An attempt is made to explore the basic implications of differences in productivity growth rates in countries within a monetary union and tailor them to the case of the EU new member countries running up to the EMU. By using the mathematical model of Harrod-Balassa-Samuelson effect and linking productivity and relative price dynamics with monetary policy, it is shown that: 1) productivity growth in faster-growing countries (FGC) leads to either inflation there, or union-wide exchange rate appreciation, or both in certain proportions, depending on the monetary policy stance taken by the union, but does not cause increase in inflation in slower-growing countries (SGC) by itself, unless the union’s monetary authorities take pro-inflationary policy; 2) because of presence of FGC, the SGC do not become less competitive in the world, and can benefit from increased export of their goods to FGC, provided their labour markets are flexible enough; 3) the real challenge for SGC posed by FGC is not inflation, but rather loss of jobs and export revenues, if their labour markets are not flexible enough to adjust under tight union-wide monetary policy aimed at keeping the union-wide overall price level unchanged, or the labour productivity increase in FGC is not met by adequate improvement in labour productivity in SGC. It should be noted, however, that this ‘adequate improvement’ is enough to constitute only a fraction of the productivity growth in FGC.
Authored by: Nikolai Zoubanov
Published in 2003
This paper reports the progress of nominal and real convergence of Spain, Portugal and Greece during their accession to the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). When the EMU was designed, it was hoped that it would induce nominal convergence (convergence of interest rates and inflation rates) and stimulate investments and economic growth through its positive microeconomic effects. As had been expected, nominal interest rates have converged quite early during the accession, output has been growing fast, and the countries experienced an inflow of foreign direct investments (FDI) and an increase of domestic investment rates. However, once within the EMU, all three countries experienced persistently higher inflation rates, which may be consistent with the convergence of price levels, instead of inflation. While all the above phenomena can be related to the EMU accession, in an econometric estimation for Spain in which we control for macroeconomic policies, we are unable to detect significant microeconomic effects of the EMU. Therefore, we conclude that it is the policies induced by the necessity to satisfy the Maastricht criteria that matter primarily for the macroeconomic performance soon after accession. In any case, the experience of the SPG is encouraging for the new member states facing accession to the EMU in the future.
Authored by: Marek Jarocinski
Published in 2003
The current fiscal imbalances and fragilities in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean countries (SEMC) are the result of decades of instability, but have become more visible since 2008, when a combination of adverse economic and political shocks (the global and European financial crises, Arab Spring) hit the region. In an environment of slower growth and higher public expenditure pressures, fiscal deficits and public debts have increased rapidly. This has led to the deterioration of current accounts, a depletion of official reserves, the depreciation of some currencies and higher inflationary pressure.
To avoid the danger of public debt and a balance-of-payment crisis, comprehensive economic reforms, including fiscal adjustment, are urgently needed. These reforms should involve eliminating energy and food subsidies and replacing them with targeted social assistance, reducing the oversized public administration and privatizing public sector enterprises, improving the business climate, increasing trade and investment openness, and sector diversification. The SEMC may also benefit from a peace dividend if the numerous internal and regional conflicts are resolved.
However, the success of economic reforms will depend on the results of the political transition, i.e., the ability to build stable democratic regimes which can resist populist temptations and rally political support for more rational economic policies.
Authored by: Marek Dąbrowski
Published in 2014
This paper uses a multi region DSGE model with collateral constrained households and residential investment to examine the effectiveness of fiscal policy stimulus measures in a credit crisis. The paper explores alternative scenarios which differ by the type of budgetary measure, its length, the degree of monetary accommodation and the level of international coordination. In particular we provide estimates for New EU Member States where we take into account two aspects. First, debt denomination in foreign currency and second, higher nominal interest rates, which makes it less likely that the Central Bank is restricted by the zero bound and will consequently not accommodate a fiscal stimulus. We also compare our results to other recent results obtained in the literature on fiscal policy which generally do not consider credit constrained households.
Authored by: Jan in't Veld, Werner Roeger, István P. Székely
Published in 2011
This paper discusses the processes of nominal and real convergence and their dependence on exchange rate regimes adopted in Central and Eastern European countries (CEECs) in thecontext of their future EMU accession. We focus our argument on the possibility of trade-off between the pace of disinflation and the maintenance of competitiveness and growth. Fixednominal exchange rate shifts the burden of adjustment on to the tradable sector but whether this pressure results in faster restructuring and faster productivity growth or becomes a straightjacket for the economy is an open question. The paper implements a simple empirical assessment of convergence of inflation to EU levels and economic growth of 7 CEE economies which had adopted different exchange rate regimes in period 1993-2002. Results indicate that fixed exchange rates seem to have been a better tool of fighting inflation as compared to floating exchange rates or intermediate regimes. The presence of a fixed exchange rate has also been characterised byhigher real GDP growth rates implying an absence of trade-off between nominal and real convergence in the investigated sample. Qualifications attached to these results are discussed.
Authored by: Przemyslaw Kowalski
Published in 2003
1) The document discusses the economic effects of low and negative interest rates as implemented by global central banks through various experiments. It focuses on the impacts on pension funds, pensioners, and bond markets.
2) Pension funds are facing difficulties generating revenue with low and negative interest rates, which makes fixed income investments less attractive. Pensioners are concerned about the security of their pensions.
3) Models in the document predict that bond yields in the US, EU, and UK will drop below zero before the end of the current decade, with varying risk premium behaviors across regions. Difficult times are ahead for pension funds, pensioners, and bond investors.
Ivo Pezzuto - FEDERAL RESERVE'S RATE RISE. COMING SOON? The Global Analyst Se...Dr. Ivo Pezzuto
The document summarizes factors contributing to increased volatility in global markets in September 2015, including the potential for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. While the US economy has improved, global risks from China's economic slowdown and falling commodity prices pose challenges. It is unlikely the Federal Reserve will raise rates in September due to this increased turbulence, though a rate hike by the end of 2015 or in 2016 is still possible depending on how the global situation evolves.
This document summarizes forecasts for the Financial Stress Index (FSI) and Economic Sensitivity Index (ESI) for 6 Central and Eastern European countries from Q1 2014 to Q2 2015. The ESI is predicted to increase for most countries except Hungary, where it will decrease, though generally remain at low levels of stress. The FSI is forecasted to rise in the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Estonia starting in Q3 2014, and to fall in Latvia and Hungary starting in Q1 2015 after initially rising. Economic growth is expected to continue strengthening recovery, but closing output gaps and inflation increases may contribute to rising ESI trends.
An attempt is made to explore the basic implications of differences in productivity growth rates in countries within a monetary union and tailor them to the case of the EU new member countries running up to the EMU. By using the mathematical model of Harrod-Balassa-Samuelson effect and linking productivity and relative price dynamics with monetary policy, it is shown that: 1) productivity growth in faster-growing countries (FGC) leads to either inflation there, or union-wide exchange rate appreciation, or both in certain proportions, depending on the monetary policy stance taken by the union, but does not cause increase in inflation in slower-growing countries (SGC) by itself, unless the union’s monetary authorities take pro-inflationary policy; 2) because of presence of FGC, the SGC do not become less competitive in the world, and can benefit from increased export of their goods to FGC, provided their labour markets are flexible enough; 3) the real challenge for SGC posed by FGC is not inflation, but rather loss of jobs and export revenues, if their labour markets are not flexible enough to adjust under tight union-wide monetary policy aimed at keeping the union-wide overall price level unchanged, or the labour productivity increase in FGC is not met by adequate improvement in labour productivity in SGC. It should be noted, however, that this ‘adequate improvement’ is enough to constitute only a fraction of the productivity growth in FGC.
Authored by: Nikolai Zoubanov
Published in 2003
This paper reports the progress of nominal and real convergence of Spain, Portugal and Greece during their accession to the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). When the EMU was designed, it was hoped that it would induce nominal convergence (convergence of interest rates and inflation rates) and stimulate investments and economic growth through its positive microeconomic effects. As had been expected, nominal interest rates have converged quite early during the accession, output has been growing fast, and the countries experienced an inflow of foreign direct investments (FDI) and an increase of domestic investment rates. However, once within the EMU, all three countries experienced persistently higher inflation rates, which may be consistent with the convergence of price levels, instead of inflation. While all the above phenomena can be related to the EMU accession, in an econometric estimation for Spain in which we control for macroeconomic policies, we are unable to detect significant microeconomic effects of the EMU. Therefore, we conclude that it is the policies induced by the necessity to satisfy the Maastricht criteria that matter primarily for the macroeconomic performance soon after accession. In any case, the experience of the SPG is encouraging for the new member states facing accession to the EMU in the future.
Authored by: Marek Jarocinski
Published in 2003
The current fiscal imbalances and fragilities in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean countries (SEMC) are the result of decades of instability, but have become more visible since 2008, when a combination of adverse economic and political shocks (the global and European financial crises, Arab Spring) hit the region. In an environment of slower growth and higher public expenditure pressures, fiscal deficits and public debts have increased rapidly. This has led to the deterioration of current accounts, a depletion of official reserves, the depreciation of some currencies and higher inflationary pressure.
To avoid the danger of public debt and a balance-of-payment crisis, comprehensive economic reforms, including fiscal adjustment, are urgently needed. These reforms should involve eliminating energy and food subsidies and replacing them with targeted social assistance, reducing the oversized public administration and privatizing public sector enterprises, improving the business climate, increasing trade and investment openness, and sector diversification. The SEMC may also benefit from a peace dividend if the numerous internal and regional conflicts are resolved.
However, the success of economic reforms will depend on the results of the political transition, i.e., the ability to build stable democratic regimes which can resist populist temptations and rally political support for more rational economic policies.
Authored by: Marek Dąbrowski
Published in 2014
This paper uses a multi region DSGE model with collateral constrained households and residential investment to examine the effectiveness of fiscal policy stimulus measures in a credit crisis. The paper explores alternative scenarios which differ by the type of budgetary measure, its length, the degree of monetary accommodation and the level of international coordination. In particular we provide estimates for New EU Member States where we take into account two aspects. First, debt denomination in foreign currency and second, higher nominal interest rates, which makes it less likely that the Central Bank is restricted by the zero bound and will consequently not accommodate a fiscal stimulus. We also compare our results to other recent results obtained in the literature on fiscal policy which generally do not consider credit constrained households.
Authored by: Jan in't Veld, Werner Roeger, István P. Székely
Published in 2011
This paper discusses the processes of nominal and real convergence and their dependence on exchange rate regimes adopted in Central and Eastern European countries (CEECs) in thecontext of their future EMU accession. We focus our argument on the possibility of trade-off between the pace of disinflation and the maintenance of competitiveness and growth. Fixednominal exchange rate shifts the burden of adjustment on to the tradable sector but whether this pressure results in faster restructuring and faster productivity growth or becomes a straightjacket for the economy is an open question. The paper implements a simple empirical assessment of convergence of inflation to EU levels and economic growth of 7 CEE economies which had adopted different exchange rate regimes in period 1993-2002. Results indicate that fixed exchange rates seem to have been a better tool of fighting inflation as compared to floating exchange rates or intermediate regimes. The presence of a fixed exchange rate has also been characterised byhigher real GDP growth rates implying an absence of trade-off between nominal and real convergence in the investigated sample. Qualifications attached to these results are discussed.
Authored by: Przemyslaw Kowalski
Published in 2003
1) The document discusses the economic effects of low and negative interest rates as implemented by global central banks through various experiments. It focuses on the impacts on pension funds, pensioners, and bond markets.
2) Pension funds are facing difficulties generating revenue with low and negative interest rates, which makes fixed income investments less attractive. Pensioners are concerned about the security of their pensions.
3) Models in the document predict that bond yields in the US, EU, and UK will drop below zero before the end of the current decade, with varying risk premium behaviors across regions. Difficult times are ahead for pension funds, pensioners, and bond investors.
Ivo Pezzuto - FEDERAL RESERVE'S RATE RISE. COMING SOON? The Global Analyst Se...Dr. Ivo Pezzuto
The document summarizes factors contributing to increased volatility in global markets in September 2015, including the potential for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. While the US economy has improved, global risks from China's economic slowdown and falling commodity prices pose challenges. It is unlikely the Federal Reserve will raise rates in September due to this increased turbulence, though a rate hike by the end of 2015 or in 2016 is still possible depending on how the global situation evolves.
This document summarizes forecasts for the Financial Stress Index (FSI) and Economic Sensitivity Index (ESI) for 6 Central and Eastern European countries from Q1 2014 to Q2 2015. The ESI is predicted to increase for most countries except Hungary, where it will decrease, though generally remain at low levels of stress. The FSI is forecasted to rise in the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Estonia starting in Q3 2014, and to fall in Latvia and Hungary starting in Q1 2015 after initially rising. Economic growth is expected to continue strengthening recovery, but closing output gaps and inflation increases may contribute to rising ESI trends.
This document discusses evaluating the appropriate level and range for inflation targeting in emerging market economies. It reviews how inflation targets are determined and set, considering factors like desired long-run inflation and central bank credibility. It then examines views on the appropriate inflation level, finding empirical evidence that emerging markets may have higher inflation thresholds than developed economies, between 7-13%. The range of targets is also discussed, arguing emerging economies may need wider ranges than developed ones. South Africa's level and range are considered, finding its threshold may be on the lower side but its range appropriate. Overall, the document analyzes what inflation levels and ranges may be optimal for emerging market inflation targeting regimes.
The World Bank's Mongolia Quarterly Economic Update assesses recent economic developments and policies in Mongolia. It finds that while the economy grew rapidly at 16.7% in the first quarter of 2012, inflation reached 16% in April due to high government spending, cash transfers, and rising capital expenditures. Exports growth slowed as China's economy weakened, worsening external balances. The update advises Mongolian policymakers to adopt a more cautious macroeconomic stance by tightening monetary and fiscal policy to prevent overheating.
In a recessionary and deflationary framework, the discretionary monetary policy cannot be optimal when the interest rate is already near zero and cannot decrease anymore. Indeed, when the Zero Lower Bound is binding, a negative demand shock implies a decrease in the current economic activity level and deflationary tensions, which cannot be avoided by monetary policy as the nominal interest rate can no longer decrease. The economic literature has then often recommended to target an inflation rate sufficiently above zero in order to avoid the dangers of this Zero Lower Bound (ZLB) constraint. On the contrary, provided the ZLB is not binding, monetary policy can efficiently contribute to the stabilization of economic activity and inflation in case of demand shocks. The variation in interest rates is then all the more accentuated as interest rate smoothing is a more negligible goal for the central bank. The contribution of our paper is to provide a clear analytical New-Keynesian framework sustaining these results. Besides, our analytical modelling also shows that even if the ZLB is currently not binding, the central bank should take into account the dangers of a potential future binding ZLB. Indeed, the interest rate should be decreased the fastest as a negative demand shock and the possibility to reach the ZLB is anticipated for a nearest future period. Our paper demonstrates the necessity of such a ‘pre-emptive’ active monetary policy even in a discretionary framework, which has the advantage to be time-consistent and to be in conformity with the empirical practices of independent central banks. We don’t have to make the strong hypothesis of a commitment monetary policy intended to affect private agents’ expectations in order to demonstrate the optimality of such a pre-emptive monetary policy.
Piotr Kozarzewski and Maciej Bałtowski analyse the causes and manifestations of this trend in economic policy in Poland. They use privatization policy as an example. The authors examine the effects of the privatization policy and point to a large unfinished agenda in ownership transformation that has had an adverse impact on the institutional setup of the Polish state, creating grounds for rent seeking and cronyism, which, in turn, impede the pace of privatization. They find out that it is the increasing capture of the state by rent-seeking groups, and not, contrary to popular opinion, the global financial crisis, that most contributes to the growing statist trends of Poland’s economic policy.
