central and Eastern European countries in the EU measured in population Non-CEE, 17 countries, 79,3% Bulgaria Estonia Latvia Non-CEE Romania Slovenia Czech Republic Hungary Lithuania Poland Slovakia Per capita GDP in purchasing power parities, in 2007 In 2005 US dollars Bulgaria Romania Poland Latvia Lithuania Hungary Slovakia Estonia Czech R. Slovenia Spain Euro Area France Greece Austria Euro Area 0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 Average annual growth of exports between 1995 and 2006 (In percent, calculated on the basis of goods and services exports data in constant 2000 US Dollars) France Greece Spain Austria Slovenia Bulgaria Latvia Romania Czech Republic Lithuania Poland Slovak Republic Estonia Hungary 0 5 10 15 Breakdown of exports by technological level, Central and Eastern Europe and „old EU” Technological level High tech 1999 15 2007 14 „Old EU” (EU-13) Medium high tech 41 40 Medium low tech Low tech Total High tech 11 33 100 7 13 34 100 11 CEE (EU10) Medium high tech 36 40 Medium low tech Low tech 15 42 16 32 2007 to „old EU” 12 37 14 37 100 11 43 15 31 The share of non-inferior intra-industry trade in the trade with EU-15 in 1999 and 2007 Bu lg ar i C ze a ch R Es . to ni a H un ga ry La t Li via th ua ni a Po la nd R om an Sl ia ov ak ia Sl ov en ia Au st ria Fr an c G e re ec e Sp ai n 0 20 40 60 80 (Horizontal + high-quality vertical IIT [in SITC 5 to 8 products]) noninferior99 noninferior07 (IIT is measured with the Grubel - Lloyd index. Horizontal IIT: less than 15% difference in price/weight; HQ VIIT: export price/weight>import p/w by more than 15%) And the crisis came Main Main strength weakness before the in the crisis crisis Intensive participation in the international economy Openness to trade in 2006 (Exports+imports of goods and services in percent of GDP) Austria Spain France Greece Romania Poland Bulgaria Latvia Lithuania Czech Republic Hungary Slovak Republic Slovenia Estonia old EU new EU 0 50 100 exports+imports in % of GDP 150 Ranking according to FDI/GDP among 158 countries (left panel) and the share of FDI in GDP (right panel) (average data 1994-2007) Estonia Estonia Hungary Hungary Czech R. Czech R. Bulgaria Bulgaria Slovakia Slovakia Latvia Latvia Poland Poland Lithuania Lithuania Romania Romania Slovenia Slovenia 0 20 40 60 80 100 ranking in FDI inflow/GDP among 158 countries 0 1 2 3 4 FDI inflow in percent of GDP Foreign ownership share of the banks in 2005, in percent Slovenia Latvia Romania Poland Bulgaria Hungary Lithuania Czech R. Slovakia Estonia 0 20 40 60 80 100 High share of foreign ownership of banks Exposure to the probably most dangerous kind of protectionism: banks are under pressure to maintain a certain level of lending at home, and they control their total lending by lending less abroad There is anecdotal evidence on such practices. The share of foreign currency loans in 2007, in % of total loans Slovenia Flexible exchange rates Czech R. Slovakia Poland Bulgaria Romania Lithuania Hungary Estonia Latvia 0 20 40 60 80 Net foreign assets in percent of GDP in 2006 Latvia Estonia Slovenia Lithuania Hungary Romania Slovakia Poland Bulgaria Czech R. -10 0 10 20 Pulic debt in the 10 new menber states 20 40 60 80 0 0 20 40 60 80 (In 2001-2007, percent of the GDP) 2000 2002 2004 year 2008 2000 2002 2004 year Bulgaria 2006 2008 Romania 0 0 20 40 60 80 Poland 20 40 60 80 Hungary 2006 2000 2002 2004 year Estonia Lithuania 2006 Latvia 2008 2000 2002 2004 year Czech R. Slovenia 2006 2008 Slovakia Current account balance, FDI covered and non-FDI-covered current account deficits (Data in percent of GDP, average 1994-2006) Estonia Lithuania Latvia Romania Hungary Slovenia Slovakia Poland Czech R. Bulgaria -4 -2 current account non-fdi 0 2 fdi-covered 4 Severe: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Hungary Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania: rapid economic growth, asset price bubble Hungary, Estonia, Lithuania: High level of openness to trade and FDI, including to FDI in banks Hungary, Romania: high share of loans in foreign currency, with flexible exchange rates Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania: hard but not „bulletproof” (remember Argentina) peg of currency to €. Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary: low level of net foreign assets Expected GDP growth in 2009 and 2010 (According to the January 2009 interim forecast of the European Commission) Slovakia Slovakia Poland Poland Romania Romania Bulgaria Bulgaria Czech R. Czech R. Slovenia Hungary EU total Lithuania Hungary EU total EU total Lithuania Estonia Estonia Latvia -8 Slovenia Latvia -6 -4 -2 EC GDP growth forecast 2009 0 2 4 EC GDP growth forecast 2010 The depreciation of the Hungarian forint against the Euro and the Swiss franc date SFR EUR 09 01 Fe b 09 01 Ja n 08 01 D ov N 01 O 01 ec 08 08 ct 08 p Se 01 01 Au g 08 100 110 120 130 140 150 (31 July 2009=100) Household mortgage debt composition (In Hungarian forint vs. in foreign currencies, data in billion forints) July 08 January 09 0 1,000 2,000 in HUF in FC 3,000 Public debt composition (In Hungarian forints vs. in foreign currencies, data in billion forints) July 08 January 09 0 5,000 in HUF 10,000 in FC The region impact „Because we are being included in the same pack, it makes me fear that, in the end, we will need aid. We fear that. We would like to be in a different region” (Mirek Topolanek, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, quoted in „Western investors panic over region's bad news”, The Prague Post, 26 February 2009). A puzzle: why does the Polish zloty behave even worse than the HUF? 70 60 9.5 10 65 10.5 HUF/PLN 11 75 11.5 Exchange rates of the Hungarian forint to the Czech koruna and the Polish zloty Aug2008 Oct2008 Dec2008 Month HUF/CZK Feb2009 HUF/PLN Apr2009 Do we need the €? Should an EU member country at a more or less low level of real convergence and thus with a high growth potential join the Euro area? Yes (Spain) but then overheating, asset price bubble. And a hard peg of the currency to the € (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) leads to similar consequences. No (Hungary) but then the floating currency will be exposed to such fluctuations that are rather harmful for a highly open economy. Do we need the €? Hungary’s extremely difficult situation suggests that keeping the national currency might be the worse one of the two bad options. A part of the troubles caused by keeping the national currency was the leeway left for the government to pursue mistaken or outright mad policies: large public sector deficits and allowing massive borrowing by housebusinesses in foreign currencies: not only in €, but mostly in SFR (!) and to some extent even in Japanese Yen!!!!! Conclusion Now, at the edge of the precipice, the Hungarian government recognises that keeping the national currency for maintaining the possibility of irresponsable policies was dangerous, and the preparation for Euro Area accession has been announced. At the same time, the actual economic policy of the government consists of trying to hold the budget deficit below 3% of the GDP and also to reduce wage taxes (supply-side rigidities). Conclusion Not all economists agree with this policy but changing it would require the approval of the IMF and the European Commission who prevented an unfolding currency crisis by granting a loan to Hungary in in last November. Foreseeing any kind of outcome of any national policies in the given situation would be hard. Now, developments mostly depend on events going on outside of the region