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Pro-Poor Economic Policies and Poverty in Eastern Europe and the CIS

United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Pro-Poor Economic Policies and Poverty in Eastern Europe and the CIS. Marek Belka Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Europe Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations July 2007 ECOSOC, Geneva.

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Pro-Poor Economic Policies and Poverty in Eastern Europe and the CIS

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  1. United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Pro-Poor Economic Policies and Poverty in Eastern Europe and the CIS Marek Belka Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Europe Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations July 2007 ECOSOC, Geneva

  2. Economic Overview of the ECE Region: 56 countries of Europe, Central Asia and North America • Rapid Economic Growth and Favourable Prospects • Tremendous Diversity: Region Has the some of the Richest and Poorest Economies • Future Growth Will Need to Be in Knowledge Intensive Industries-UNECE Has a New Program • A Major Challenge from Globalization Is How to Preserve the Social Welfare State

  3. Solid Real Growth in the ECEAfter a Difficult Decade (1990s) There Is Now Solid Growth in the Transition Economies especially since 2002

  4. Per Capita Income in the UNECE Region:Significant Diversity

  5. Poverty in the Transition Economies of the ECE • The collapse of central planning and dissolution of the USSR and Yugoslavia resulted in a decade long transitional recession • GDP fell by: • 20% in central Europe • 30% in southeast Europe • 50% in much of the FSU • In addition to the fall in income, much of the institutional structure supporting social services fell apart as well, resulting in rising unemployment, poverty, and inequality.

  6. Inequality in the Transition ECEAbove Western Europe, Below Latin America Latin America 50+ U.S. France Nordics

  7. Inequality Increased during the TransitionTwoDifferent Patterns of Increasing Inequality:Poland Typical of NMS, Russia of CIS

  8. Poverty in the ECE RegionHighest in Central Asia, Caucasus 40 Million ($2.15PPP) and 150 million ($4.30PPP)

  9. Central Asian and CaucasusAs Poor as Many African Countries

  10. Poverty: The Vulnerable Groups • Rural Areas • Unemployed • Ethnic Minorities • Retired, Elderly • Unskilled • Single Parent Households • Health Problems

  11. Poverty Varies Significantly Within Countries --GeographicallyKyrgyzstan Note: Poverty is generally lowest in capital cities Source:UNDP

  12. Poverty is Significantly Related to Unemployment in the Transition Economies • Although unemployment has been declining; still very high in southeast Europe • A significant percent of unemployed are long-term due to large structural changes in sectoral output (2 to 3 times western levels) • Unemployment likely to result in poverty since weak safety nets, tight eligibility, limited funds for active labor market policies • Large informal sectors with no benefits • Women and youth have especially high unemployment • Economic growth in the resource rich-CIS has not (until recently) produced much employment growth

  13. Gender Pay Gap: Worsened During the TransitionPercentage Women’s Pay Is Less than Men’sRed=Transition Economy

  14. There Is an Ethnic Dimension to Poverty: The Roma of Southeast Europe Source: UNDP

  15. By Some Measures the Transition Economies Appear to be Pro-Poor • It is difficult to assess the overall policy environment of a country in addressing basic needs • The UNDP human development index (HDI) may provide a reasonable overall measure (includes literacy, life expectancy, etc) • Generally most of the transition economies rank significantly higher by the HDI than by per capita income • Thus for their income level, they seem to be addressing basic needs reasonably well

  16. Pro-Poor versus Pro-Growth • Not all growth policies are pro-poor, and not all pro-poor policies are pro-growth • The pro-poor growth agenda attempts to promote those that are both (such as broad-based education programs) • But there are large policy areas where there is some trade-off; how do we assess policies where the benefits “trickle-down” only in the long-run • Generally, donors favor poverty reduction while national governments favor growth

  17. Just How Pro-Poor Are Some Current Economic Policies?Tax Competition Amongst the Middle-Income Countries • In order to encourage investment (especially FDI) and improve competitiveness, taxes (especially on corporations) have been cut, made less progressive; and social benefits, and government’s role has been cut back • Flat taxes in Baltics, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine, Georgia, Romania, fYR of Macedonia, others considering • There is tax competition throughout Europe, especially the lowering of corporate taxes • Generally, the government sector is significantly lower in these low tax economies with less spent on social services, less investment in human capital & infrastructure • Although some of these economies have grown quite rapidly, it is less clear if tax policy is the key

  18. Just How Pro-Poor Are Some Current Economic Policies?PRSP/PRGF in Low-Income Economies • Macroeconomic policy in the poorest ECE members is formulated under the IMF/WB Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers and Poverty Reduction Growth Facility (1999) • Covers Albania, Caucasus, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan • Provides concessionary lending • Definitely a positive development, but is this framework working effectively? • There has been progress in terms of the MDGs, but not that rapid • Are the country programs pro-poor enough or just the old Washington Consensus policies repackaged? • Research, Assessment Is Needed

  19. Policies for Promoting Pro-Poor Development • Social Policies • Improve the design of social safety nets • Improve access to education and health resources • Structural Policies • Encourage creation of SMEs, self-employment • Improve access to finance for the poor • Macroeconomic Policies • Reduce cyclical fluctuations by making fiscal policy more counter-cyclical • Diversify out of resource-intensive sectors in order to stimulate employment growth • Keep borders open; benefits of trade and migration; stick with economic reforms, don’t backtrack • Political Policies • Resolve political conflicts; ensure the disenfranchised have a voice; civil society has a role to play • Address ethnic and gender discrimination

  20. Summary: Pro-poor Development in the ECE Region • The ECE region has solid economic growth • This is having a major impact on poverty • Policy reforms have also contributed but more is needed • Economic policies should better target the vulnerable groups • There are some broad macroeconomic policy trends in the region, however, that may not be pro-poor

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