The paper first considers why central European countries wish to join EMU soon. The main reasons are the risk of macroeconomic instability they face outside the euro zone if they wish to grow quickly. At the same time, Central Europe is highly integrated as regards trade with EMU, so it is little exposed to asymmetric shocks that would require a realignment of exchange rates. Finally, it is argued that there is no cost in terms of slower growth from EMU accession, so that there is no trade-off, as has been claimed, between nominal convergence to EMU and real convergence to EU average GDP levels. Second, the paper assesses whether Central European accession to EMU would be disadvantageous to current members. It concludes that accession cannot increase inflationary pressure on existing EMU members, as has been claimed, but that slow growing members of EMU might suffer increased unemployment, unless they increase the flexibility of their labour markets. Incumbent members may also be unwilling to share power with Central Europeans in EMU institutions.
Authored by: Jacek Rostowski
Published in 2003
The document is the February 2014 Monetary Policy Report from the Federal Reserve. It discusses recent economic and financial developments. Key points:
- The labor market continued improving in the second half of 2013 and early 2014, with employment gains averaging 175,000 per month and unemployment falling to 6.6%. However, unemployment remains above sustainable levels.
- Inflation remained low at 1% over the last half of 2013, below the Fed's 2% target, but some factors were transitory. Inflation expectations have remained steady.
- Economic growth picked up in the second half of 2013 to an annual rate of 3.75%, as fiscal policy restraint lessened and financial conditions remained supportive.
The Eurozone crisis mobilises an appreciable amount of the attention of politicians and the public, with calls for a decisive defence of the euro, because the single currency’s demise is said to be the beginning of the end of the EU and Single European Market. In our view, preserving the euro may result in something completely different than expected: the disintegration of the EU and the Single European Market rather than their further strengthening. The fundamental problem with the common currency is individual countries’ inability to correct their external exchange rates, which normally constitutes a fast and efficient adjustment instrument, especially in crisis times.
Europe consists of nation states that constitute the major axes of national identity and major sources of government’s legitimisation. Staying within the euro zone may sentence some countries – which, for whatever reason, have lost or may lose competitiveness – to economic, social and civilizational degradation, and with no way out of this situation. This may disturb social and political cohesion in member countries, give birth to populist tendencies that endanger the democratic order, and hamper peaceful cooperation in Europe. The situation may get out of control and trigger a chaotic break-up of the euro zone,
threatening the future of the whole EU and Single European Market.
In order to return to the origins of European integration and avoid the chaotic break-up of the euro zone, the euro zone should be dismantled in a controlled manner. If a weak country were to leave the euro zone, it would entail panic and a banking system collapse. Therefore we opt for a different scenario, in which the euro area is slowly dismantled in such a way that the most competitive countries or group of such countries leave the euro zone. Such a step would create a new European currency regime based on national currencies or currencies serving groups of homogenous countries, and save EU institutions along with the Single European Market.
This paper has been also published in "German Economic Review" (Volume 14, Issue 1, pages 31–49, February 2013)
Authored by: Stefan Kawalec and Ernest Pytlarczyk
This document is a paper analyzing inflation and monetary policy in Russia between 1992-2001. It seeks to identify the main factors driving inflation in Russia during this period through empirical testing and econometric analysis. The paper finds that money expansion and exchange rate depreciation fueled inflation, though the underlying trends changed over time. Until 1999, fiscal policy posed the biggest obstacle to disinflation, while later, attempts to target both money supply and exchange rate simultaneously through monetary policy caused inflationary pressures.
This paper employs a standard Tobin-Markowitz framework to analyse the determinants of capital flows into the CIS countries. Using data from 1996-2006, we find that the Russian financial crisis of 1998 has had a profound impact on capital flows into the CIS (both directly and indirectly). Firstly, it introduced a structural shift in the investors' behaviour by shifting the focus from the external factors to the internal ones, e.g. domestic interest and GDP growth rates. Secondly, it also drastically changed the impact of a number of explanatory variables on capital flows into the CIS. Political risk was found to be the second most important determinant of capital flows into the CIS. Additionally, we report some strong evidence of co-movement between portfolio flows into the CIS and CEEC, coupled with strong complementarity between global stock market activity and portfolio inflows into the CIS. Interestingly, external factors tend to be of a higher significance than internal factors for the largest members (Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan) of the CIS; whereas domestic variables tend to have a greater impact on the capital flows into the smaller CIS countries.
Authored by: Oleksandr Lozovyi
Published in 2007
This publication presents the collection of papers written in 2004 within the project that aimed to broaden the knowledge about sources of inflation in Ukraine and indicate policies that can support low inflation in the future. While working on analyses of monetary policies and inflation, the authors used the experience of other transitional countries, Polish in particular.
The project team hopes that the research gathered in this volume will contribute to the understanding of the sources of inflation in Ukraine and to the influence of monetary policy instruments on other variables. And that the results presented here can be of practical use for the National Bank of Ukraine.
Authored by: Volodymyr Hryvniv, Malgorzata Jakubiak, Mykyta Mykhaylychenko, Oksana Novoseletska, Wojciech Paczynski, Przemyslaw Wozniak
Published in 2005
he paper examines theoretical literature, recent EMU accession examples, and current CEECs performance in search of the optimal currency regime for meeting the Maastricht criteria. Currency board arrangements seems to provide the fastest convergence. For other regimes, the markets may have theoretical and historical reasons to believe in the government's temptation to devalue on the ERM-2 entry. The government should announce the final date, and, possibly indicate the final exchange rate for the regime switch to avoid excessive currency and yield volatility. It should also underscore the central bank’s and EU authorities importance (even if non-existent) in the parity setting process to avoid excessive domestic debt inflation premium ahead of the accession. Recent experience shows that it will be easy to get rid of the remaining influence of cross rates on CEECs exchange rates.
Authored by: Mateusz Szczurek
Published in 2003
This document provides an analysis of macroeconomic conditions and portfolio recommendations. It analyzes the national economies of the US, Asia, and Europe, finding overall recovery but some weaknesses. International factors like declining commodity prices and tight financial conditions are noted. The document then assesses industries, provides interest and exchange rate forecasts, evaluates specific securities, and recommends a diversified portfolio allocation and hedging strategies to achieve the target 5.78% return over 5 years for retirement investors.
Economic Outlook, Nordea, September 2010Nordea Bank
The economic outlook document provides the following key points in 3 sentences:
1) Global economic growth is expected to moderate in the coming years from the strong rebound in 2010, with risks including further slowdowns in the US and China and potential commodity price shocks.
2) The Nordic economies have shifted into higher gear after a slow start in 2010, supported by improving exports and domestic demand, with healthy public finances reducing the need for fiscal austerity.
3) While the Eurozone recovery continues, led by Germany, growth is expected to slow in the second half of 2010 as fiscal tightening takes effect across countries and the US economic leadership in driving global growth may weaken.
In this paper the concept of total gross seigniorage is used to analyze sources of revenues of National Bank of Georgia (NBG) and their distribution in the period 1996-1999. A comprehensive framework for measuring total seigniorage and its main components is presented and estimates of seigniorage revenues (sources and uses) are computed and analyzed. It is shown that in the considered period fiscal revenues from NBG have not been extensively financed by the money supply (consequently, cannot be estimated by the monetary seigniorage), but have been mostly covered by the reduction of the non government debt hold by central bank. Since the stock of international and private domestic assets hold by National Bank of Georgia is limited, in long run NBG cannot rely on it. The only way how, in the future, NBG can finance large deficits of the state budget is to use monetary seigniorage. This, however, will have to be accompanied by significant growth of monetary base and will cause a danger of large inflation.
Authored by: Jacek Cukrowski
Published in 2000
The document discusses the investment outlook and portfolio positioning of Fasanara Capital. It states that despite weak economics and high valuations, the path of least resistance for markets in the short term is higher, as long as tensions in Ukraine do not escalate. Within equities, the portfolio prefers Italy, Greece, and Japan over US markets. The portfolio is positioned for a scenario where Russia de-escalates tensions in Ukraine, allowing markets to rise to new highs, especially in peripheral Europe. However, it remains hedged for a potential escalation causing a more significant market correction.
Since May 1, 2004 the European Union's new member states (NMS) have been subject to the same fiscal rules established in the Treaty on the European Union and Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) as the old member states (OMS). The NMS entered the EU running structural fiscal deficits. More than half of them (including the biggest ones) breach the Treaty's actual deficit limits and are already the subject of the excessive deficit procedure. A high rate of economic growth makes the fiscal situation of most NMS reasonably manageable in the short- to medium-term, but the long term fiscal outlook, mostly connected with the consequences of an aging population, is dramatic. The NMS should therefore prepare themselves now to be able to meet this challenge over the next decades (the same goes for the OMS). In addition, the perspective of EMU entry should provide the NMS with a strong incentive to reduce their deficits now because waiting (and postponing both fiscal adjustment and the adoption of the Euro) will only result in higher cumulative fiscal costs. The additional financial burden connected with EU accession cannot serve as excuse in delaying fiscal consolidation.
In spite of the growing debate on the relevance of the EU's fiscal surveillance rules and not excluding the possibility of their limited modification, they should not be relaxed. Frequent breaching of these rules cannot serve as an argument that they are irrelevant from the point of view of safeguarding fiscal prudence and avoiding fiscal 'free riding' under the umbrella of monetary union. Any version of fiscal surveillance rules (either current or modified) must be solidly anchored in an effective enforcement mechanism (including automatic sanctions) at the EU and national levels.
Authored by: Malgorzata Antczak, Marek Dabrowski, Michal Gorzelak
Published in 2005
This document provides an overview of key issues shaping New Hampshire's future, including its economy, demographics, education, health care, budget, and infrastructure. It finds that while New Hampshire has a strong economy, it faces challenges from an aging population, rising health care and education costs, and underfunded infrastructure needs. The state will need to address these issues to ensure future prosperity and quality of life for its residents.
World bank report on China Economic Update 2013Shiv ognito
The World Bank economic update provides an update on recent economic and social developments and policies in China, and presents findings from ongoing World Bank work on China. The update was produced by a World Bank team consisting of Karlis Smits (Senior Economist), Bingjie Hu (Economist), Binglie Luo (Research Assistant), Tony Ollero (Economist), and Ekaterine Vashakmadze (Senior Economist) with support from the China country team, and under the overall guidance of Klaus Rohland (Country Director), Sudhir Shetty (Sector Director), Bert Hoftman (Regional Chief Economist), and Chorching Goh (Lead Economist).
This paper estimates responses to monetary policy shocks in several euro area countries and Central and Eastern European countries using a Bayesian structural vector autoregression (SVAR) model. The estimates suggest that while responses are broadly similar across regions, prices may respond more strongly in the CEE countries, though after a longer lag. This could be due to structural differences, in which case early euro adoption could cause problems for CEE countries. However, if due to credibility issues, euro adoption could help by providing credibility to monetary policy. With longer lags in the CEE, domestic monetary policy may be difficult to conduct, so relinquishing it may not entail significant costs.
Unlike the crisis years of 2007-2009 (when the insolvency of large banks was a major problem), the current round of the global financial crisis has fiscal origins. Almost all developed countries suffer from an excessive public debt burden that has been built up over the last two decades or more. The financial crisis caused a further deterioration of government accounts as a result of ill-tailored countercyclical fiscal response and, in some cases, a costly financial sector rescue. All excessively indebted countries must conduct fiscal adjustment, even if this involves economic and political costs in terms of lower output and higher unemployment. Central banks can reduce these costs through accommodative monetary policies but without compromising their anti-inflationary missions and institutional independence. The ECB is additionally constrained by its institutional status which is based on a delicate cross-country political consensus. Excessive ECB involvement in quasi-fiscal rescue operations can undermine this consensus and lead to a disintegration of the Eurozone. There are also strong arguments in favor of strengthening fiscal and banking integration within the EU, especially the fiscal discipline mechanism at national levels, and building the EU rescue capacity in respect to sovereigns and banks based on strong policy conditionality.
Authored by: Marek Dabrowski
Published in 2012
This document provides a general overview of non-performing loans (NPLs) on a global scale. It discusses that NPLs increased significantly following the 2008 financial crisis for banks in the US, Europe, and Asia. In Europe specifically, the level of NPLs across major banks was 6% of total loans outstanding or 10% excluding other financial institutions, compared to 3% for major US banks. Most Asian banking systems saw NPL ratios fall below 5% after the crisis. The document aims to educate about causes and effects of NPLs as well as mechanisms for banks to manage high NPLs.
- Monetary financing or "helicopter money" involves central banks directly increasing money supply by crediting funds to government or individual accounts, bypassing traditional monetary policy tools. It is seen as a potential next step for central banks struggling with low growth and inflation.
- The document provides a checklist for considering helicopter money, examining factors like economic conditions, central bank credibility and independence, balance sheet constraints, and risks of losing control over inflation.
- While helicopter money could boost nominal growth and inflation, current economic data does not warrant it for major economies. More importantly, the approach risks undermining central bank credibility and ability to manage inflation expectations.
This document discusses evaluating the appropriate level and range for inflation targeting in emerging market economies. It reviews how inflation targets are determined and set, considering factors like desired long-run inflation and central bank credibility. It then examines views on the appropriate inflation level, finding empirical evidence that emerging markets may have higher inflation thresholds than developed economies, between 7-13%. The range of targets is also discussed, arguing emerging economies may need wider ranges than developed ones. South Africa's level and range are considered, finding its threshold may be on the lower side but its range appropriate. Overall, the document analyzes what inflation levels and ranges may be optimal for emerging market inflation targeting regimes.
The World Bank's Mongolia Quarterly Economic Update assesses recent economic developments and policies in Mongolia. It finds that while the economy grew rapidly at 16.7% in the first quarter of 2012, inflation reached 16% in April due to high government spending, cash transfers, and rising capital expenditures. Exports growth slowed as China's economy weakened, worsening external balances. The update advises Mongolian policymakers to adopt a more cautious macroeconomic stance by tightening monetary and fiscal policy to prevent overheating.
In a recessionary and deflationary framework, the discretionary monetary policy cannot be optimal when the interest rate is already near zero and cannot decrease anymore. Indeed, when the Zero Lower Bound is binding, a negative demand shock implies a decrease in the current economic activity level and deflationary tensions, which cannot be avoided by monetary policy as the nominal interest rate can no longer decrease. The economic literature has then often recommended to target an inflation rate sufficiently above zero in order to avoid the dangers of this Zero Lower Bound (ZLB) constraint. On the contrary, provided the ZLB is not binding, monetary policy can efficiently contribute to the stabilization of economic activity and inflation in case of demand shocks. The variation in interest rates is then all the more accentuated as interest rate smoothing is a more negligible goal for the central bank. The contribution of our paper is to provide a clear analytical New-Keynesian framework sustaining these results. Besides, our analytical modelling also shows that even if the ZLB is currently not binding, the central bank should take into account the dangers of a potential future binding ZLB. Indeed, the interest rate should be decreased the fastest as a negative demand shock and the possibility to reach the ZLB is anticipated for a nearest future period. Our paper demonstrates the necessity of such a ‘pre-emptive’ active monetary policy even in a discretionary framework, which has the advantage to be time-consistent and to be in conformity with the empirical practices of independent central banks. We don’t have to make the strong hypothesis of a commitment monetary policy intended to affect private agents’ expectations in order to demonstrate the optimality of such a pre-emptive monetary policy.
Piotr Kozarzewski and Maciej Bałtowski analyse the causes and manifestations of this trend in economic policy in Poland. They use privatization policy as an example. The authors examine the effects of the privatization policy and point to a large unfinished agenda in ownership transformation that has had an adverse impact on the institutional setup of the Polish state, creating grounds for rent seeking and cronyism, which, in turn, impede the pace of privatization. They find out that it is the increasing capture of the state by rent-seeking groups, and not, contrary to popular opinion, the global financial crisis, that most contributes to the growing statist trends of Poland’s economic policy.
