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2. TRANSITION Privatization Macroeconomic stabilization CHANGES OF THE ECONOMIC SYSTEM Ownership State or social Private Centralised state/ centralised Soviet Union private/ centralised South Korea Decentralised social/ decentralised Yugoslavia private/ decentralised USA Management COMPONENTS OF TRANSITION • • • • • • • • • • • 2.1. Privatization - objectives - efficiency, justice, democracy - complexities of privatization - privatization models - outcomes of privatization 2.2. Macroeconomic stabilization - assumptions and Washington consensus - transformational depression 2.3. Microeconomic restructuring 2.4. Creation of a new economic system A Case: Slovenia; Could SEE countries follow Slovenian experiences? DILEMMAS OF PRIVATISATION MECHANISM Distribution to whom to everybody - to employees - equally - by age - by years of employment - Patterns - direct - indirect - Restitution - in kind - compensation Sales to whom to citizens - to foreigners - Patterns - stock market - auctions - workers-managers by outs - debt equity swaps - direct sales - increase of capital Privatizations in CEE Countries Czech Republic: a rigid socialist system, 96.7% of production in state industries, Vaclav Klaus, shock therapy to market without adjectives, restitution (100.000 units), small privatization - sales (12300 units), large privatization – public auctions, public tender, direct sales, sales of shares for vauchers, employees stock ownership plans; vauchers collected by private investment funds, direct sales of companies Avia Praha, Skoda auto, Tabak Kutna Hora, banks, telecomunications etc. To foreign owners Estonia: small scale privatization in 1990, large scale Privatization Act of 1992direct sales to foreign investors, vauchers in 1994 marginal, Eesti Telekom, Estonian Air (Denmark), Estonian Shipping Company (American/Norwegian), Tallina Vesi (utilities), electricity, banking sector Hungary: “gulash socialism”, centralized privatization for small scale privatization, management by-outs, former owners, new phase in 1995 by selling companies to multinationals, golden share in some companies PRIVATIZATION BAROMETER SHARES OF FOREIGN STOCK IN CEE COUNTRIES Country stock FDI/GDP in % 1994 1999 2003 Czech Republic Estonia Latvia Lithuania Hungary Poland Slovakia Slovenia 11.0 9.2 7.6 0.7 17.1 4.1 6.1 9.2 14.1 19.3 13.9 5.7 25.3 5.8 4.2 9.5 48.0 77.6 35.1 27.2 51.8 24.9 31.5 20.7 Share of foreign banks in assets 2001 90.0 98.9 65.2 78.2 88.8 68.7 85.5 20.6 MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION Assessment of economic situation: D>S, Washington consensus; Increase of Supply: liberalization of imports, pure socialist production goods; Decrease of Demand: price liberalization, restrictive credit policy, restrictive fiscal policy; freeze of wages, fixed exchange rate; Results: economic depression, measured and actual, unemployment, social diferentiation; Slovenian transition model; ignorance of Washington agreement, gradualism, floating exchange rate ASESSSMENTOF ECONOMIC SITUATION IN SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Aggregate supply and demand curves Prices Supply Demand Equilibrium price Price in socialism Shortage Supply Demand output TRANSFMATIONAL DEPRESSION 120 index 1990=100 110 CEE 100 Vzhodna Evropa 90 80 70 nekdanja SZ 60 CIS 50 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 TRANSITION MODELS IN CEE 1.Baltic 2.Visegrad 3. Slovenia Starting position EE, LT, LV CZ, HU, PL, SK Privatization sales to foreigners sales to foreigners free distribution MW by-outs Stabilization fixed ex.rate fiscal discipline switching adaptable floating adaptable Social Considerations absent present important Restructuring absent by FDI decentralized Problems CA deficit emigration CA deficit budget deficit balance EMU problems MODEL neoliberal emmbeded neoliberal neocorporativist SI PUBLIC EXPENDITURES AND SOCIAL COHESION 40 36 PL Inequality coeffocient RO HU 32 CY MT SK 28 CZ BG 24 LT 7 LV EE