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Wednesday, December 5, 2007

The Rise and Rise of the Zloty

The Polish zloty gained again today, rising a 5 1/2-year high against the euro as risk appetite improved and investors bet the interest-rate difference with the U.S. will widen. The zloty, which has been the best performer in a group of 26 emerging-market currencies, has gained 6.2 percent since April, when the central bank began raising its reference rate in four quarter point stages to its current 5 percent level . Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn has recently acknowledged the threat to US consumer spending which could result from a reduced access to credit, stoking expectations that the Fed will lower interest rates for a third straight time on Dec. 11.




The zloty rose as much as 0.2 percent to 3.6036 per euro today, the highest since May 2002, and was at 3.6070 by 11:31 a.m. in Warsaw, from 3.6121 late yesterday. All of this raises important questions about the actual ability of conventional monetary policy to work in Poland, since raising rates may just as easily stoke up more inflation - as we have seen in Australia and New Zealand, and to some extent in China - by attracting more investment funds into the country. This issue became apparent when the zloty also gained after a central-bank policy maker Marian Noga said the interest rate may have to rise as much as three-quarters of a percentage point before the end of 2008 to ward off inflation. Normally, an impending rise in inflation and a monetary tightening process (which reduces growth) would be considered to weaken and not strengthen a currency.

``The sooner we have the hike, the better, as preventive action is
cheaper than boosting rates to chase down inflation,''
Marian Noga.


Faster-than-expected economic growth in the third quarter and a drop in unemployment have increased the chances inflation will breach the 3.5 percent upper limit of the central bank's target. The inflation rate, which rose to 3 percent in October, first exceeded the target's 2.5 percent midrange in June.

Noga said the repurchase rate may have to rise to between 5.5 percent and 5.75 percent in quarter-point moves to quell consumer- price growth. ``Moves by 25 basis points are reasoned and balanced,'' Noga was quoted as saying in an interview in Warsaw.

Growth continued at the strong annual rate of 6.4 percent in the third quarter of 2007, according to data released by the Warsaw-based National Statistics Institute earlier this week. Year on year retail sales rose in October by 10 percent, while sales of manufactured goods increased 14 percent on year in October.

Not everyone in the central bank agrees with Marian Noga, however. Monetary Policy Council member Miroslaw Pietrewicz has said that Poland's central bank should delay raising the benchmark interest rate until policy makers assess whether four increases this year have contained inflation.

The increases are ``a lot and the first results could be visible in the second half of next year,'' Pietrewicz, 66, said is quoted as saying in an interview earlier today in Warsaw. "Inflation is currently driven by factors that cannot be influenced by monetary policy", while any further increases "could boost inflationary expectations."

Pietrewicz's comments may signal a split in the council about the future direction of monetary policy and is an indication of the difficulties the central bank will have in controlling inflation in the years when Poland is trying to enter a euro adoption process.

Poland's inflation rate, which was at 3 percent in October, probably reached the 3.5 percent upper limit of the central bank's target in November because of rising food costs around Europe, the Finance Ministry said on Dec. 3. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said today Polish consumer-price growth will accelerate to 3.6 percent next year.

Pietrewicz takes the view that such predictions don't necessarily "require a reaction from us, because first of all, we need to be sure that this acceleration is not a one-time jump generated by food prices, as it was in October"......."It's too early to figure this out in December".

The government also plans to reduce the budget deficit to 27 billion zloty ($11 billion) from the targeted 28.6 billion zloty.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Poland GDP Q3 2007

Poland's economy expanded an annual 6.4 percent in the third quarter, a little faster than forecast, increasing concerns that the economy may be running above its long term capacity rate, and raising expectations that the central bank will raise interest rates further. Growth in gross domestic product in the period from July to September compared with 6.7 percent in the second quarter and 6.8 percent in the first quarter, according to the Warsaw-based Central Statistical Office.



The Polish central bank this week raised its benchmark interest rate to a more-than two-year high of 5 percent, the fourth increase this year, on concerns inflation may accelerate further above target. Booming demand for cars, furniture and household appliances has been triggered by an average 10 percent increase in wages this year and a record pace of job creation.