The paper first considers why central European countries wish to join EMU soon. The main reasons are the risk of macroeconomic instability they face outside the euro zone if they wish to grow quickly. At the same time, Central Europe is highly integrated as regards trade with EMU, so it is little exposed to asymmetric shocks that would require a realignment of exchange rates. Finally, it is argued that there is no cost in terms of slower growth from EMU accession, so that there is no trade-off, as has been claimed, between nominal convergence to EMU and real convergence to EU average GDP levels. Second, the paper assesses whether Central European accession to EMU would be disadvantageous to current members. It concludes that accession cannot increase inflationary pressure on existing EMU members, as has been claimed, but that slow growing members of EMU might suffer increased unemployment, unless they increase the flexibility of their labour markets. Incumbent members may also be unwilling to share power with Central Europeans in EMU institutions.
Authored by: Jacek Rostowski
Published in 2003
The document is the February 2014 Monetary Policy Report from the Federal Reserve. It discusses recent economic and financial developments. Key points:
- The labor market continued improving in the second half of 2013 and early 2014, with employment gains averaging 175,000 per month and unemployment falling to 6.6%. However, unemployment remains above sustainable levels.
- Inflation remained low at 1% over the last half of 2013, below the Fed's 2% target, but some factors were transitory. Inflation expectations have remained steady.
- Economic growth picked up in the second half of 2013 to an annual rate of 3.75%, as fiscal policy restraint lessened and financial conditions remained supportive.
The Eurozone crisis mobilises an appreciable amount of the attention of politicians and the public, with calls for a decisive defence of the euro, because the single currency’s demise is said to be the beginning of the end of the EU and Single European Market. In our view, preserving the euro may result in something completely different than expected: the disintegration of the EU and the Single European Market rather than their further strengthening. The fundamental problem with the common currency is individual countries’ inability to correct their external exchange rates, which normally constitutes a fast and efficient adjustment instrument, especially in crisis times.
Europe consists of nation states that constitute the major axes of national identity and major sources of government’s legitimisation. Staying within the euro zone may sentence some countries – which, for whatever reason, have lost or may lose competitiveness – to economic, social and civilizational degradation, and with no way out of this situation. This may disturb social and political cohesion in member countries, give birth to populist tendencies that endanger the democratic order, and hamper peaceful cooperation in Europe. The situation may get out of control and trigger a chaotic break-up of the euro zone,
threatening the future of the whole EU and Single European Market.
In order to return to the origins of European integration and avoid the chaotic break-up of the euro zone, the euro zone should be dismantled in a controlled manner. If a weak country were to leave the euro zone, it would entail panic and a banking system collapse. Therefore we opt for a different scenario, in which the euro area is slowly dismantled in such a way that the most competitive countries or group of such countries leave the euro zone. Such a step would create a new European currency regime based on national currencies or currencies serving groups of homogenous countries, and save EU institutions along with the Single European Market.
This paper has been also published in "German Economic Review" (Volume 14, Issue 1, pages 31–49, February 2013)
Authored by: Stefan Kawalec and Ernest Pytlarczyk
This document is a paper analyzing inflation and monetary policy in Russia between 1992-2001. It seeks to identify the main factors driving inflation in Russia during this period through empirical testing and econometric analysis. The paper finds that money expansion and exchange rate depreciation fueled inflation, though the underlying trends changed over time. Until 1999, fiscal policy posed the biggest obstacle to disinflation, while later, attempts to target both money supply and exchange rate simultaneously through monetary policy caused inflationary pressures.
This paper employs a standard Tobin-Markowitz framework to analyse the determinants of capital flows into the CIS countries. Using data from 1996-2006, we find that the Russian financial crisis of 1998 has had a profound impact on capital flows into the CIS (both directly and indirectly). Firstly, it introduced a structural shift in the investors' behaviour by shifting the focus from the external factors to the internal ones, e.g. domestic interest and GDP growth rates. Secondly, it also drastically changed the impact of a number of explanatory variables on capital flows into the CIS. Political risk was found to be the second most important determinant of capital flows into the CIS. Additionally, we report some strong evidence of co-movement between portfolio flows into the CIS and CEEC, coupled with strong complementarity between global stock market activity and portfolio inflows into the CIS. Interestingly, external factors tend to be of a higher significance than internal factors for the largest members (Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan) of the CIS; whereas domestic variables tend to have a greater impact on the capital flows into the smaller CIS countries.
Authored by: Oleksandr Lozovyi
Published in 2007
This publication presents the collection of papers written in 2004 within the project that aimed to broaden the knowledge about sources of inflation in Ukraine and indicate policies that can support low inflation in the future. While working on analyses of monetary policies and inflation, the authors used the experience of other transitional countries, Polish in particular.
The project team hopes that the research gathered in this volume will contribute to the understanding of the sources of inflation in Ukraine and to the influence of monetary policy instruments on other variables. And that the results presented here can be of practical use for the National Bank of Ukraine.
Authored by: Volodymyr Hryvniv, Malgorzata Jakubiak, Mykyta Mykhaylychenko, Oksana Novoseletska, Wojciech Paczynski, Przemyslaw Wozniak
Published in 2005
he paper examines theoretical literature, recent EMU accession examples, and current CEECs performance in search of the optimal currency regime for meeting the Maastricht criteria. Currency board arrangements seems to provide the fastest convergence. For other regimes, the markets may have theoretical and historical reasons to believe in the government's temptation to devalue on the ERM-2 entry. The government should announce the final date, and, possibly indicate the final exchange rate for the regime switch to avoid excessive currency and yield volatility. It should also underscore the central bank’s and EU authorities importance (even if non-existent) in the parity setting process to avoid excessive domestic debt inflation premium ahead of the accession. Recent experience shows that it will be easy to get rid of the remaining influence of cross rates on CEECs exchange rates.
Authored by: Mateusz Szczurek
Published in 2003
This document provides an analysis of macroeconomic conditions and portfolio recommendations. It analyzes the national economies of the US, Asia, and Europe, finding overall recovery but some weaknesses. International factors like declining commodity prices and tight financial conditions are noted. The document then assesses industries, provides interest and exchange rate forecasts, evaluates specific securities, and recommends a diversified portfolio allocation and hedging strategies to achieve the target 5.78% return over 5 years for retirement investors.
Economic Outlook, Nordea, September 2010Nordea Bank
The economic outlook document provides the following key points in 3 sentences:
1) Global economic growth is expected to moderate in the coming years from the strong rebound in 2010, with risks including further slowdowns in the US and China and potential commodity price shocks.
2) The Nordic economies have shifted into higher gear after a slow start in 2010, supported by improving exports and domestic demand, with healthy public finances reducing the need for fiscal austerity.
3) While the Eurozone recovery continues, led by Germany, growth is expected to slow in the second half of 2010 as fiscal tightening takes effect across countries and the US economic leadership in driving global growth may weaken.
In this paper the concept of total gross seigniorage is used to analyze sources of revenues of National Bank of Georgia (NBG) and their distribution in the period 1996-1999. A comprehensive framework for measuring total seigniorage and its main components is presented and estimates of seigniorage revenues (sources and uses) are computed and analyzed. It is shown that in the considered period fiscal revenues from NBG have not been extensively financed by the money supply (consequently, cannot be estimated by the monetary seigniorage), but have been mostly covered by the reduction of the non government debt hold by central bank. Since the stock of international and private domestic assets hold by National Bank of Georgia is limited, in long run NBG cannot rely on it. The only way how, in the future, NBG can finance large deficits of the state budget is to use monetary seigniorage. This, however, will have to be accompanied by significant growth of monetary base and will cause a danger of large inflation.
Authored by: Jacek Cukrowski
Published in 2000
The document discusses the investment outlook and portfolio positioning of Fasanara Capital. It states that despite weak economics and high valuations, the path of least resistance for markets in the short term is higher, as long as tensions in Ukraine do not escalate. Within equities, the portfolio prefers Italy, Greece, and Japan over US markets. The portfolio is positioned for a scenario where Russia de-escalates tensions in Ukraine, allowing markets to rise to new highs, especially in peripheral Europe. However, it remains hedged for a potential escalation causing a more significant market correction.
Since May 1, 2004 the European Union's new member states (NMS) have been subject to the same fiscal rules established in the Treaty on the European Union and Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) as the old member states (OMS). The NMS entered the EU running structural fiscal deficits. More than half of them (including the biggest ones) breach the Treaty's actual deficit limits and are already the subject of the excessive deficit procedure. A high rate of economic growth makes the fiscal situation of most NMS reasonably manageable in the short- to medium-term, but the long term fiscal outlook, mostly connected with the consequences of an aging population, is dramatic. The NMS should therefore prepare themselves now to be able to meet this challenge over the next decades (the same goes for the OMS). In addition, the perspective of EMU entry should provide the NMS with a strong incentive to reduce their deficits now because waiting (and postponing both fiscal adjustment and the adoption of the Euro) will only result in higher cumulative fiscal costs. The additional financial burden connected with EU accession cannot serve as excuse in delaying fiscal consolidation.
In spite of the growing debate on the relevance of the EU's fiscal surveillance rules and not excluding the possibility of their limited modification, they should not be relaxed. Frequent breaching of these rules cannot serve as an argument that they are irrelevant from the point of view of safeguarding fiscal prudence and avoiding fiscal 'free riding' under the umbrella of monetary union. Any version of fiscal surveillance rules (either current or modified) must be solidly anchored in an effective enforcement mechanism (including automatic sanctions) at the EU and national levels.
Authored by: Malgorzata Antczak, Marek Dabrowski, Michal Gorzelak
Published in 2005
This document provides an overview of key issues shaping New Hampshire's future, including its economy, demographics, education, health care, budget, and infrastructure. It finds that while New Hampshire has a strong economy, it faces challenges from an aging population, rising health care and education costs, and underfunded infrastructure needs. The state will need to address these issues to ensure future prosperity and quality of life for its residents.
World bank report on China Economic Update 2013Shiv ognito
The World Bank economic update provides an update on recent economic and social developments and policies in China, and presents findings from ongoing World Bank work on China. The update was produced by a World Bank team consisting of Karlis Smits (Senior Economist), Bingjie Hu (Economist), Binglie Luo (Research Assistant), Tony Ollero (Economist), and Ekaterine Vashakmadze (Senior Economist) with support from the China country team, and under the overall guidance of Klaus Rohland (Country Director), Sudhir Shetty (Sector Director), Bert Hoftman (Regional Chief Economist), and Chorching Goh (Lead Economist).
This paper estimates responses to monetary policy shocks in several euro area countries and Central and Eastern European countries using a Bayesian structural vector autoregression (SVAR) model. The estimates suggest that while responses are broadly similar across regions, prices may respond more strongly in the CEE countries, though after a longer lag. This could be due to structural differences, in which case early euro adoption could cause problems for CEE countries. However, if due to credibility issues, euro adoption could help by providing credibility to monetary policy. With longer lags in the CEE, domestic monetary policy may be difficult to conduct, so relinquishing it may not entail significant costs.
Unlike the crisis years of 2007-2009 (when the insolvency of large banks was a major problem), the current round of the global financial crisis has fiscal origins. Almost all developed countries suffer from an excessive public debt burden that has been built up over the last two decades or more. The financial crisis caused a further deterioration of government accounts as a result of ill-tailored countercyclical fiscal response and, in some cases, a costly financial sector rescue. All excessively indebted countries must conduct fiscal adjustment, even if this involves economic and political costs in terms of lower output and higher unemployment. Central banks can reduce these costs through accommodative monetary policies but without compromising their anti-inflationary missions and institutional independence. The ECB is additionally constrained by its institutional status which is based on a delicate cross-country political consensus. Excessive ECB involvement in quasi-fiscal rescue operations can undermine this consensus and lead to a disintegration of the Eurozone. There are also strong arguments in favor of strengthening fiscal and banking integration within the EU, especially the fiscal discipline mechanism at national levels, and building the EU rescue capacity in respect to sovereigns and banks based on strong policy conditionality.
Authored by: Marek Dabrowski
Published in 2012
This document provides a general overview of non-performing loans (NPLs) on a global scale. It discusses that NPLs increased significantly following the 2008 financial crisis for banks in the US, Europe, and Asia. In Europe specifically, the level of NPLs across major banks was 6% of total loans outstanding or 10% excluding other financial institutions, compared to 3% for major US banks. Most Asian banking systems saw NPL ratios fall below 5% after the crisis. The document aims to educate about causes and effects of NPLs as well as mechanisms for banks to manage high NPLs.
- Monetary financing or "helicopter money" involves central banks directly increasing money supply by crediting funds to government or individual accounts, bypassing traditional monetary policy tools. It is seen as a potential next step for central banks struggling with low growth and inflation.
- The document provides a checklist for considering helicopter money, examining factors like economic conditions, central bank credibility and independence, balance sheet constraints, and risks of losing control over inflation.
- While helicopter money could boost nominal growth and inflation, current economic data does not warrant it for major economies. More importantly, the approach risks undermining central bank credibility and ability to manage inflation expectations.
Financial market stability Final SubmissionPieter Roux
This document provides a summary of the anatomy and dynamics of the global financial crisis that began in 2007-2008. It describes how a crisis in the US subprime mortgage market multiplied into a crisis of staggering global proportions, with initial subprime losses of $250 billion resulting in estimated global GDP losses of $4,700 billion and a decrease in global stock market capitalization of $26,400 billion. The document then analyzes the dynamics of the crisis, tracing how unsustainable trade imbalances and the bursting of the US housing bubble contaminated the global financial system through complex financial instruments. It divides the crisis into two phases: the initial subprime mortgage crisis and run on the shadow banking system, followed by the collapse of Lehman Brothers
The document provides an update on the world economic situation and prospects as of mid-2012. It finds that despite some signs of improvement, the global economic outlook remains challenging. Global economic growth is projected to remain slow in 2012, below most regions' potential, and the jobs crisis continues globally and in many regions. The largest risk to the outlook is a further escalation of the euro area debt crisis.
The document discusses how global insurers are rethinking their investment strategies in response to divergent monetary policies and quantitative easing programs. It finds that while insurers see positive short-term effects of QE on asset prices and growth, many are concerned about potential long-term imbalances and market distortions. Insurers are seeking to increase yield by taking on more risk, but are struggling due to low liquidity in fixed income markets and the lack of quality opportunities. They are holding high cash levels as they look for the right investments. Insurers are diversifying into alternative assets like real estate and private credit that generate income. Overall monetary policy uncertainty is a challenge as insurers balance short-term benefits of QE against
1. 2023 will be a challenging year globally with high inflation, geopolitical uncertainty, and diverging economic growth across regions. The US and Europe are expected to fall into recession while China may see positive surprises.
2. Europe will fall into recession this winter due to an energy crisis, with inflation remaining above targets through 2023. The US is also at risk of recession in the second half of 2023 if the Fed's terminal rate rises close to 6%.
3. Central banks will continue tightening monetary policy aggressively to fight high inflation, which could lead to recession risks. Financial markets may see opportunities for entry points after an initial period of caution as recession risks become priced in.
Declaracion de Mario Draghi (2 de agosto de 2012)ManfredNolte
The ECB decided to keep interest rates unchanged following a decrease the previous month. Inflation is expected to decline in 2012 and be below 2% in 2013, while economic growth in the euro area remains weak. The Governing Council discussed undertaking outright open market operations and other non-standard measures to address high risk premia in bond markets, which are hindering monetary policy transmission. Policymakers need to push ahead with fiscal consolidation, reforms, and institution building to create conditions for risk premia to disappear.