Gini coefficient 8 LT SI LV 6 PL EE 5 CY SK 4 BG 20 HU RO MT CZ SI 3 32 36 40 44 48 Public expenditures/GDP 52 56 32 36 40 44 48 Public expenditures/GDP 52 56 EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH AND EDUCATION 1994-2003 14 % GDP 13 12 11 10 9 8 C ZE EST H LAT LIT PL SLK SLN GINI COEFFICIENTS, 2000-2006 40 LT Gini(2 0 0 0 )=2 8 .4 Gini(2 0 0 6 )=3 0 .2 EE LV 35 HU 30 PL RO MT EU15 CY SK 25 20 BG CS SI SOCIAL COHESION INDICATORS IN NMS 2000 2006 Public expenditures/GDP 41.6 40.5 Gini coefficient 28.3 30.3 Inequality coefficient 4.35 4.91 Social Security Expenditures/GDP 11.9 10.9 ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE IN 2007 EU27 BG CZ EE LT LV HU PL RO SI SK 61.0 (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) 100 38.1 81.3 70.6 58.0 7.8 63.5 53.8 40.6 90.9 68.6 2.9 6.3 6.8 10.4 11.9 5.8 4.1 6.2 8.2 5.9 8.5 2.3 7.6 3.0 6.7 10.1 4.3 7.9 2.6 4.9 3.8 1.9 7.1 6.9 5.3 4.7 6.0 -1.2 7.4 9.6 6.4 4.9 11.1 -0.9 3.4 -1.6 2.8 0.0 17.3 -5.5 -2.0 -2.5 -0.1 -2.2 58.7 18.2 28,7 3.4 9.7 -13.7 66.0 45.2 13.0 24.1 29.4 -0.6 -21.5 -3.3 -17.3 -22.9 6.3 -4.9 -3.7 -14.1 -4.9 -5.7 4.8 3.5 3.5 5.5 7.9 5.5 5.6 5.3 3.4 4.0 (1) GDP/capita, (2) GDP growth, (3) inflation, (4) unemployment, (5) budget deficit/GDP, (6) public debt (7) current account, (8) inequality coefficient EMPLOYMENT FUNCTION rE=a+b*rQ+c*D Labor market “a” “b” “c” traditonal socialism + 0 0 no labor market, high hidden unemployment selfmanaged socialism 0 0.3 - growing hidden unemployment low open unemployment classical (US) capitalism - 1 0 flexible labor market open unemployment traditional European capitalism - 0.5 - low hidden unemployment high social protection neo-evropean capitalism - 0.7 + growth of open unemployment hysteresis rZ- growth of employment, rQ – growth of GDP, D- dummy, a-autonomous growth, b-elasticity, c- assymetry consequences EMPLOYMENT MECHANISMS Centraly planned economy Selfmanagement Social market economy OUTPUT Pure capitalism Neo-European capitalism JOBLESS GROWTH? 16 une mpl. r ate % 93 14 94 95 2000 01 97 12 02 03 99 10 96 04 05 98 G D P gr owth % 8 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 RESTRUCTURING BY FDI SPILL-OVER EFFECTS OF FDI THEORETICALLY POSITIVE (OECD 2003) • • • • • FDI transfers technology and know-how; FDI contributes to enterprise development and restructuring; FDI contributes to international trade integration; FDI bolsters competition; FDI supports human capital formation; IN REALITY . FDIs were acqusitions rather than greenfield investments, thus not • • • • • investments in the macroeconomic sense; FDIs concentrated to finance, trade, and communications; FDIs increased imports more than exports; FDIs increased specialization within a multinational cutting links with the rest of the economy; FDI brought strong monopolies forcing small emerging domestic firms out of business; FDI creates addiction, income account deficit, and gap between GDP and GNP; SUSTAINABLE GROWTH? 8 CA/G DP % 99 98 97 03 6 96 2000 02 01 04 05 4 95 2 94 0 93 G DP gr owth % -2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 RESTRUCTURING BY FDI FDI, CURRENT ACCOUNT, AND INDEBTEDNESS CA/GDP FDI/GDP Net external stock FDI/GDP foreign banks 10 years average position 2004 1994 2003 in assets 2003 Czech R. Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Poland Slovakia Slovenia -4.05 -7.46 -4.40 -5.48 -8.36 -2.64 -6.37 -0.51 5.80 6.03 4.31 5.96 3.42 2.73 3.44 1.04 -34.6 -99.7 -96.9 -55.0 -38.9 -53.3 -37.5 -18.0 11.0 9.2 17.1 7.6 0.7 4.1 6.1 9.2 48.0 77.6 51.8 35.1 27.2 24.9 31.5 20.7 90.0 98.9 88.8 65.2 78.2 68.7 85.5 20.6 Average -4.91 4.10 -56.7 9.3 39.6 74.5 THE STRUCTURE OF CURRENT ACCOUNT IN CEE COUNTRIES 10000 mi ll . Eur os transfe r s ser vice s 0 goods -10000 i nc ome s -20000 -30000 1998 c urr e nt ac count 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 SHARE OF INCOME ACCOUNT IN CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT 120 % 100 80 CAI/CA 60 40 20 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005