Domestic demand grew 7.4 percent and consumer demand increased 5.2 percent, while investments rose 18.8 in the third quarter, the office said. Production grew 6.6 percent and construction was up 12.6 percent, the office said.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Poland Central Bank Meeting

Poland's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for a fourth time this year today after higher food costs and strongly growing consumer demand is firing up inflation inflation. The bank's Monetary Policy Council lifted the seven-day reference rate by a quarter point to 5 percent.




Poland's $350 billion economy is expected to expand 6.5 percent this year, compared with last year's 6.6 percent, bolstered by domestic consumer demand. Poles are buying more cars, furniture and household appliances after wages soared 10 percent this year and new jobs were created at a record pace.

The zloty traded at 3.651 per euro after the decision, little changed from 3.651 before the decision and up from 3.672 yesterday. Yield on the government's five-year bonds was unchanged after the rate decision. It fell 2 basis points to 6.012 percent from yesterday.

The inflation rate rose in October to 3 percent, above the central bank's 2.5 percent target and in the upper part of the 1.5 percent to 3.5 percent range. Policy makers raised the benchmark rate by three-quarters of a point between April and August in three quarter-point increases.

The average corporate wage rose 11 percent in October, the fastest annual pace in seven years and the unemployment rate fell to an 8 1/2-year low of 11.3 percent. With more money in pockets, Poles moved to buy cars, furniture and household appliances, boosting retail sales in October an annual 19.4 percent, the highest in 3 1/2 years.

The consumer-optimism indicator WOK, compiled by Ipsos market researcher, rose in November by 5 points to 112.9, the highest since 1991.




The Lombard rate, which the central bank charges to commercial banks borrowing overnight with government securities as collateral, was also lifted by a quarter point to 6.5 percent. The discount rate, a reference rate for some bank loans, will rise to 5.25 percent, also by a quarter point.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Poland October 2007 Retail Sales

Polish October retail continued their rapid rate of annual increase adding to evidence that economic growth remains strong despite four interest rate increases from the Central Bank so far this year. Retail sales rose an inflation corrected 16.3% in October over October 2006, this was up from a 12.2% rise in September compared with 14.2 percent in September, according to the Warsaw-based statistics office today.





The growth which is driven by sales of vehicles (which rose 42% year on year) and sales furniture and household appliances (a 21.9% annual rate of increase) - confirms the impression that consumer demand is being bolstered by falling unemployment, which dipped to an 8 1/2-year low, higher wages, which last rose the most in seven years last month, and a steady and economically significant inward flow of remittances.


The unemployment rate fell for the ninth consecutive month in October to 11.3 percent from 11.6 percent in September, the office said in a separate report today. Earlier this month, the office said that average corporate wages advanced an annual 11 percent in October and employment grew a record 5 percent from the year before.



Economic growth slowed to 6.4 percent in the second quarter from 7.2 percent in the first three months of the year. The report on third-quarter gross domestic product will be released on Nov. 30 at 10 a.m. The full-year growth will be in the region of 6.5 percent, Deputy Finance Minister Katarzyna Zajdel-Kurowska said at a seminar in Warsaw today, confirming the ministry's earlier forecast.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Catch Up Growth and Demographics - Evidence from Eastern Europe

by Claus Vistesen: Copenhagen


Performing a simple series of adept Googling exercises around various sources on the internet you can easily discover that certain species of the lynx are able to travel at speeds of up to 50 kph (31 mph). Wikipedia informs us that the Eurasian lynx, on average, commands a hunting area of between 20-60 square kilometers in which the lynx is able to walk and run about 20 kilometers in one single night. All in all, a pretty rugged and constitutional little thing this lynx.

In this way, and perhaps because, at that particular point in time, the Eastern European Economies looked as if nothing could come in their way of economic prosperity and growth they were paired, by the Economist, with the region's sturdy feline coining the notion of 'Lynx Economies.' Thus, 'that particular point in time' was sometime back in the spring of 2006 where the Economist's (and my own) coverage of the CEE and Baltic economies came in hot on the heels of publications by the World Bank and and the Vienna Institute of Comparative Economic Studies speaking favorably of the future prospects of economic prosperity and thus 'catch-up' growth in the CEE and Baltic Economics.