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND DEVELOPMENTDISCUSSI.docxdickonsondorris
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT
DISCUSSION PAPERS
THE MAKING OF THE TURKISH
FINANCIAL CRISIS
Yilmaz Akyüz and Korkut Boratav
No. 158
April 2002
TTHH EE MM AAKKIINN GG OOFF TT HHEE TTUURR KK IISSHH FFIINN AANN CC IIAA LL CCRR IISSIISS
Yilmaz Akyüz and Korkut Boratav*
No. 158
April 2002
* The authors are Director, Division on Globalization and Development Strategies, UNCTAD, and
Professor of Economics, University of Ankara, respectively. An earlier draft of this paper was presented to
a conference on “ Financialization of the Global Economy”, PERI, University of Massachusetts, 7–9
December 2001 in Amherst, Mass. The authors are grateful to Andrew Cornford and Richard Kozul-
Wright for comments and suggestions.
UNCTAD/OSG/DP/158
ii
The opinions expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the
views of UNCTAD. The designations and terminology employed are also those of the author.
UNCTAD Discussion Papers are read anonymously by at least one referee, whose comments are
taken into account before publication.
Comments on this paper are invited and may be addressed to the author, c/o the Publications
Assistant*, Macroeconomic and Development Policies, GDS, United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD), Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland. Copies of
Discussion Papers may also be obtained from this address. New Discussion Papers are available on
the website at: http://www.unctad.org/en/pub/pubframe.htm
_________
* Fax: (4122) 907.0274; Email: [email protected]
JEL classification: E3, E6 and F4
iii
CONTENTS
Page
Abstract .......................................................................................................................... 1
I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................ 1
II. THE BUILD UP OF IMBALANCES: INFLATION, DEBT AND CAPITAL FLOWS ......................... 4
III. THE STABILIZATION PROGRAM ...................................................................................... 12
IV. CRISIS MARK I.............................................................................................................. 14
V. CRISIS MARK II ............................................................................................................ 20
VI. ACCOUNTING FOR THE CRISIS: OMISSION OR COMMISSION?............................................. 25
VII. STANDING STILL AND MOVING FORWARD ...................................................................... 29
Annex: KEYNES ON DEBT AND INFLATION............................................................................... 33
References ............................................................................................................................ 34
UNCTAD Discussion Papers.................................................................................................. 36
...
This document provides an overview of monetary policy through 7 chapters. It begins with an introduction and outlines the objectives, methodology and limitations of the report. Chapter 2 defines monetary policy and provides a history and overview of its scope, objectives and tools. Chapter 3 discusses the transmission mechanism of monetary policy through interest rates and financial markets. Chapter 4 examines the impacts of monetary policy on capital markets and inflation. Chapter 5 analyzes Bangladesh's monetary policy strategy, instruments and challenges. Chapter 6 concludes with an advocacy perspective on monetary policy in Bangladesh.
Current developments in the design and management of fiscal rules in the European Union may have negative implications for New Member States. Loosening of the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) and a growing degree of arbitrariness in its implementation reduce incentives for fiscal adjustment in New Member States, adjustment that would be crucial during the transition to the Eurozone. High budget deficits may prove a serious obstacle in the process of catching up of New Member States to the income levels of EU-15 countries.
Authored by: Fabrizio Coricelli
Published in 2005
- A recovery in risk assets in 2023 is possible following the rare sell-off in both equities and bonds in 2022, but it is uncertain and will depend on inflation, interest rates, and the severity of the expected global recession.
- While caution is warranted, there could be opportunities for investors during the year as the global economy adjusts to higher interest rates, which represents a return to "normal" financial conditions after a long period of low rates.
- The path of any recovery remains unclear as much depends on factors like the trajectory of inflation and interest rates, as well as the depth of the expected global recession.
This document provides a summary of recent developments in global financial markets following the sub-prime mortgage crisis. It discusses how turmoil originated from problems in the US sub-prime mortgage market but was exacerbated by a liquidity crisis in the European inter-bank market. While central banks provided liquidity to stabilize markets, the document argues the current financial system's overreliance on complex, opaque instruments like CDOs and lack of transparency regarding risk has increased uncertainty and amplified volatility. Long-term regulatory reforms are needed to improve transparency and prevent excessive risk-taking.
Financial crises have become relatively frequent events since the beginning of the 1980s. They have taken three main forms: currency crises, banking crises, or both - so called twin
crises. As the number of developed economies, developing countries, and economies in transition experienced severe financial crashes researchers are trying to propose a framework for systemic analyses. That is why attempts to advance the understanding of features leading to the outbreak of financial crisis as well as the reasons of vulnerability have become more and more important. In recent years a number of efforts have been undertaken to identify variables that act as early warning signals for crises. The purpose of this paper is to provide some perspective on the issue of early warning signals of vulnerability to currency crises. In particular, it is aimed at presenting and highlighting the main findings of theoretical literature in this area.
Authored by: Magdalena Tomczynska
Published in 2000
Dr Haluk F Gursel, A Monetary Base Analysis and Control ModelHaluk Ferden Gursel
This report is one of the first studies discussing monetary base analysis and control model, a concept even today is alive and more developed by, for example, by IMF to use its analysis. The study presents monetary base approach to control of money flows and the links between monetary base, money supply and monetary income. Further, the monetary policy problems of the developing countries are reviewed.
The research devotes a section to a developing country data application and analysis.
In developing countries, there are similar tendencies for many variables, although each country has different characteristics, economic and social structures. It follows that remedies can be broadly similar although applications will differ from country to
country. The outlined policies do not address themselves to the solution of all problems; however, the necessity for designing different policies fitting the special conditions of each country and the need for other policies complementary to monetary policies is apparent. Thus, the solutions suggested in conclusion should be considered as guidelines.
- The global economy is facing a recession due to central banks raising rates aggressively to reduce inflation, an energy shock in Europe, and China's zero-Covid policies and property market issues.
- The US is expected to enter recession in mid-2023, while growth will slow substantially in China and Europe is already in recession.
- Inflation remains stubbornly high but signs point to peaking in Europe and slowing in the US by late 2023 if labor markets weaken as expected. Government support measures face limits with high inflation and tightening monetary policies.
The global economy remains fragile going into 2023. There are possibilities of mild recession and stagflation in some economies. Deloitte 2023 Banking & Capital Markets Outlook shares comprehensive overview insights into the Banking and Capital market segments. Uncover about Retail Banking: Envisioning new ways to serve and engage with customers, Consumer Payments- build deeper financial relationships beyond transaction flows.
The document summarizes China's monetary policy report for Q3 2011. Some key points:
1) China's economy continued steady growth in Q3, moving from stimulus-driven to endogenous growth. Domestic demand was a key growth driver.
2) The PBC prioritized inflation control and continued prudent monetary policy. Money and credit growth began returning to normal levels aligned with stable economic growth.
3) In Q3, M2 money supply grew 13% and new RMB loans grew 15.9%. The PBC will closely monitor economic and financial conditions and make preemptive adjustments to policies as needed to support stable development and maintain price stability.
This paper analyses the public finance performance and the dynamics of government expenditures on education and health in the Kyrgyz Republic in 2007-2010, when the country was hit by the global economic crisis and then by an internal political crisis in 2010. Despite these crisis conditions, public health expenditures have increased substantially. In education, recurrent expenditures have been protected, while capital investments have been cut dramatically. Both sectors suffer from chronic under-financing, which results in an insufficient quality of services. The country's fiscal situation in the medium-term is going to be difficult, so efficiency-oriented reforms need to be implemented in health care and especially in education in order to sustain the development of these critical services in Kyrgyzstan.
Authored by: Roman Mogilevsky
Published in 2011
Bank Performance Analysis Report: German System vs. Benelux System through two of their most representative banks. Overview, Financial Analysis, Financial Reporting, COmparative analysis, Conslusions.
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The document summarizes the occupation and liberation of Severodonetsk, Ukraine by pro-Russian separatist forces in 2014. It describes how separatists illegally seized voter rolls in April 2014 and held a sham referendum on May 11th declaring an independent "Lugansk People's Republic". During the occupation from May to July, the city faced shelling, food and water shortages, and lawlessness as separatists controlled checkpoints and detained and tortured civilians. Witnesses provided evidence of attacks on residential buildings and reports of rape and abuse. The Ukrainian military liberated Severodonetsk on July 22nd, ending the occupation.
The document analyzes violations of electoral rights that occurred during elections in liberated territories of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts in Ukraine. It describes violations during the 2014 extraordinary presidential and parliamentary elections, as well as the 2015 local elections, including obstacles to voting, violence against election officials, and criminal interference. The document highlights issues preventing internally displaced persons from exercising their right to vote and proposes solutions like allowing voters to change their voting address without changing their official place of residence, to integrate displaced people into their new communities while preserving electoral rights.
The document provides background information on Popasna, Ukraine and summarizes key events regarding its occupation and liberation during the 2014 conflict. It describes how Popasna came under the control of pro-Russian separatist forces in May 2014 but was liberated by Ukrainian troops on July 22, 2014. However, Popasna remained strategically important and faced repeated artillery attacks from separatists using Grads and other rocket launchers throughout the remainder of 2014, resulting in civilian casualties and property damage. The document lists numerous specific dates of artillery attacks on the city during this period.
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milvus, unstructured data, vector database, zilliz, cloud, vectors, python, deep learning, generative ai, genai, nifi, kafka, flink, streaming, iot, edge
ViewShift: Hassle-free Dynamic Policy Enforcement for Every Data LakeWalaa Eldin Moustafa
Dynamic policy enforcement is becoming an increasingly important topic in today’s world where data privacy and compliance is a top priority for companies, individuals, and regulators alike. In these slides, we discuss how LinkedIn implements a powerful dynamic policy enforcement engine, called ViewShift, and integrates it within its data lake. We show the query engine architecture and how catalog implementations can automatically route table resolutions to compliance-enforcing SQL views. Such views have a set of very interesting properties: (1) They are auto-generated from declarative data annotations. (2) They respect user-level consent and preferences (3) They are context-aware, encoding a different set of transformations for different use cases (4) They are portable; while the SQL logic is only implemented in one SQL dialect, it is accessible in all engines.
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ViewShift: Hassle-free Dynamic Policy Enforcement for Every Data Lake
1What are the likely consequences of the economic blockade of the separatist-controlled areas of Donbas?
1. DECEMBER 2017
Policy Notes and Reports 19
Ukraine: Selected Economic
Issues
Vasily Astrov and Leon Podkaminer
The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies
Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche
2.
3. Ukraine: Selected Economic Issues
VASILY ASTROV
LEON PODKAMINER
Vasily Astrov and Leon Podkaminer are Research Economists at the Vienna Institute for
International Economic Studies (wiiw).
4.
5. Abstract
Following the ‘Maidan revolution’ of February 2014, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) abandoned the
exchange rate peg to the US dollar and switched to a flexible exchange rate, which was later formalised
within the framework of the newly adopted inflation targeting regime. Our analysis suggests that this
move has been questionable and, at the very least, premature. First, the presumed success of inflation
targeting as a universally applicable ‘magical tool’ to reach low and stable levels of inflation in many
countries has in reality been largely due to other factors rather than the inflation targeting concept.
Second, the NBU’s announced inflation target (5% in the medium term) appears to be overly ambitious
given Ukraine’s development level. Experience from other countries suggests that sticking to this target
at all cost will likely require a consistently overly restrictive monetary policy, which will constrain
Ukraine’s growth prospects. Last but not least, as capital controls are gradually eased, the exchange
rate will likely become vulnerable to speculative attacks once again, given the numerous political and
geopolitical uncertainties and the ‘thinness’ of the country’s foreign exchange market. Attempts at
macroeconomic stabilisation in response to such exchange rate shocks by using ‘classical’ inflation
targeting instruments such as interest rates will have a pro-cyclical impact, given the high degree of
dollarisation and the related prevalence of so-called ‘balance sheet effects’. The experience of other
countries in similar circumstances – both in Central and Eastern Europe and elsewhere – suggests that
a preferable strategy would be to smooth exchange rate fluctuations via interventions rather than
monetary policy instruments. For this, a certain minimum level of reserves is needed; the latter will not
only provide the necessary policy space for interventions should such a need arise, but should
discourage speculations against the currency in the first place.
Another major reform effort undertaken recently (October 2017) has been a comprehensive pension
reform, which envisaged most notably a gradual increase in the effective retirement age. Our analysis
suggests that the current situation in Ukraine’s pension system hardly justifies such a step. The
country’s statutory retirement age may be indeed rather low, but it is more than offset by the low life
expectancy of Ukrainians, and the share of pensioners in the total population is not particularly high by
international standards. Besides, while Ukraine’s Pension Fund may be in deficit, this is not very
different from the situation observed in other countries, and there are no theoretical arguments why the
Pension Fund must be necessarily balanced. Finally, the sustainability of the pension system is not
necessarily a cause of major concern either, taking into account the likely future improvements in the
labour market. To the extent that any reform of the pension system is needed at all, it should target
above all efforts to curb the shadow economy and/or partial reversion of last year’s cuts in social security
contributions.
Keywords: monetary policy, inflation targeting, pension systems
JEL classification: E52, E58, H55
6.
7. CONTENTS
Abstract........................................................................................................................................................................... v
I. Inflation targeting regime for Ukraine: caution is needed........................................................1
1. Background: Ukraine’s inability to secure stable exchange rates....................................................1
2. Inflation targeting may constrain economic growth..........................................................................2
2.1. Inflation targeting shortly explained: ‘mechanics combined with mystics’.............................2
2.2. Disinflation under inflation targeting not guaranteed – unlike losses to the real economy....2
2.3. Inflation targeting: a magic wand, or an undeserved reputation? .........................................3
2.4. NBU inflation targets are unreasonably ambitious ................................................................5
3. The ‘fear of floating’ is justified.........................................................................................................6
3.1. ‘Pure’ inflation targeting in a dollarised economy tends to be pro-cyclical............................6
3.2. ‘Balance sheet effect’ matters in Ukraine..............................................................................8
3.3. The hryvnia, if allowed to float, will be vulnerable to speculative attacks..............................9
3.4. Inflation targeting and fixed exchange rate regimes in practice: the equivocal
experiences of the Balkan countries ...................................................................................11
3.5. ‘Flexible’ inflation targeting does not exclude occasional exchange rate interventions ......15
4. Conclusions and policy recommendations.....................................................................................16
References ...............................................................................................................................................17
II. Ukraine’s pension system: some reservations about the ‘fundamental’ reform .......... 18
1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................18
2. Average pension not as low as claimed by the IMF.......................................................................19
3. Statutory retirement age relatively – but not exceptionally – low...................................................19
4. Lower life expectancy ‘neutralises’ the effect of lower statutory retirement age............................20
5. Older workers may be unfit to work: higher levels of poverty expected.........................................21
6. Excessive deficits of the Pension Fund or rather excessive preoccupation with the deficits?.......22
7. Sustainability concerns may be exaggerated ................................................................................23
8. The real problem with the pension system lies with taxation rather than spending.......................24
9. Conclusions ...................................................................................................................................26
References ...............................................................................................................................................26
8. TABLES AND FIGURES
Table 1 / Male life expectancy at age 60 (years) .....................................................................................20
Table 2 / Female life expectancy at age 60 (years) .................................................................................20
Table 3 / Ratio of population aged 65 or more to the working-age (15-64 years) population, in % .........21
Figure 1 / Real GDP growth and inflation in OECD countries, in %...........................................................4
Figure 2 / Inflation targeting in a small open economy...............................................................................7
Figure 3 / Share of foreign currency-denominated loans, in %..................................................................8
Figure 4 / Exchange rate and the share of non-performing loans..............................................................8
Figure 5 / Public debt, as % of GDP ..........................................................................................................9
Figure 6 / Economic size vs extent of dollarisation/euroisation, 2016......................................................13
Figure 7 / GDP growth rates: Croatia vs Serbia.......................................................................................14
Figure 8 / GDP growth rates: Bulgaria vs Romania .................................................................................14
Box 1 / Inflationary expectations in Ukraine: hardly influenced by NBU, but heavily dependent on
exchange rate expectations........................................................................................................11
9. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 1
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
I. Inflation targeting regime for Ukraine:
caution is needed
Following the ‘Maidan revolution’ of February 2014, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) abandoned the
exchange rate peg to the US dollar and switched to a flexible exchange rate, which was later formalised
within the framework of the newly adopted inflation targeting regime. In this chapter, we (i) question the
universal wisdom of inflation targeting, especially when applied to less developed economies, and (ii)
demonstrate that in the case of Ukraine, inflation targeting is additionally complicated by the high degree
of dollarisation and the related ‘fear of floating’. We argue that the adoption of a full-fledged inflation
targeting regime in Ukraine at this stage would be premature and misplaced. Instead, the NBU should (i)
avoid an over-restrictive monetary stance, which would be inevitably following the adoption of inflation
targeting, and (ii) retain at least some control over exchange rate movements using market mechanisms.
