1 / 16

Session III: Panel discussion Euro and macroeconomic stability Servaas Deroose

Ten Years of the Euro Inspirations for the Czech Republic. Session III: Panel discussion Euro and macroeconomic stability Servaas Deroose Director DG ECFIN, European Commission Conference hosted by Mr. Miroslav Kalousek, Minister of Finance of the Czech Republic, November 25, 2008. Outline.

Télécharger la présentation

Session III: Panel discussion Euro and macroeconomic stability Servaas Deroose

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. Ten Years of the Euro Inspirations for the Czech Republic Session III: Panel discussionEuro and macroeconomic stability Servaas Deroose Director DG ECFIN, European Commission Conference hosted by Mr. Miroslav Kalousek, Minister of Finance of the Czech Republic,November 25, 2008

  2. Outline • Assessing macroeconomic stability • Domestic: from overheating to hard-landing? • Financial: Are financial systems resilient? • External: Are external positions sustainable? • Lessons from EMU@10 for future € members • Challenges • Policy requirements • Conclusion

  3. Real convergence is advancing but remains a long-term challenge GDP per capita in 2007 (in PPS, EU=100) and average change, 2004-2007

  4. Growth is slowing considerably due to global and domestic factors (in %, y-o-y)

  5. Price level convergence but also demand pressures 12-month average inflation (in %, y-o-y)

  6. Financially-driven convergence – large capital inflows and extension of external balance sheets

  7. 100% 100% Czech Republic 90% 90% Hungary Poland 80% 80% Slovakia Romania 70% 70% 60% 60% 50% 50% 40% 40% 30% 30% Bulgaria Estonia 20% 20% Latvia 10% 10% Lithuania 0% 0% 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 H1-08 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 H1-08 Very rapid financial deepening from a low base (less pronounced amongst ‘floaters’) Domestic credit growth (in % of GDP)

  8. Large external imbalances (especially in ‘fixers’) Balance on current account (in % of GDP)

  9. Fiscal positions External constraints seem to matter for fiscal performance General government balance and government debt (in % of GDP; 2007)

  10. Exchange rate developments vs. euro, monthly averages (index numbers, Jan 2007 = 100)

  11. Lessons from EMU@10 for future euro area members (1 - challenges) • Price stability: equilibrium real appreciation complicates inflation control ; shorter history of anti-inflation policy and lower credibility ; conflict between fiscal and monetary authorities ; wage catching up • Effective adjustment capacity(incl. stabilisation): • To deal with shocks without exchange rate instrument (but nominal exchange rate flexibility acts also as shock propagator, hence less ‘cost’ of giving up the XR instrument); • Relatively more frequent and persistent common shocks with asymmetric impact (exchange rates, terms of trade, shifting comparative advantages…); asymmetric shocks still possible (see Spain, Ireland, …) • Correction of large current account imbalances may require long and painful disinflation processes if coupled with stagnating productivity • EMU and financial integration help efficient resource allocation and allow for longer adjustment periods, but managing credit booms can be a challenge (already well before euro adoption) • Do not lose sight of long-term challenges: sustain high potential growth, in a context of ageing, globalisation (with more rapid shifts in comparative advantages)

  12. Lessons from EMU@10 for future euro area members(2 – policy needs) • Improved budgetary control to reduce the risk of fiscal policy pro-cyclicality; budgetary frameworks in NMS are less developed and assessing cyclical component even more challenging • Sustainability of public finances • Quality of public finances ; bias towards current expenditure in NMS • Flexible and integrated goods and factor markets • More efficient use of labour resources (participation rates, structural unemployment, skill mismatches) • Business environment and investment climate (innovation, FDI, education, favour entry /exit of firms) • Growth-enhancing use of capital inflows ; NMS are receiving huge inflows , included EU funds; utilisation has differed a lot across NMS • Effective supervision and regulation of financial markets ; NMS experience accelerated financial development

  13. Fiscal policy • Fiscal policy has to balance multiple challenges • need for well-targeted public spending (infrastructure, education and R&D) vs • fiscal policy key to rein in demand pressures and overheating risks, especially in fixed XR regimes • Preventing imbalances may require substantial surpluses of longer periods • Quality of public finances (pro-growth priorities)

  14. Coping with financial deepening and credit growth • Vigilance to prevent the build-up of imbalances and vulnerabilities • Prudential and administrative measures • Raise minimum capital adequacy ratio • Strengthen loan-loss provisioning • Mandatory loan-to-income or loan-to-value limits • Strengthen supervisory framework • Improvements in credit registers • Strengthening risk management, expand stress testing • Harness cross-border supervision

  15. Structural policy implications • Boost external competitiveness • Ensure favourable business environment and investment climate • Encourage innovation and entrepreneurship to maintain competitiveness and move up the value-added chain • Move toward high value-added and fast-growing sectors • Sectoral composition of exports • Productivity growth in the tradables sector • Enhance internal economic adjustment • NMS will have to manage underlying structural divergences for some time • Ensure functioning of goods, services and labour markets • labour mobility, skill development & wage flexibility • wage setting in line with productivity gains • Entrepreneurship, etc.

  16. Conclusion • Catching-up is proceeding but accompanied by varying imbalances • Euro adoption – readiness more important than timing • Ability to cope with country-specific adjustment needs • Adequate preparation in fiscal, structural and prudential domains • Short-term challenges: deal with fall-out from the financial crisis; manage orderly unwinding of imbalances among the ‘fixers’, keep progress towards convergence on track for the ‘floaters

More Related