1 / 30

ROMANIA

Conference “Productivity, Investment and Growth” Sofia, May 17-18, 2004. ROMANIA. Romania: Recent Macroeconomic Developments and Monetary Policy Coordinates. Wilhelm Salater Senior Economist. NATIONAL BANK OF ROMANIA. Recent Macroeconomic Developments. Looking Back at 1999.

rigel-crane
Télécharger la présentation

ROMANIA

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. Conference “Productivity, Investment and Growth” Sofia, May 17-18, 2004 ROMANIA Romania: Recent Macroeconomic Developments and Monetary Policy Coordinates Wilhelm Salater Senior Economist NATIONAL BANK OF ROMANIA

  2. Recent Macroeconomic Developments

  3. Looking Back at 1999 • Economic growth: -1.2% • Inflation rate: 54.8% (December/December) • Fiscal deficit: 1.8% of GDP (but quasifiscal deficit larger) • Current account deficit: 4.0% of GDP

  4. Gradual disinflation Robust economic growth 2000-2003:Sustainable Disinflation and Growth

  5. Gradual disinflation Robust economic growth Significant, but sustainable, current account deficits Moderate fiscal deficits and low public debt 2000-2003:Sustainable Disinflation and Growth

  6. Gradual Disinflation • Smooth disinflation path, without trend reversals • Gradual approach chosen as: • prices, tariffs and wages have recorded major adjustments • external equilibrium has not yet been consolidated • Supported by a consistent policy mix: • prudent monetary policy • cautious fiscal policy • sustainable income policy • structural adjustments

  7. Robust Economic Growth • Higher GDP growth rates than in most CEE countries • Driven initially by external demand and afterwards by domestic demand (on the back of rising wages and loans)

  8. ModerateFiscal Deficitsand Low Public Debt • The official financial accounts have been maintained under control • Fiscal deficit declined gradually from 4% of GDP in 2000 to 2.3% of GDP in 2003 • Quasifiscal losses are still significant (the quasifiscal deficit is estimated to hover around 2.5% of GDP) • The level of public debt (around 27% of GDP at end-2003) compares favourably with that of other CEE countries

  9. Current Account Deficits:Significant, but Sustainable • Moderate current account deficits in 2000 (3.7% of GDP) and 2002 (3.4% of GDP) due to: • Strong export expansion • Supportive exchange rate policy • Beneficial influence of substantial current transfers surplus • Larger-than-foreseen current account deficit (5.8 of GDP) in 2003 due to: • Weak external demand • Substantial investment growth • Rising household demand for imports • No financing difficulties • Satisfactory coverage through FDIs - although larger productivity-enhancing FDIs desirable - and MLT external borrowings • Adequate level of official forex reserves (covering 3.5 months of imports) • Low foreign debt

  10. 2004: Official Forecasts • Economic growth: 5.5% • CPI inflation rate: 9% (December/December) • Fiscal deficit: 2.1% of GDP • Current account deficit: 5.5% of GDP

  11. II. Monetary Policy Coordinates

  12. Major Guidelines • Single-digit inflation rates in 2004 and in the years to come • Interest rate policy: firm and transparent • Exchange rate policy: managed floating regime preserved • Inflation targeting: introduction envisaged for 2005 • Expected timing of euro-area entry: 5-6 years after EU accession

  13. Interest rate policy • The current policy rate is high enough to encourage savings and to smooth credit expansion • Gradual downward adjustment of the policy rate is envisaged once the disinflation trend has been confirmed • Interest rate policy gains in transparency

  14. Exchange rate policy • The managed floating regime avoids excessive rate fluctuations • Central bank foreign interventions tend to be less frequent and ample • Euro link gets tighter – the current composition of the currency basket is EUR 75% - USD 25% • The preferred range of real exchange rate appreciation (2-4 percent) supports disinflation without endangering external competitiveness • The real appreciation generated by the Balassa-Samuelson effect is not counteracted through exchange rate policy

  15. Inflation targeting • The monetary policy regime switch envisaged for 2005 (after enhancing central bank credibility and inflation forecast capability) • Increased transparency and accountability: Inflation Reports already published (semiannual frequency) • Monetary policy firmly committed to pursue the inflation targets and relieved of supporting conflicting macroeconomic objectives • Higher exchange rate flexibility (decreasing role of exchange rate as BoP adjustor) • Harmonization of monetary and fiscal policies (fiscal dominance on the wane) • Sound banking sector (but not yet fully-fledged financial system)

  16. Macroeconomic Context Before Adopting Inflation Targeting

  17. The road towards euro-area • Sped-up nominal convergence, but without hurting the process of real convergence

  18. The road towards euro-area • Sped-up nominal convergence, but without hurting the process of real convergence • EU accession prospects in 2007 • ERM II entry: not too soon (3-4 years after EU accession) • ERM II stay: as short as possible (2 years) • Euro-area entry: when ready (5-6 years after EU accession)

More Related