This would provide a higher degree of macroeconomic stability by avoiding the ‘trap’ of depreciation-
induced recessions. In the meantime, monetary policy should be conducive towards economic growth,
which over time should strengthen trust in the domestic currency and thus could enable the adoption of
an inflation targeting regime in the longer run.
1. BACKGROUND: UKRAINE’S INABILITY TO SECURE STABLE EXCHANGE
RATES
Already after the 1998-1999 currency crisis, the International Monetary Fund advised the adoption of an
inflation targeting strategy for conducting monetary policy in Ukraine. However, until 2014 the monetary
policies followed by the NBU were at first rather conventionally anchored to the US dollar (in 2001-2007,
replaced by a peg until 2013) and – later on – tracked monetary targets (while at the same time
attempting to stabilise the exchange rates by various means). The monetary policies from 2000 through
2014 lacked consistency and inflation rates were rather unstable (but on the whole not very high,
ranging between 28.2% in 2000 and -0.3% in 2013). Attempts to fix the exchange rate by means of
foreign exchange interventions as well as the interest rates’ hikes and occasional restrictions/controls
imposed on the capital account transactions1
were successful – but only in otherwise tranquil periods
(characterised by an absence of external shocks). But when the pressures on the hryvnia (UAH) were
becoming serious, the foreign exchange interventions (even when ‘strengthened’ by the hikes in interest
rates and some restrictions imposed on foreign exchange transactions) usually misfired. Under
conditions of a developing currency crisis the interventions led to massive losses in official reserves
(during the years 2008-2009, and then in 2014-2015). The eventual sharp devaluations (most likely
excessive) have encouraged the transition to a regime of floating exchange rates (in 2014). The ‘float’
was followed by the measures introducing inflation targeting, formally launched in December 2016.
It may be worth noting that despite the rather chaotic longer-run monetary/exchange rate developments
periodically occurring since 2000, in real terms the economy of Ukraine performed quite well until 2008.
During that period (2000 through 2007) GDP growth was high (7.5% per year on average) and
1
Between October 2008 and May 2010, controls/restrictions were in place also over some current account transactions.
10. 2 INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
quite stable. After a deep recession (undoubtedly due to the external shock shaking Ukraine) in 2009, a
moderate recovery followed in 2010-2011.
2. INFLATION TARGETING MAY CONSTRAIN ECONOMIC GROWTH
2.1. Inflation targeting shortly explained: ‘mechanics combined with mystics’
In purely ‘mechanical’ terms, full-fledged inflation targeting essentially boils down to the manipulation of
the central bank’s policy interest rates with the aim of achieving (or approaching), in some definite time
perspective, a well-defined level of inflation (i.e. the ‘inflation target’). In conducting its actions (over the
policy interest rates and associated monetary transactions with the financial sector institutions) a central
bank on a full-fledged inflation targeting regime is assumed to be insensitive to fiscal policy
considerations and is expected not to target, at least explicitly, any other indicators (such as the
exchange rate, the real GDP growth rate or employment levels).
The ‘mystical’ aspects of full-fledged inflation targeting include the insistence on (i) the ‘inflation target’
being publicly announced in advance; (ii) the central bank’s transparency (including well-developed
channels of communication with the ‘public’); (iii) the central bank’s ‘independence’ (at least from the
‘politicians running fiscal policies’); and yet (iv) its ‘accountability’ (whatever that can mean).
There may be a rational reason why a central bank should be clear about its (exclusive) inflation target
and should be promulgating the air of ‘independence’, ‘transparency’ and ‘accountability’. It is quite
reasonable to expect that such a central bank is more likely to gain and maintain credibility than a bank
widely believed to lack such virtues. A central bank’s credibility may help stabilise public expectations
concerning inflation – and the credibility may be contributing to the success of inflation targeting (i.e. the
achievement of the inflation target). Of course, no amount of independence, transparency and
accountability will be of any use if the monetary policy hugely misses its inflation target permanently, or
is responsible for a devastating crisis of the financial system, or pushes the real economy into a severe
recession. On the other hand, a central bank operating a monetary policy largely by means of its interest
rates may be successful (on inflation control) without being ‘independent’, ‘transparent’ and
‘accountable’.
2.2. Disinflation under inflation targeting not guaranteed – unlike losses to the
real economy
Under inflation targeting the monetary policy aiming at disinflation is to be restrictive: interest rates
administered by the central bank have to be sufficiently higher than the expected inflation to have an
effect on actual inflation. High real interest rates prevailing under such conditions are to constrain the
demand pressures – by restricting aggregate demand (i.e. the level of real economic activity, or the
speed of growth of activity).
In other words, disinflation under inflation targeting boils down to harming, or slowing down, the
real economy in the hope that this will translate into disinflation.
11. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 3
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Disinflation under inflation targeting always involves some dose of real ‘pain’ according to the doctrine
‘no pain – no gain’. But the ‘pain’ itself is no guarantee of ‘gain’. The experience of inflation targeting
monetary policies as conducted in e.g. Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary (as well as the
experience of the policy of the ECB, which has been also conducted by means of interest rates) is that
achieving the targeted inflation rates is a lengthy and uncertain process. The consensus view has been
that it takes at least 12 to 18 months for the policy interest rate decisions to have observable impacts on
inflation. Moreover, it is generally accepted that these impacts are far from certain. (Uncertainty about
the inflationary consequences of decisions on the policy interest rates is overwhelming at the inflation
targeting central banks. In their published inflation forecasts the central banks avoid presentation of
point-forecasts. Instead they produce so-called ‘fan charts’ showing possible ranges (usually very broad)
of the eventual effects of their decisions.)
Interestingly, the same decisions on policy interest rates are likely to have consequences for economic
growth much earlier – already within twelve months. The real consequences of decisions tightening the
monetary conditions are more predictable – and negative – while the decisions loosening the monetary
conditions tend to be less predictable (and not necessarily positive). ‘Pulling on a string’ (i.e. tightening
of the monetary conditions) is more effective in restricting output than ‘pushing on a string’ (i.e. relaxing
of the monetary conditions).2
One must be ‘transparent’ about the fact that Ukraine’s adoption of inflation targeting in the hope
of achieving fast disinflation actually implies some additional hardship. Whether that hardship is
worth the (possibly vain) hope of fast disinflation should be left to the Ukrainian policy-makers to
decide.
2.3. Inflation targeting: a magic wand, or an undeserved reputation?
Inflation targeting was started in 1990 and spread subsequently to 11 advanced and 25 developing
countries until now. One reason for the worldwide popularity of inflation targeting has been the fact that
under progressing external liberalisation and globalisation, other monetary/exchange rate regimes, such
as targeting the monetary aggregates or targeting exchange rates (or some combinations of both), had
often (though not always) produced unwelcome consequences – at least for smaller open economies.
Interestingly, China continues to run an eclectic monetary/exchange rate policy very successfully –
without experiencing high inflation and/or currency crises while at the same time continuing to grow
vigorously in real terms. This has been possible because the Chinese authorities continue to maintain
effective (and selective) restrictions on capital flows. The policies of the US Federal Reserve Board
(Fed) and of the European Central Bank (ECB) are also not classified as being guided by inflation
targeting.3
2
The ‘string’ parable used to be one of J.M. Keynes’ favourites.
3
The Fed conducts the monetary policy by managing the level of short-term interest rates and influencing the availability
and cost of credit in the economy. The monetary policy of the Fed directly affects interest rates; indirectly it affects stock
prices, wealth, and currency exchange rates. Through these channels, monetary policy influences spending,
investment, production, employment, and inflation in the United States. The Fed’s monetary policy actions are to
achieve three general goals specified by the Congress: maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term
interest rates (without announcing any concrete quantitative targets for these goals).
The ECB is officially mandated to run a policy aiming at achieving an inflation rate ‘lower than, but close to, 2% in the
12. 4 INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
The second, ‘positive’ reason for the popularity of inflation targeting has been its widespread reputation
as a fool-proof ‘method’ of achieving low and stable inflation (i.e. the ability to hit the inflationary targets
announced by the monetary authorities). In fact this reputation may be undeserved. Even before the
advent of deflationary conditions (after 2014, when actual inflation was persistently lower than the
targets) the actual inflation rates had tended to deviate quite visibly from the targets in a number of
countries (including especially in Serbia, Iceland, Turkey, Romania, Hungary, Israel, and Poland, among
others). Until 2014 the inflation targets were ‘hit’ with a greater precision only in highly developed
countries where inflation had already been very low and stable for quite some time anyway.
The ‘anti-inflationary’ reputation of inflation targeting may also be undeserved on other grounds. The
proliferation of inflation targeting from the early 1990s onwards happened to coincide with inflation
subsiding throughout much of the globe (and certainly in the developed industrial countries). In these
circumstances the impression could have been that falling inflation was due to the magic of inflation
targeting: the ‘modern policy tool’. But in actual fact the worldwide disinflation started much earlier,
shortly after the dissolution of the Bretton Woods Accords in 1973 and the oil-price shock of 1974 (see
Figure 1).
Figure 1 / Real GDP growth and inflation in OECD countries, in %
Source: World Development Indicators (World Bank), April 2017.
Disinflation in the post-1990 period is a smooth continuation of the pre-1990 tendency. The whole post-
1975 disinflation, extending to this day, follows the ‘Great Moderation’ (in inflation and wages). This has
resulted from progressing internal liberalisations in major OECD countries (advent of Thatcherism)
combined with advancing globalisation (China and other low-cost countries starting to oversupply the
world with cheap goods/labour). Persisting high unemployment and the resulting secular slowdown of
real growth (see Figure 1), due to permanent inadequacy of aggregate demand, seem to have been the
genuine basis of the worldwide disinflation more materially than the proliferation of inflation targeting.
medium run’. In its policy the ECB is required to take into account also the dynamics of monetary aggregates (this is the
so-called ‘monetary pillar’ of the ECB policy).
After the 2008-2009 global financial and economic crises (with depressed real economies and deflationary tendencies)
the Fed, the ECB as well as most inflation targeting central banks worldwide have long been unsuccessful in moving up
inflation closer to their desired level (and that despite massive cheap lending to the financial sector institutions).
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
7
9
11
13
15
GDP INFL Linear (GDP) Expon. (INFL)
13. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 5
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
If the global tendencies for external and internal liberalisations come to an end (for example
under the impact of protectionist and ‘populist’ sentiments) the ‘Great Moderation’ in wages and
inflation may be also terminated. Under such conditions inflation targeting, even if solemnly
celebrated, may no longer deliver the marvels expected. This conclusion must be remembered
while encouraging the implementation of an inflation targeting regime in Ukraine.
2.4. NBU inflation targets are unreasonably ambitious
In the developed economies the standard inflation target is 2.0% (eventually with a ‘tolerance band’ of
+/-1%). In the Czech Republic the ‘central’ inflation target is also 2.0%, in Poland it is 2.5%, in Hungary
and Romania 3.0%, in Armenia, Russia and Serbia 4.0%, in Moldova and Turkey 5.0%.
The ‘Road Map for Implementation of Inflation Targeting in Ukraine’ (announced by the NBU in March
2016) sets the inflation (end-year) targets at 8% (+/-2%) for 2017; 6% (+/-2%) for 2018 and 5% (+/-1%)
for 2019 (and beyond). As can be seen, the NBU is somewhat ‘hawkish’ on disinflation. (In year-on-year
terms the consumer price index rose by 14% in 2016, the industrial producer price by over 20% while
the Ukrainian hryvnia devalued by 17% against the euro.)
Whether these inflation targets will be met is anybody’s guess at the moment; in any case, the
target for 2017 will certainly be over-shot by a wide margin. A more relevant question is whether
aiming at the targets so defined may be conducive to Ukraine’s real prosperity in the medium
term.
The prevailing view among most neoliberal (‘mainstream’) economists is that stable and low (though
positive) inflation is conducive to strong real growth in the medium term. This belief also underlies the
trajectory of inflation targets envisaged by the NBU’s ‘Road Map’. But in actual fact this conventional
view is not really consistent with the available empirical evidence and the findings of respectable
research reported – at least for the less developed countries. Pollin and Zhu (2006) studied the link
between inflation and economic growth for 80 countries over the period 1961-2000. For medium- and
low-income countries their finding is that higher inflation is associated with gains in GDP growth up
to inflation threshold of 14-16%.
The implication they draw is that ‘there is no justification for inflation-targeting policies as they are
currently being practiced throughout the middle- and low-income countries, that is, to maintain
inflation within a 3-5 percent band’. A more recent research conducted at the World Bank (Espinoza
et al., 2011) reviews a lot of published research on the issue of the optimal level of inflation and reports
the outcomes of their own research based on data for a panel of 165 countries over the years 1960-
2007. For developing countries they find that inflation becomes harmful to real growth when exceeding
the threshold of 10%. Below that threshold, higher inflation is associated with faster real growth. In this
context one must conclude that the path of disinflation targeted by the NBU actually lacks proper
justification. If really followed, the path envisaged over the coming years is very likely to imply real
growth falling short of what could be achieved with substantially higher inflation.
Concluding, the inflation targets set by the NBU will very probably imply losses in real GDP
growth otherwise achievable at a substantially higher inflation target – and thus in a loss to
14. 6 INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Ukrainian living standards. The advancement of real economic development – which is the
ultimate goal of any desirable economic policy – will thus be subordinated to the attempts to
meet the secondary (and possibly elusive) goal of achieving an arbitrarily low level of inflation.
3. THE ‘FEAR OF FLOATING’ IS JUSTIFIED
3.1. ‘Pure’ inflation targeting in a dollarised economy tends to be pro-cyclical
Full-fledged inflation targeting assumes a freely floating value of the domestic currency vs the foreign
currencies: the operation of the foreign exchange market is assumed to be unperturbed by interventions
by the central bank and otherwise unconstrained (for instance, by administrative controls). Under such
an inflation targeting regime the monetary authority is expected to be totally indifferent to the exchange
rate movements. The monetary regime opposite to the ‘free float’ is centred on securing the exchange
rate stability (or ‘fix’). Under a ‘fix’ the stability of the exchange rate is to be achieved, for example, by the
central bank’s unrestricted (and reasonably credible) ability and determination to intervene – by selling
or buying foreign currencies – on the (free) foreign exchange market.
However, in a highly dollarised economy such as Ukraine’s, the implementation of ‘pure’ inflation
targeting with a flexible exchange rate regime can be problematic, as suggested by the following
theoretical arguments.
In a non-dollarised small open economy (see e.g. Ball, 1999), a flexible exchange rate is deemed
as an important transmission mechanism which supplements and amplifies the desired effects
of monetary policy instruments. For instance, when a central bank eases its policy (e.g. by lowering
the policy interest rate) in a cyclical downturn, lower capital inflows result in currency depreciation, which
in turn fuels inflation via both direct and indirect channels (see Figure 2a). The direct channel of
depreciation operates through the higher prices of imported goods, which fuels overall inflation (‘pass-
through effect’). At the same time, currency depreciation generally renders the economy more
competitive and thus has an expansionary effect, which may also lead to increased inflationary
pressures (the indirect channel of depreciation).