Yet, merely 1 year and a tad later things seem to have changed quite significantly with respect to the discourse on the economic situation in Eastern Europe. Many of the contributors to this blog has been pitching on the change in discourse but also some of major institutional actors have been flagging the red banner. Not least the World Bank seems to have changed their attitude somewhat with most notably a recent report on the demographics of Eastern Europe entitled From Red to Gray - The Third Transition of Ageing Populations in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union as well as a recent writ with specific focus on the macroeconomic risks prevailing in the region. Yet, also the IMF in their latest World Economic Outlook devotes a chapter to the managing of large capital inflows where Eastern European economies also take center stage of the general tone of warning; in essence this note of warning concerning Eastern Europe seems to be the general talk of the day amongst economic analysts and journalists. As such, perhaps even the lynxes roaming the forests and planes of Eastern Europe are beginning to feel that the otherwise catchy notion conjured by journalists at the Economist is becoming something of a stretch according to the reality of the situation. Sure, things are moving fast now but it is what happens next which might finally serve to make the allegory rather unrealistic. In this entry I set out to explicitly investigate an issue which in fact has been treated several times on this blog and perhaps most often in the context of the CEE and Baltic Economies. Simply put and in the form of one simple question;

  • How do changing demographics and more specifically the final and ongoing stages of the demographic transition affect the notion and principle of economic catch up growth and thus economic convergence as it is stipulated by (neo-classical) economic growth theory?

As I have hinted above in the introduction my main subject of analysis on which the general theoretical argument is based is the current and ongoing situation in the CEE and Baltic economies. A lot has been written about this recently not least from the hands of the contributors to this blog (see also above). As a one-stop overview of the concrete issues at hand this recent note by Edward over at Global.Economy.Matters should provide you with suitable ammunition to get you started. In particular, the following three point overview of the current economic situation in Eastern Europe should always be in the back of your mind as we move forward from this point ...

Basically the principal outstanding issues confronting the EU10 countries are threefold:

  • Labour capacity constraints (which are normally a by product of long-term low fertility and large scale recent migration flows) are producing significant wage inflation and strong overheating.
  • A structural dependence on external financing - which is in part a by-product of the effect of low levels of internal saving, and which is another factor which separates the EU 10 from those like India or China who are benefiting from a typical demographic dividend driven catch up, is leading to large current account deficits, and potentially high levels of financial instability.
  • A loss of control over domestic monetary policy due to eurozone convergence processes which - with or without the presence of formal pegs - make gradual downward adjustment in currency values as a alternative to strong wage deflation virtually impossible. This issue is compounded by the likely private "balance sheet consequences" of any sustained downward movement in the domestic currency given the widespread use of mortgages which are not denominated in the local currency.
Traditionally a rigorous economic analysis in the light of the immediate events would focus a lot on point 2 and 3 but in this note we shall look specifically at number 1 and the issues of labour capacity, its constraints, and what it means of the economic growth of less to medium developed countries. Now, the most obvious caveat in this entry is that I really don't have the time at this point to really lay out the whole theoretical framework of economic growth theory and as such the precise slot in which my argument should be inserted within the wider theoretical framework. This will be the topic of a more rigorous article not suited for the blog format. However, I still need to attach some comments to set the scene where I should also immediately note that my previous note here at DM about catch up growth in Eastern Europe serves as a good state of the game post for what comes next.

Apart from my studies of selected pieces of the economic growth literature one of the best overviews of the concept of economic convergence as a function of the theoretical and practical assumptions vested in the growth models is to be found in an article by Norbert Fiess and Marco Fugazza on economic integration in Europe (PDF). As such it is important to note that convergence of GDP per capita levels is not a holy grail within the fields of economic growth theory. Rather, the process of convergence should be seen as an inbuilt consequence of the fact that as economies mature returns to production inputs decrease; that is to say that this discussion essentially revolves around the concept of increasing v. decreasing returns to scale in our economic model. If we think about decreasing returns to scale and introduce the concept of marginal productivity to production inputs we can then see that less developed countries are likely to exhibit higher rates of growth than their more mature counterparts in the sense that their marginal productivity is higher which then leads to a process of convergence. Now, this argument in its most strict sense is usually applied in the context of capital as a production input and coupled with the properties of an open economy and subsequent free flow of production factors this would lead to a rather rapid process of convergence or absolute convergence as the technical term. As regards to labour as a production input is has also been argued that the universal transition from an agricultural to manufacturing over to service (?) based economy produces a mechanism of convergence in the sense that this process implies a move up the value chain and thus that every unit of labour becomes more productive. Of course and even though we are talking about stylised facts here, this is also where the whole debacle begins in the context of my immediate argument because how certain is this process? Also, we need to take into account the distinction between stocks and flows (of labour) which is a crucial issue to consider when talking about ageing economies.

