1 / 17

Economic and political challenges of acceding to the euro area in the post-Lehman Brothers world: Latvia

Economic and political challenges of acceding to the euro area in the post-Lehman Brothers world: Latvia. Jānis Bērziņš – Riga Stradins University janis@berzins.in. Background. Euro adoption as main goal Until 2007 was fulfilling all indicators of the Maastricht criteria, except inflation

quito
Télécharger la présentation

Economic and political challenges of acceding to the euro area in the post-Lehman Brothers world: Latvia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Economic and political challenges of acceding to the euro area in the post-Lehman Brothers world: Latvia Jānis Bērziņš – Riga Stradins University janis@berzins.in

  2. Background • Euro adoption as main goal • Until 2007 was fulfilling all indicators of the Maastricht criteria, except inflation • Although facing a process of unsustainable social and economic development, could have adopted the Euro

  3. Latvia’s economic problems • Deepening economic restructurization after joining the EU • Ineffective model/strategy of development, both from inside (Latvia) and outside (impositions from the EU) • Changing strategy of the actors of the financial sector after Latvia joining the EU • Lack of appropriated regulation, as a result of neoliberal ideology • Market determines everything • Politicians and civil servants have no responsibility for what is going in the economic and social spheres.

  4. Latvia’s GDP Structure

  5. Credit dynamic

  6. Issued credit by sector

  7. Structure of issued credit - %

  8. Latvia’s GDP - %

  9. Price Stability • M2 increased 163% between May 2004 and Jun e 2008 • Official discourse: • Increasing wage affecting costs and profits • Fuel • Food • Indirect taxes and administrated prices • Energy • Lagged effective depreciation of the lat • Buoyant domestic demand associated with credit growth

  10. M2 X Inflation

  11. Government Budgetary Position • Deficit of -3,9% of the GDP in 1999 • Surplus of 0,1% in 2007 • After the crisis: expected to be around -13%

  12. Exchange rate • Exchange rate was fixed against the Euro in 30 December 2004 • Ls 0,702804 for 1 Euro • Corridor of + or - 1% • Member of the ERM II since 2 May 2005

  13. Long term interest rates

  14. Additional factors • The ERM II indicators aren’t adequate to deal with Latvia • They are based on models related to well developed countries • They presuppose some level of “normality” • Sustainable development

  15. Additional factors • The ERM II indicators aren’t adequate to deal with Latvia • They are based on models related to well developed countries • They presuppose some level of “normality” • Sustainable development • May be temporally falsified (Latvia did it!) • These indicators became an autonomised expression of the Maastricht criteria, turning to be an objective per se • Lost objectivity

  16. Latvia and the adotion of Euro • Maastricht criteria is irrelevant in Latvia’s case • The political gains surpass the economic problems • Latvia’s economic size is less than 1/3 of Munich’s GDP • No risk of spreading inflation to the monetary union • Economic stability as development facilitator • Even the IMF doesn’t believe it is possible through “normal ways” (last report October 2009)

  17. Thank You!

More Related