In a dollarised small open economy, however (see Figure 2b), rather than being expansionary, the
outcome of monetary policy easing can be quite the opposite because of the so-called ‘balance sheet
effect’. If many credits are denominated in foreign exchange, exchange rate depreciation in response to
monetary policy easing typically results in a higher credit burden for households and businesses. This
may result in surging non-performing loans and thus have potentially negative consequences for the
financial stability, which weighs on domestic demand (see e.g. Leiderman et al., 2006). Even if the share
of non-performing loans does not go up, the increased credit burden means that households and
businesses divert a higher share of their incomes for the purpose of debt service at the expense of other
expenditures. If such a contractionary ‘balance sheet effect’ over-compensates the expansionary effect
of depreciation thanks to a more competitive exchange rate, the overall effect of monetary policy
easing may well turn out to be contractionary, albeit accompanied by higher inflation because of the
‘pass-through effect’ (which is argued to be particularly high in dollarised economies).
15. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 7
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Figure 2 / Inflation targeting in a small open economy
2a. Non-dollarised economy
2b. Dollarised economy
Source: Own presentation based on Leiderman et al. (2006).
The above difference in the underlying transmission mechanism between the non-dollarised and the
dollarised economy can be easily transposed to the case of an exogenous exchange rate shock. In a
non-dollarised economy, exchange rate depreciation typically has a both expansionary and inflationary
effect; this calls for monetary tightening as the appropriate policy response. In a dollarised economy,
Policy easing
Currency depreciation
Direct effect on inflation through
higher import prices
(‘pass-through effect’)
Indirect effect on inflation through
expansionary impact of higher
competitiveness
Policy easing
Currency depreciation
Direct effect on inflation through
higher import prices
(‘pass-through effect’)
Indirect effect on inflation
Expansionary impact through higher
competitiveness
Contractionary impact due to
‘balance sheet effect’
16. 8 INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
however, for the reasons outlined above, exchange rate depreciation may well be inflationary and
contractionary at the same time. If the central bank is only concerned with inflation rather than the
state of the real economy, it will react to exchange rate depreciation by tightening its policy,
which works pro-cyclically by amplifying the contractionary impact of currency depreciation. Thus, in a
dollarised economy, a pure inflation targeting regime may contradict the task of macroeconomic
stabilisation, which should really be a key concern for the central bank (at least implicitly).
3.2. ‘Balance sheet effect’ matters in Ukraine
Of what relevance are the above theoretical considerations for Ukraine? Ukraine’s economy is certainly
‘small and open’: its GDP stands at just around EUR 80 billion, about the same size as Slovakia’s (see
Figure 6 below), whereas exports and imports of goods and services combined account for 105% of
Ukraine’s GDP (in 2016). It is also highly dollarised, reflecting the long-standing tradition of mistrust in
the domestic currency as a saving vehicle. A large part of bank deposits has been historically
denominated in foreign exchange (mainly US dollars), despite much higher interest rates offered on
hryvnia deposits. In these circumstances, the proliferation of foreign currency loans in Ukraine could be
arguably explained by the strategy of banks to hedge exchange rate risks related to their high exposure
to dollar-denominated deposits.4
Although new lending in foreign currency has been generally banned
since the global financial crisis of 2008, each devaluation episode (most recently in 2008-2009 and
2014-2015) resulted in another spike in the share of foreign currency-denominated loans due to the
mere valuation effect (the rising volume of outstanding foreign currency loans when expressed in
national currency terms) – see Figure 3.
Figure 3 / Share of foreign currency-
denominated loans, in %
Source: wiiw Monthly Database.
Figure 4 / Exchange rate and the share of
non-performing loans
Source: wiiw Monthly Database.
4
Such an explanation would be consistent with the high dollarisation of both loans and deposits (see, for instance,
Belhocine et al., 2016). However, the incentive for borrowers to economise on lower interest rates charged on foreign
currency loans (‘carry-trade’) might have played some role as well.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
y2006m02
y2006m09
y2007m04
y2007m11
y2008m06
y2009m01
y2009m08
y2010m03
y2010m10
y2011m05
y2011m12
y2012m07
y2013m02
y2013m09
y2014m04
y2014m11
y2015m06
y2016m01
y2016m08
Loans to non-financial corporations
Loans to households
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
y2008m01
y2008m07
y2009m01
y2009m07
y2010m01
y2010m07
y2011m01
y2011m07
y2012m01
y2012m07
y2013m01
y2013m07
y2014m01
y2014m07
y2015m01
y2015m07
y2016m01
y2016m07
Non-performing loans, in %
Nominal exchange rate, UAH/USD
17. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 9
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Given the high degree of dollarisation, it is little wonder that the recent history of economic crises in
Ukraine fits well the ‘balance sheet’ theoretical narrative outlined in section 3.1. Figure 4
demonstrates that every episode of currency devaluation resulted, with a certain time lag, in surging
non-performing loans. During the most recent such episode (the switch to a floating exchange rate in
2014-2015), the nominal exchange rate depreciated by around four times, which put the vast majority of
foreign currency borrowers under pressure. The ‘balance sheet effect’ has also manifested itself in the
dynamics of Ukraine’s public debt, 70% of which is denominated in foreign currency. In 2014 alone, it
jumped by 31 pp of GDP (Figure 5), of which 20 pp was on account of the valuation effect of exchange
rate depreciation, according to our calculations. This (and the high burden of public debt service) has
given rise to fiscal consolidation (mostly through cuts in wages of public sector employees and social
expenditures), which suppressed domestic demand still further.
Figure 5 / Public debt, as % of GDP
Source: wiiw Annual Database.
At the same time, inflation soared (to 48% in 2015, far exceeding the official target of 20%) on account
of the pass-through effect of hryvnia depreciation to import prices, forcing the NBU to hike its policy
(discount) rate markedly, up to 30% p.a., and keep it at this level for a relatively prolonged period of
time. Not surprisingly, credit expansion stalled as a result: the stock of loans to the non-financial private
sector grew during 2014-2015 by a mere 8.7% in nominal terms (in real terms it contracted by 32.5%
(!)). Needless to say, the impact on the real economy was highly contractionary, adding to the pains
induced by the exchange rate depreciation. All in all, in 2014-2015 Ukraine’s real GDP declined by 16%
as a result.
3.3. The hryvnia, if allowed to float, will be vulnerable to speculative attacks
Disinflation only became possible once extensive capital controls (including a surrender requirement on
export proceeds, limits on withdrawals of foreign currency deposits, caps on dividend repatriation, etc.)
were imposed in spring 2015 and the exchange rate stabilised accordingly (Figure 4). As a result, in
2016 inflation was brought down to 12.4% – thus meeting the official inflation target of the NBU (12%).
Thus, the success of macroeconomic stabilisation in Ukraine has been basically a success of the
implemented capital controls rather than of inflation targeting. In fact, stabilisation only became
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Devaluation
Devaluation
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possible once the inflation targeting regime was effectively abandoned.5
But the existence of capital
controls – despite their relaxation over the recent months – contradicts the very idea of inflation
targeting, with the exchange rate being equilibrated by market forces.
Can it be safely assumed that once capital controls are relaxed further, the exchange rate will remain
reasonably stable and shocks like those observed in 2008 and 2014 will be avoided? If yes, one could
argue that the vulnerability of the economy to contractionary ‘balance sheet effects’ (and the related
problems with the implementation of a ‘pure’ inflation targeting regime) are less of an issue. But
unfortunately there are good reasons to believe that the exchange rate – once allowed to freely float
again – will likely remain very volatile.
One reason for the likely volatility of the exchange rate, which is grounded in ‘fundamentals’, is its
susceptibility to shifts in the terms of trade. For instance, a decline in the global prices of wheat and steel
(Ukraine’s two major export items) would certainly put the hryvnia under downward pressure, which
cannot be resisted – at least not over prolonged periods of time – by foreign exchange interventions:
sooner or later, foreign exchange reserves will be depleted, and the exchange rate defence will have to
be abandoned. In such a situation, there is little choice for the NBU rather than to accept a weaker
currency and live with its consequences, however contractionary they may be.6
Therefore, exchange
rate shocks driven by fundamentals should not be seen per se as an obstacle to the implementation of
inflation targeting.
Another – and arguably more likely – reason for future exchange rate volatility is speculative capital
flows. Unlike in the above example of sustained shifts in the terms of trade where the exchange rate can
be seen as a ‘shock absorber’, in this case the exchange rate can become a source of a ‘shock’
itself, with potentially destabilising consequences for the real economy – especially if amplified
by a pro-cyclical inflation targeting regime. The most recent hryvnia devaluation in 2014-2015 is the
best illustration of this. Although it cannot be denied that by the end of Viktor Yanukovych’s presidency,
Ukraine had accumulated unsustainable external imbalances, making an exchange rate adjustment only
a matter of time, the extent of the subsequent hryvnia devaluation cannot be explained other than by
purely speculative factors, triggered by political and geopolitical tensions (political instability following the
‘Maidan revolution’, the secession of Crimea, military conflict in Donbass, etc.).
Many of these factors may become relevant again anytime: the semi-frozen conflict in Donbass may
become ‘hot’ anytime, geopolitical tensions surrounding Ukraine-Russia relations/sanctions have not
been resolved, political stability within Ukraine itself remains shaky, and any abortion of the IMF loan
programme may trigger another wave of speculations against the hryvnia. Even disregarding the specific
political and security challenges Ukraine is facing, its market for foreign exchange is fundamentally ‘thin’:
the daily turnover on the interbank market only reaches USD 200-300 million,7
making the hryvnia an
easy target for speculations. In a ‘thin’ market, even single transactions may make an impact, potentially
causing large swings in the value of the hryvnia.
5
In fact, capital controls should have been introduced much earlier than spring 2015. This would have enabled the
hryvnia to stabilise at a much higher level, thereby limiting the devastating effects of devaluation on the real economy.
6
One example of such an approach is the experience of Russia, which in response to a sustained deterioration in its
terms of trade (oil price decline starting from the second half of 2014) allowed the rouble to depreciate by up to 50%.
7
‘Hryvnia is falling again’, Central European Financial Observer, 20 March 2017,
http://www.financialobserver.eu/cse-and-cis/ukraine/hryvnia-is-falling-again/
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Unlike exchange rate movements driven by ‘fundamentals’ (which tend to be of a long-lasting nature),
exchange rate movements driven by speculative capital flows can – and should – be resisted, or
at least smoothed out via active foreign exchange interventions rather than interest rate
instruments. Active management of the exchange rate would also help anchor inflationary
expectations, which in Ukraine – as research strongly suggests – are dependent much more on
exchange rate expectations than on NBU actions (see Box 1).
BOX 1 / INFLATIONARY EXPECTATIONS IN UKRAINE: HARDLY INFLUENCED BY NBU, BUT
HEAVILY DEPENDENT ON EXCHANGE RATE EXPECTATIONS
As mentioned above, a properly functioning inflation targeting regime requires that the central bank is able to
influence inflationary expectations of economic agents. If it is unable to do so and inflationary expectations
exceed substantially the official inflation target (and, as a result, employees require accordingly higher wages
and producers higher prices), the actual inflation may well end up following inflationary expectations rather
than the central bank’s inflation target, forcing the latter to resort to excessive policy tightening, with the likely
negative consequences for the real economy.
Meanwhile, Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015) found that economic agents in Ukraine tend not to revise their
inflationary expectations in light of new information coming from the central bank. They found no difference
between the inflationary expectations of firms which track the announcements and actions of the central bank
and those which do not, suggesting a significant credibility gap. Instead, they found that there is a strong
positive correlation between inflationary expectations and expectations with respect to exchange rate
development, especially in the case of households, suggesting that the exchange rate is used as a simple
proxy of broader price movements. Consistent with this interpretation is their finding that there is no difference
in the inflationary or exchange rate expectations of firms which do not trade with other countries and those
which do (otherwise firms which trade extensively would track exchange rates more and would have different
expectations with respect to inflation because of the ‘pass-through effect’). These findings put in doubt the
credibility of the NBU and its ability to ‘form’ inflationary expectations via channels other than the exchange
rate, raising doubts over the feasibility of a ‘pure’ inflation targeting regime in Ukraine.
3.4. Inflation targeting and fixed exchange rate regimes in practice: the
equivocal experiences of the Balkan countries
The conventional wisdom has been that while the credible exchange rate fix tends to be a more efficient
tool (or ‘anchor’) for the stabilisation of inflation (especially if inflation is rather high), the ‘float’ is a more
efficient tool for smoothing out the fluctuations in the real activity. The conventional wisdom follows the
observation that a ‘float’ allows a quick and flexible adjustment to economic shocks (especially to
external shocks) by means of real currency devaluation (or revaluation). This flexibility is believed to be
conducive to faster (and more stable) real growth, at least in the medium term. Under flexible exchange
rates, periods of economic boom tend to be accompanied by increased capital inflows and currency
appreciation, which ‘cools down’ the economy. Conversely, in times of economic slack, capital outflows
result in currency depreciation, which makes the economy more competitive.
The countries on the ‘fix’ exchange rate regimes do not have that option. It is assumed that they could
respond to such shocks by either changing real aggregates (e.g. the levels of investment or
consumption) or by changing domestic wage rates or prices. But – in contrast to the changes in
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exchange rates, which could happen overnight – changes in real activities, or domestic wages/prices,
are not easy to implement (at short notice). Also, the ‘pain’ due to a sharp devaluation is likely to be less
acute than the pain of a comparably deep decline in the wage rates.
The conventional wisdom on the superiority of ‘floaters’ over ‘fixers’ as far as the real responses to
external shocks are concerned has been supported by the experiences of two groups of Central and
East European EU Member States (EU-CEE). It turned out that, generally speaking, the ‘floaters’
(including inflation targeting countries such as Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania) tend
to have performed better, in real growth terms, than the ‘fixers’ (including Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and
other EU-CEE countries which had adopted the euro).8
These findings square well with those of
Belhocine et al. (2016) who, in addition to EU-CEE, also included countries of the Western Balkans into
their sample and found that ‘floaters’ have performed better not only in terms of growth, but also in terms
of inflation.
The latter does not mean however that a floating exchange rate regime is superior to a fixed one under
any circumstances; in fact, there are usually good reasons why a country chooses a particular exchange
rate regime and not the other. For instance, Central and East European ‘floaters’ tend to be bigger
economies (which are generally less dependent on exchange rate movements), are typically more
developed and have better institutions. In turn, ‘fixers’ and economies with heavily managed exchange
rates tend to be smaller and have a higher degree of euroisation/dollarisation and, accordingly, a higher
‘fear of floating’ – see Figure 6.
Currently Ukraine differs very radically from the advanced EU-CEE countries (be they ‘floaters’ or
‘fixers’) on very many counts (macroeconomic in nature, as well as structural and ‘systemic’).
Conclusions drawn from the experiences of these more advanced transition countries may be rather
irrelevant for today’s Ukraine. Much more relevant conclusions might be expected to follow from the
experiences of relatively less advanced (and relatively poorer9
) transition countries such as Serbia,
Croatia, Romania and Bulgaria. Another relevant feature Ukraine shares with all four Balkan countries
(but not with the advanced transition countries) is the high level of dollarisation (euroisation in the case
of the Balkan countries) of both loans and deposits. (In Croatia and Serbia the shares of deposits and
loans denominated in foreign currencies have been about 75%, in Bulgaria and Romania about 50-60%
– see Figure 6.)
While Serbia and Romania have been inflation targeting countries and thus ‘floaters’ (since 2006 and
2005 respectively),10
Bulgaria and Croatia have been ‘fixers’ for a very long time (the former since 1997,
the latter since 2003). Bulgaria and Croatia differ in the ‘hardness’ of their ‘fixes’. Bulgaria is formally a
currency-board country with the exchange rate vs the euro constant since the very beginning, while the
Croatian exchange rate (vs the euro) is allowed to fluctuate within a very narrow band.