However and it does not take much of an economist to see that empirical facts do not support the idea of absolute convergence or at least it seems as if the process takes much longer to materialize than predicted by the theory. This has lead, among other factors, to a 'new' strand of economic growth models which allows for persistent growth divergence to exist between countries. The crucial aspect to understand here is the mechanism through which persistent divergences can occur. In this way, one of the widest contributions by economist to this thesis has dealt with the possibility that technological processes and thus accumulation of technological advances exhibits increasing returns to scale. The fundamental brilliancy of this notion is that it allows for a model where there is indeed decreasing returns to labour and capital but where different levels of technological effort leads to internal positive feedback mechanisms and thus explains persistent divergences in growth and 'prosperity' across countries.

Ok, I think that I have already said enough at this point and in order to get us back to track one crucial assumption and conceptual idea needs to be pinned down. As such and if we look at the rudimentary description of the economic growth process above it is not wholly unreasonable to argue that the growth process of an economy is somewhat directly related to the process of the demographic transition. Or as Robert Lucas puts it in a widely cited article ...

That is, the industrial revolution is invariably associated with the reduction in fertility known as the demographic transition.

As such, why don't we take a look at Eastern Europe where the economies have experienced, quite as expected by the conventional theory of economic growth, economic dynamics tantamount to catch-up or convergence. Especially the economic data since the expansion from EU15 to EU25/27 and, for some countries, the subsequent anchoring to the Euro has been very impressive indeed. Yet as Edward and I have been at pains (see link above) to explain again and again these countries are not your average emerging markets. This follows from the fact that their demographic structures have been fundamentally distorted due to a collapse of fertility in the beginning of the 1990s which has been aggravated by a persistent net outflow of migrants serving to further speed up the decline in the working and essentially also most productive cohorts. In order to capture this development and in order to frame the current situation the following point I made in a previous note is worthwhile to repeat.

In short, we are dealing with countries where the demographic transition by far, and indeed worryingly, has out paced the traditional economic process of economic convergence.

This is exactly what we are talking about here and apart from going to the heart of the imminent issues in Eastern Europe it also strikes right smack into the concept of economic growth theory and how to deal with the fact that the demographic transition does not occur the way it was originally anticipated. Most emphatically, we can see in the context of the Eastern European countries that the final stages of the transition have arrived far before and quicker than the twists and turns of history allowed for these economies to really get on with business. Yet, the general argument can just as easily be expanded into a discussion of the ageing part of OECD where it is painfully clear at this point that conventional economic theories are wholly incapable of explaining what is likely to happen next. In fact, we could stretch it so far as to say that modern economic growth theory is not able to explain what happens when fertility drops to a level below replacement level and stays there!

In Summary

Even though that a lot words have been written in this entry I am afraid that only superficial contributions have been made to the final answer of the proposed question. This entry principally had one main task, namely to initiate a line of reasoning which ultimately and hopefully can lead to a better understanding of modern economic growth processes in a context of the current demographic profile of many developed and developing economies. Specifically, this entry revolved around the concept of catch-up growth/convergence where the countries in Eastern Europe were suggested as an example to demonstrate how demographics can fundamentally alter the principles by which the economic growth process is likely to conform. In this way, the message is not that modern economic growth theory and growth accounting methods are rendered obsolete in the face of changing demographics but rather that considerable adjustment needs to be made; especially in the context of catch up growth/convergence but also crucially in the context of the notion of a steady state of economic growth. Returning briefly to the real world before we sign off it could seem as if the branding of the lynx economies never was more than a quick and essentially expensive make-up which is set to quickly wear off as we venture on. Specifically, recent signs coming out of the ECB and the European commission suggest that expectations are aligning towards an outlook where the process of convergence effectively risks grinding to a halt. My advice would then be not to exchange the carrot too swiftly into a stick since this would only serve to kick those who are already on the ground.