8
See e.g. wiiw (2015).
9
In 2016 the Ukrainian per capita GDP (at purchasing power parity) represented 20% of the EU-28 level vs the Polish or
Hungarian 69%. For Serbia and Bulgaria the levels are 37% and 48% respectively; for Croatia and Romania 58%
(each). Apart from being relatively poorer, all four countries suffer from ‘systemic’ shortcomings (e.g. as evidenced by
widespread corruption), even Bulgaria and Romania, which acceded the EU ten years ago.
10
It has to be mentioned though that Serbia has been a ‘floater’ largely on paper only. As suggested by the so-called
Calvo-Reinhart ‘Fear of Floating’ Index (which puts the variability of the nominal exchange rate in relation to the
variability of policy instruments typically used to stabilise the exchange rate), Serbia’s effective exchange rate flexibility
has been much lower than e.g. in Hungary and Romania – and closer to Croatia (see Belhocine et al., 2016).
21. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 13
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Figure 6 / Economic size vs extent of dollarisation/euroisation, 2016
Source: wiiw Annual and Monthly Databases.
Comparing the real performances of Croatia and Serbia11
supports the conventional view that under
‘floating’ the external shocks tend to be absorbed with smaller GDP losses than under a ‘fix’ (see
Figure 7). In 2009 the Croatian GDP plummeted by 7.4% while Serbia’s only by 3.1%. Overall, GDP
growth in Serbia has almost always been much faster than in Croatia. Since 2005 GDP has grown at 2%
per year (on average) in Serbia but only at 0.6% in Croatia. On the other hand, in terms of inflation
Croatia performed much better than Serbia. Average yearly inflation in Croatia was 2.1%, against 8.0%
in Serbia (years 2005 through 2016). It may be added that since 2013 inflation has been much lower in
Serbia, while Croatia has been experiencing outright deflation.
However, comparing the real performances of Bulgaria and Romania does not quite support the
conventional views (see Figure 8). It turns out that in Romania (the inflation targeting ‘floating’ currency
country) the GDP decline in 2009 was deeper than in Bulgaria with a ‘fixed’ exchange rate (-7.1%
vs -3.6%). In terms of longer-term GDP growth, there is virtually little difference between the two
countries (since 2005 GDP has on average grown by 3.1% in Romania and 3.0% in Bulgaria). However,
on inflation Bulgaria has performed definitely better than Romania. In the former country average yearly
inflation since 2005 has been 3.4% – in the latter country 4.4%. (Recently both countries have suffered
deflation: Bulgaria since 2013, Romania since 2015.)
11
Comparing Serbia and Croatia makes sense: both countries are successor states of former Yugoslavia and – as such –
share many institutional features developed under the Yugoslav model of ‘Socialism’ (e.g. the role of labour-managed
firms). In contrast, in the past both Bulgaria and Romania were on rigid, centralistic, regimes of the orthodox Soviet
persuasion (i.e. the ‘command economy model’).
AL
BY
BG
HR
CZ
EE
HU
KZ
LV
LT
MK
PL
RO
RU
RS
SK
SI
UA
020406080
Foreigncurrencyloansin%oftotalloans,end-2016
0 500 1000 1500
GDP in EUR bn, 2016
Fixed or heavily managed Flexible, inflation targeting
Euro
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wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Figure 7 / GDP growth rates: Croatia vs Serbia
Source: wiiw Annual Database.
Figure 8 / GDP growth rates: Bulgaria vs Romania
Source: wiiw Annual Database.
On comparing two pairs of countries: Croatia with Serbia and Bulgaria with Romania, one can find some
support for the view that the ‘fixed’ exchange rate regimes are more conducive to the achievement (or
maintenance) of low inflation than free float regimes (combined with inflation targeting). However, the
conventional view that ‘float’ (and thus inflation targeting) helps to better absorb ‘shocks’ than the ‘fix’ is
not unequivocally supported.
On the whole, the experiences of the four Balkan countries considered seem to suggest that
inflation targeting (and the exchange rate float) is not necessarily a better choice than the
monetary policy regimes seeking to stabilise the value of the exchange rate in the first place.
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
GDP Croatia GDP Serbia
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
GDP Bulgaria GDP Romania
23. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 15
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
3.5. ‘Flexible’ inflation targeting does not exclude occasional exchange rate
interventions
The NBU’s ‘Road Map for Implementation of Inflation Targeting in Ukraine’ mentions (on p. 15) ongoing
improvements in the functioning of the foreign exchange markets. These improvements (still ‘in process’)
are to result in ‘lifting the administrative restrictions’, ‘revision and liberalisation of the capital account’
and ‘development of hedging instruments’. On p. 17 the ‘Road Map’ mentions, among ‘actions for
reaching inflation targets’, the smoothing of excessive exchange rate fluctuations: ‘FX interventions will
be used to smooth exchange rate fluctuations without resistance to fundamental
appreciation/depreciation trends.’
The declared intention to use foreign exchange interventions is commendable not only for smoothing out
‘excessive’ exchange rate fluctuations but also for the accumulation of safe levels of foreign reserves
and for ensuring adequate liquidity in the foreign exchange market during stressful episodes. The
smoothing out of ‘excessive’ exchange rate fluctuations may be important not only for the real economy
(stabilisation of economic conditions facing domestic exporting and importing firms, minimisation of
balance sheet crises among the financial institutions) but, first of all, because strong devaluation shocks
(especially if speculative in nature) may fuel domestic inflation (e.g. via hikes in prices of essential
imports).
Combining inflation targeting (implying floating of the domestic currency) with a liberal use of
foreign exchange interventions has become a standard practice – especially among lower- and
medium-income countries.12
While the NBU’s declared intention to fall back on foreign exchange interventions (when expedient) is in
principle commendable, the envisaged ‘improvements’ whose aim is to lift administrative restrictions on
capital transactions may not be accepted unconditionally. Given the shallowness and institutional
underdevelopment of Ukraine’s exchange rate market, the successful conduct of exchange rate
interventions may require a good deal of non-market-based measures to be taken by the authorities.
These measures may include various reserve requirements (for example the imposition of obligatory
deposits on specific types of transactions) or other measures. Needless to say, the application of non-
market measures supporting foreign exchange interventions would require staffing the NBU with
reasonably competent – and incorrupt – personnel.
The NBU may be well advised to consider the usefulness of various non-market-based measures
with which the monetary authorities of Israel, Korea, Russia or Colombia (among others) have
supported their foreign exchange interventions (while still operating under inflation targeting
regimes).
12
That combining inflation targeting with foreign exchange interventions has become a common practice is amply
documented in a volume reporting the contents of a conference held at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) in
February 2013. The conference was attended by high-level representatives of 24 inflation targeting central banks from
emerging economies (including from Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Russia) – see BIS (2013). In a similar
vein, IMF (2015) found that not a single low- and low-middle-income country – irrespectively of whether or not it has a
formal inflation targeting regime – conducts a pure exchange rate float. More recently publications have appeared
justifying what works in practice on ‘theoretical grounds’ – see e.g. Airaudo et al. (2016). Of high relevance in this
context are also the findings by Ötker-Robe et al. (2007) who report that even countries like Israel, Poland and Chile –
undoubtedly more advanced than Ukraine in nearly all respects – needed 10-20 years for a switch to a full-fledged
floating and inflation targeting regime.
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4. CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS
The above analysis suggests that the adoption of ‘pure’ inflation targeting as Ukraine’s monetary policy
framework, which was formally announced at the end of 2016, is questionable and, at the very least,
premature. The presumed success of inflation targeting as a universally applicable ‘magical tool’ to
reach low and stable levels of inflation in many countries has in reality been largely due to other factors,
such as progressive liberalisation and globalisation, rather than the inflation targeting concept itself.
Besides, the NBU’s announced inflation target (5% in the medium term) appears to be overly ambitious
given Ukraine’s development level. Experience from other countries suggests that sticking to this target
at all cost will likely require a consistently overly restrictive monetary policy, which will constrain
Ukraine’s growth prospects.
The success of macroeconomic stabilisation in Ukraine so far has had nothing to do with inflation
targeting but has been basically due to the imposed capital controls, which contradict the basic idea of
inflation targeting with the exchange rate being determined by market forces. However, as capital
controls are being gradually eased, the hryvnia exchange rate is likely to become vulnerable to
speculative attacks once again, given the numerous political and geopolitical uncertainties facing
Ukraine and the ‘thinness’ of its foreign exchange market. Attempts at macroeconomic stabilisation in
response to such exchange rate shocks by using ‘classical’ inflation targeting instruments such as
interest rates will have a pro-cyclical impact, given the high degree of dollarisation and the related
prevalence of so-called ‘balance sheet effects’. The experience of other countries in similar
circumstances – both in Central and Eastern Europe and elsewhere – suggests that a preferable
strategy would be to smooth exchange rate fluctuations via interventions rather than monetary policy
instruments. Such interventions can be occasionally used within the framework of a formal inflation
targeting regime. It is clear that for this, a certain minimum level of reserves is needed; the latter will not
only provide the necessary policy space for interventions should such a need arise, but should
discourage speculations against the currency in the first place.
25. INFLATION TARGETING REGIME FOR UKRAINE: CAUTION IS NEEDED 17
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REFERENCES
Airaudo, M., E.F. Buffie and L.M. Zama (2016), ‘Inflation Targeting and Exchange Rate Management in Less
Developed Countries’, International Monetary Fund Working Paper No. 16/55.
Ball, L. (1999), ‘Policy rules for open economies’, in: J. Taylor (ed.), Monetary Policy Rules, University of
Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois.
Belhocine, N. et al. (2016), ‘Taking stock of monetary and exchange rate regimes in emerging Europe’, IMF
European Department, Washington DC.
BIS (2013), ‘Market volatility and foreign exchange interventions in EMEs: What has changed’, BIS Papers
No. 73, Bank for International Settlements.
Coibion, O. and Y. Gorodnichenko (2015), ‘Inflation expectations in Ukraine: a long path to anchoring’,
VoxUkraine, 5 October, https://voxukraine.org/2015/10/05/inflation-expectations-in-ukraine-a-long-path-to-
anchoring-en/
Espinoza, R., H. Leon and A. Prasad (2011), ‘When Should We Worry About Inflation’, The World Bank
Economic Review, Vol. 26, No. 1, pp. 100-127.
IMF (2015), ‘Evolving monetary policy frameworks in low-income and other developing countries’, IMF Staff
Report, October.
Leiderman, L., R. Maino and E. Parado (2006), ‘Inflation targeting in dollarized economies’, IMF Working
Paper 06/157, June.
Ötker-Robe, I., D. Vavrá et al. (2007), ‘Moving to greater exchange rate flexibility: operational aspects based
on lessons from detailed country experiences’, IMF Occasional Paper No. 256.
Pollin, R. and A. Zhu (2006), ‘Inflation and Economic Growth: A Cross-Country Non-Linear Analysis’, Journal
of Post Keynesian Economics, Vol. 28, pp. 593-614.
wiiw (2015), A Time of Moderate Expectations: Economic Analysis and Outlook for Central, East and
Southeast Europe’, The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw), wiiw Forecast Report,
Spring.
26. 18 UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
II. Ukraine’s pension system: some reservations
about the ‘fundamental’ reform
1. INTRODUCTION
The international financial institutions have a very poor record as the promoters of pension reforms in
less developed and emerging economies. The wave of partial privatisations of public pension systems
enforced in the 1990s throughout Latin America and the post-socialist countries has ended badly for
both the whole national economies in question and for their pensioners. An urgent need to scrap (or
substantially reformulate) the fundamental reforms introduced under the conditionalities of the
international financial institutions (led in this case by the World Bank) was acknowledged – and acted
upon accordingly – not only in Latin America but also in Hungary, Poland, Kazakhstan and Russia.
In Ukraine, a comprehensive pension reform has been one of the most pressing IMF requirements for
the allocation of the fifth tranche in the framework of its EFF (Extended Fund Facility) loan programme.
The final version of the pension reform adopted in October 2017 abandoned the initial IMF demands for
a higher statutory retirement age but envisages a gradual increase in the effective retirement age by (i)
tightening the number of years in service requirement, and (ii) abolishing early retirement schemes for a
wide range of occupations. In its recent Country Report (IMF, 2017), the International Monetary Fund
provides some theoretical and empirical arguments underlying its policy recommendations. It does not
seem to be considering a partial privatisation of Ukraine’s pension system, remarking though that ‘the
introduction of a second pillar should be delayed’. Nonetheless it critically reviews the state of Ukraine’s
pension system which, in its judgement, ‘is in urgent need of fundamental reform’. Some of the
measures the IMF considers as worthy of implementation make good sense – for instance, the
suggestion to link the size of the pension benefit to the amount of paid social security contributions, as it
would provide incentives to declare wages and incomes and thus help to raise the badly needed
revenues for the Pension Fund (for more on that see below). However, some of the basic assumptions
underlying the IMF analysis are not unquestionable. Also, the most essential and concrete reform
measure recommended which boils down to ‘raising the effective retirement age’ may not be accepted
unconditionally.13
13
The current draft government bill endorsed by the IMF and the World Bank does not envisage a hike in the statutory
retirement age. However, it envisages an increase of the minimum years of service requirement and the abolition of
early retirement options (with the exception of the military), which is tantamount to a higher effective retirement age.
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2. AVERAGE PENSION NOT AS LOW AS CLAIMED BY THE IMF
In 2015 the average monthly pension in Ukraine, disbursed under the pay-as-you-go system14
, stood at
about UAH 1,700, equivalent to about EUR 70 at the exchange rate or EUR 217 at purchasing power
parity (PPP). This is well above the international poverty line of USD 1.90 (PPP) per day. Even the
minimum pension, which currently stands at UAH 1,312 per month (about EUR 45 at the exchange rate
and EUR 140 at PPP) and is received by around two thirds of the country’s pensioners,15
is more than
double the international poverty line.
The average gross replacement rate (the ratio of average pension to average gross wage) was 40.4% –
not very low by international standards (e.g. in Poland that ratio stood at 42.2% in 2015). However, the
genuine gross replacement rate is currently certainly lower than the figure quoted above. This is due to
both the government decision to double the official minimum wage starting from January 2017 (which
has led to an overall strong wage growth, by 20% in real terms) and the high level of underreporting of
wages earned by working-age individuals ‘informally’. On the other hand, it must be admitted that most
probably a high share of the retirees also work in the informal sector, earning incomes supplementing
their pensions.
3. STATUTORY RETIREMENT AGE RELATIVELY – BUT NOT EXCEPTIONALLY –
LOW
Contrary to what the IMF study claims, Ukraine’s statutory retirement age for men (60 years) is not very
low by international standards. It is not different from that for Russia and Belarus. While it is indeed
lower than in most OECD countries (the OECD average is 64.7 years, in Poland it is 65 years) – it is the
same as, or higher than, in such OECD countries as Turkey, Slovenia and Luxembourg (according to
OECD data for 2014).
Ukraine’s statutory retirement age for women (58 years) is currently higher than in Belarus and Russia
(where it is 55 years), lower than in most OECD countries (63.5 years on average; 60 years in Poland)
but the same as in Turkey. More importantly, the statutory retirement age for women in Ukraine goes up
by half a year ever year in line with the pension reform enacted in 2011 (also under pressure from the
IMF). By 2021, the statutory retirement age for women will reach 60 years – the same as for men.
The effective retirement age (for both sexes) in Ukraine (61.2 years) does not appear to be particularly
low in international comparison either. Interestingly, the effective retirement age (for both sexes) falls
short of 60 years in France. For women it falls short of 60 years also in Slovenia, Poland, Belgium and
Slovakia (see OECD, 2015).
14
In theory, the ‘Law on Mandatory State Pension Insurance’ also envisages the introduction of a second and a third
‘pillar’ of the pension system (operated by the government and the private sector, respectively). However, the second
pillar (mandatory funded system) remains only on paper: the law does not stipulate when it has to come into effect, only
the conditions that are required for it to do so. The third pillar (voluntary funded system) has been functioning since
2005, but the participation rate has been very low (Lisenkova, 2011).
15
The high number of those receiving the minimum pension is explained by the fact that by law, if the calculated pension
is below the official minimum pension, it is adjusted to that level (which corresponds to the official subsistence
minimum).
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4. LOWER LIFE EXPECTANCY ‘NEUTRALISES’ THE EFFECT OF LOWER
STATUTORY RETIREMENT AGE
Ukraine’s relatively low statutory retirement ages – in the IMF study ‘very early retirement ages by
international standards’ – are seen as the main reason for the particularly large number of pensioners –
which then is ‘the main reason behind high pension expenditure’. However, it is essential to see the
retirement ages in connection with the life expectancy at the ages of retirement. It appears that Ukraine’s
life expectancy for both men and women is substantially lower than in the advanced countries (see
Tables 1 and 2). Moreover, the gaps between Ukraine’s and other countries’ life expectancies are not
expected to diminish even in the long run.
Table 1 / Male life expectancy at age 60 (years)
2015-2020 2020-2025 2025-2030 2030-2035 2035-2040
Eastern Europe 16.45 16.69 16.96 17.30 17.65
Belarus 14.72 14.96 15.18 15.45 15.73
Bulgaria 17.30 17.63 17.94 18.30 18.65
Czech Republic 19.98 20.61 21.29 22.01 22.72
Hungary 18.02 18.42 18.85 19.23 19.69
Poland 19.45 20.08 20.73 21.42 22.13
Romania 18.00 18.40 18.85 19.31 19.77
Russian Fed. 15.30 15.43 15.57 15.72 15.91
Slovakia 18.23 18.70 19.21 19.68 20.20
Ukraine 15.34 15.45 15.57 15.70 15.86
Northern Europe 22.32 23.05 23.77 24.49 25.11
Southern Europe 22.58 23.27 23.92 24.51 25.09
Western Europe 22.87 23.60 24.29 24.89 25.43
Table 2 / Female life expectancy at age 60 (years)
2015-2020 2020-2025 2025-2030 2030-2035 2035-2040
Eastern Europe 21.54 21.89 22.22 22.57 22.91
Belarus 21.24 21.53 21.84 22.17 22.47
Bulgaria 21.47 21.79 22.11 22.42 22.73
Czech Republic 23.93 24.45 24.96 25.48 25.95
Hungary 22.46 22.85 23.24 23.61 24.02
Poland 24.37 24.85 25.33 25.78 26.26
Romania 22.03 22.41 22.82 23.23 23.68
Russian Fed. 20.98 21.29 21.57 21.85 22.13
Slovakia 22.84 23.25 23.66 24.10 24.51
Ukraine 20.50 20.77 21.00 21.25 21.51
Northern Europe 25.28 25.82 26.33 26.86 27.36
Southern Europe 26.54 27.17 27.80 28.42 29.00
Western Europe 26.52 27.08 27.63 28.20 28.75
Source: UN Population Projections, 2015.
Taking into account the facts from Tables 1 and 2 it must be concluded that the relatively low statutory
retirement ages in Ukraine cannot be the main reason for the relatively large number of
pensioners. Earlier retirement is coupled with lower post-retirement life expectancy. In effect the ratio of
29. UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM 21
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
the old- to the working-age population in Ukraine is not much different from the same ratio for other East
European countries – while much lower than in other parts of Europe (see Table 3).
Table 3 / Ratio of population aged 65 or more to the working-age (15-64 years) population,
in %
2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045
Eastern Europe 21.1 25.2 28.9 31.4 31.8 33.5 36.3
Belarus 20.0 22.8 26.8 30.3 30.9 31.6 32.8
Bulgaria 30.4 33.4 35.6 37.0 39.0 42.5 46.6
Czech Republic 27.0 31.7 34.1 36.1 38.1 43.4 50.7
Hungary 26.3 30.4 32.8 32.9 34.6 37.9 44.1
Poland 22.3 28.2 33.9 36.3 37.7 41.0 47.0
Moldova 13.4 17.6 21.1 24.7 25.3 26.5 29.4
Romania 25.8 30.0 33.4 33.6 39.2 44.4 49.9
Russian Fed. 19.1 22.8 26.7 29.5 28.8 29.5 31.0
Slovakia 19.5 24.2 28.5 31.6 33.4 37.2 43.5
Ukraine 21.9 26.0 28.1 30.8 30.8 32.1 34.4
Northern Europe 27.9 29.8 32.0 35.4 38.5 40.0 40.8
Southern Europe 30.8 33.9 37.8 43.3 49.5 56.3 61.9
Western Europe 30.6 33.7 37.8 43.2 48.1 50.0 50.5
Source: UN Population Projections, 2015.
Also on account of the number of pensioners as a percentage of the working-age population (41.7% in
2015), Ukraine is not worse off than its regional peers. For instance, it does not differ much from Belarus
(41.2%) and scores much better than Russia (45.5%), although worse than most OECD countries (e.g.
in Poland, this ratio stood at 36.6%).
5. OLDER WORKERS MAY BE UNFIT TO WORK: HIGHER LEVELS OF
POVERTY EXPECTED
Raised statutory retirement ages would deprive a large number of persons of pensions to which they are
currently entitled. The assumption is that these persons would earn their incomes themselves. Of course
this assumption is questionable. Firstly, the demand for services of the elderly may not be forthcoming.
Secondly, in view of Ukraine’s low life expectancies of the seniors (see Tables 1 and 2) large fractions of
the cohorts considered may be physically unable to earn any income. (Low life expectancy is a sign of
the poor health status of the population.) In both cases raising the statutory retirement ages would
only contribute to higher levels of extreme poverty and material deprivation. It may be added that
the ‘savings’ to the public finances achieved that way would come primarily from cuts in the volume of
pensions disbursed. The non-working (for whatever reason) new cohorts of the elderly would not
contribute to higher revenues of the public pension system at all.
Raising the statutory retirement ages need not be the only way of extending the average effective
retirement ages. Seniors that are able and willing to work may choose to defer the time of retirement if
income earned is sufficiently attractive in comparison with the retirement pay. It is interesting to note that
while in most countries the average effective retirement ages are lower than the statutory ages, in
Turkey (where the statutory retirement ages are comparable with Ukraine’s) the opposite obtains: the
30. 22 UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
average effective retirement ages are much higher than the statutory ones. Also in other lower-income
OECD countries (Korea, Mexico and Chile) seniors work substantially longer than statutorily required.
6. EXCESSIVE DEFICITS OF THE PENSION FUND OR RATHER EXCESSIVE
PREOCCUPATION WITH THE DEFICITS?
The issue that is central to the IMF’s dissatisfaction with the current state of Ukraine’s pension system is
its being apparently unsustainable: ‘Without a major overhaul, the current contributory, earnings-related
pension system will continue to remain in deficit and will fail to provide adequate and equitable pensions
to all retirees.’ To support that conclusion the IMF analysis quotes pension spending as a percentage of
GDP for Ukraine and its regional peers (Russia, Belarus and Moldova) – suggesting that at 13.4% that
share was the highest in 2015.
The first problem with that number is that it is inconsistent with other numbers for Ukraine quoted in the
same place (IMF, 2017, Table 1). The ratio consistent with the IMF numbers from that table is 10.8% –
less than in Moldova and only slightly more than in Russia and Belarus. Anyway, even at 13.4% the
GDP share of spending on pensions is not excessive by international (European) standards. The
average share for the euro area is 10.8%, for a number of European countries it is much higher (for
France 13.6%, for Italy 13.8%, for Austria 13.1%, for Finland 13.4%). In Poland the share is lower
(9.1%). However, when one allows for public spending for retirees’ survivors (1.8%) the share is close to
11% also in Poland.16
In addition, other items of social spending in Europe (among others on account of sickness and
disability, family and children) to some extent also benefit the retirees. Arguably, total social protection
spending is a better measure of attention the poorer social strata – including retirees – should be given
in the modern world. The GDP share of social protection spending (excluding health care) in the euro
area is over 20% now: 15.9% in Poland, 17.4% in Slovenia – but much higher in the Scandinavian
countries: 23% in Denmark, 22% in Finland. In Ukraine, total social protection spending is much lower:
13.6% of GDP.17
The IMF quotes the high and rising deficits in Ukraine’s pension system (revenue from obligatory
contributions minus pension expenditure) as something unacceptable in the long run. Even if the IMF’s
estimates of the deficit for 2015 are overstated (on account of the mistaken value of expenditure) the
deficits in question are nothing unusual by international standards. For the euro area the deficit in
question (calculated as the net social security contributions minus social protection expenditure) was
5.6% of GDP in the euro area, 6.3% in the whole EU, 3.4% in Poland – but as much as 22.6% (!) in
Denmark. Narrower social spending (on old-age persons and their survivors) was still higher than the
whole of social security contributions in a number of countries (including in Austria, the Scandinavian
countries and Italy). There is nothing irregular or unacceptable about social spending (and
pension spending in particular) being financed out of the budget of the general government. It is
superstition to believe that social spending must be balanced by social contributions.18
Equally well the
16
The average public spending on retirees’ survivors also equals 1.8% of GDP for the euro area.
17
See ILO (2014). Data refer to the latest available year.
18
The IMF analysis deplores the fact that the Pension Fund of Ukraine makes deficits which are then financed by transfers
from the state budget. But the PFU is just a part of Ukraine’s general government, of which the state budget is another
component. The existence of the PFU is just an administrative detail without any real consequence from the macro
31. UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM 23
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
former may be financed by other taxes levied on the private sector (e.g. indirect taxes, personal income
taxes or corporate income taxes) – or, under some conditions – by government borrowing.
7. SUSTAINABILITY CONCERNS MAY BE EXAGGERATED
The alleged need for a major pension reform is also advocated on the grounds of the pension system’s
sustainability. The low fertility rate (currently 1.5 per woman) in Ukraine is expected to lead to both
population decline and population ageing in the long term. According to the UN central (medium-fertility)
scenario, which reckons with a gradual improvement in the fertility rates over the coming decades,
Ukraine’s population is projected to decline by 20% by 2050. The decline may turn out to be even higher
(up to 30%) if fertility and mortality rates stay at their current levels. At the same time, the old-age
dependency ratio (the share of old-age to working-age population) is expected to double under the UN
central scenario. According to IMF projections, this will lead to a significant increase in pension spending
as a share of GDP, by about 6 pp of GDP by 2050.
There are grounds to believe that these predictions – even assuming that the underlying demographic
projections are correct – may be overly pessimistic. Following the same methodology as the one used
by IMF (2017), pension spending as a share of GDP (PE) can be decomposed as follows:
= ∗ ∗ ∗ (1)
where RR is the replacement rate (the ratio of average pension to average output per worker), CR is the
coverage ratio (the share of pensioners in the total population above 65), ODR is the old-age
dependency ratio (the ratio of population above 65 to the working-age population), and LP is labour
participation (the share of workers in the total working-age population).
The IMF conclusion with respect to the expected long-term increase in pension spending as a share of
GDP primarily stems from the ageing of the population (increasing old-age dependency ratio) on
account of the above-mentioned demographic trends. The replacement ratio is assumed to remain
constant at the level of 2015, which does not entirely correspond to the current system of pension
indexation (under the current system, only part of the pension which corresponds to the minimum
pension is being indexed to inflation) but may be a plausible assumption in the long term.19
In turn, the
coverage ratio, the old-age dependency ratio, as well as the labour force participation and employment
rates are all determined exclusively by the population dynamics and assume that age- and gender-
specific participation rates are unchanged from their current levels.
Some of these assumptions are questionable, in particular the one with respect to the constant rate of
employment over time. Rather, it is reasonable to expect that the demographic decline should diminish
perspective. Equally well the PFU could cease to exist, with its functions being taken over by the state budget (as is the
case in e.g. Denmark). Such a ‘reform’ would make sense also on economic ground as it would reduce another layer of
de facto redundant bureaucracy.
19
The total value of the pension is also partially indexed to wages; this indexation should be no less than 20% of the
average wage increase in the previous year, provided that pensions were growing more slowly than wages (Lisenkova,
2011).
32. 24 UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
the excess labour supply, resulting in a lower unemployment rate and a higher de facto labour
participation rate. Another reason for the likely future decline in the labour supply may be outward labour
migration. The latter may accelerate following the entry into force of the visa-free regime with the EU as
of June 201720
as well as due to the large-scale recruitment campaigns in several EU countries, such as
Poland and the Czech Republic, which are designed to alleviate labour shortages and explicitly target
Ukrainian labour force. The recent experience of many Central and East European countries suggests
that the combined effect of these two factors – demographic decline and outward labour migration
– may bring about a strong reduction of unemployment and thus an increased de facto labour
participation rate (see wiiw, 2016).
A higher de facto labour participation rate would mean that a higher share of working-age population
would be actually working (and not just be part of the labour force, with or without a job) – and thus
paying social security contributions to the Pension Fund.21
According to LFS data, 64% of the working-
age population in Ukraine were employed in 2016, and another 7% were unemployed (the total labour
participation rate stood thus at 71% of the working-age population – a relatively stable figure over time).
It is clear that with an unemployment rate of nearly 10%, Ukraine’s labour market is far away from the
state of full employment. Even a mere reduction of this unemployment rate by half, i.e. to around 5%,
which would arguably correspond more or less to the ‘natural’ unemployment rate (the infamous
NAIRU), would raise the share of those employed by 3.5 pp of the working-age population, to 67.5%. An
increase in the de facto labour participation rate of this magnitude (by 5%) would reduce the share of
pension spending in GDP by around 1 pp according to formula (1), thus offsetting some of the 6 pp rise
projected by the IMF on account of population ageing. Clearly, reaching the state of full employment, i.e.
an unemployment rate more like 2%, would constrain the increase in pension spending as a share of
GDP even more.
8. THE REAL PROBLEM WITH THE PENSION SYSTEM LIES WITH TAXATION
RATHER THAN SPENDING
Assuming that the gloomy demographic projections underlying the IMF analysis are correct and pension
spending as a share of GDP does indeed go up markedly in the medium and long run, this would likely
contribute towards higher budget deficits. There is little doubt that it is these fiscal sustainability
concerns which underlie the IMF recommendations to cut pension expenditure – primarily by raising the
effective retirement age.
However, as argued above, the actual need for cuts in pension expenditure is far from obvious: the
number of pensioners is not particularly high in international comparison and reducing it further may
have unwelcome poverty effects. Even a casual look at the reasons behind the low level of Pension
Fund revenues (low statutory social contribution rate, high degree of the shadow economy)
suggests that the problem lies here rather than in the area of pension expenditures. Thus, if the
feared increase in fiscal deficits in the long term is to be prevented, it is the revenue side of the Pension
Fund which is to be tackled first.
20
Per se, the visa-free regime is only valid for stays of up to 90 days in the Schengen EU Member States and does not
grant the right to work. However, there is little doubt that it will make it easier for Ukrainians to find jobs in the EU.
21
Here, for simplicity purposes we disregard the informality issue, which is dealt with below.
33. UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM 25
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
A first-best solution in this vein would be to ‘de-shadow’ the economy, i.e. broaden the tax base as far as
social security contributions are concerned. According to the IMF, out of 16.4 million estimated to be
employed in 2015, only 12.3 million were employed officially and paid social security contributions.
Assuming that those employed in the ‘shadow’ sector were earning on average the same wage as those
employed in the official economy (which stood at UAH 4,200 per month in gross terms in that year), the
mere declaration of their incomes would result in additional annual Pension Fund revenues (PF) of the
following magnitude:
=
ℎ ∗ ℎ ∗ 12 ∗ " #$ #% $ # $&% $ ' ( ∗
ℎ " $ ℎ $ % = 4.1 $ $ ∗ + , 4,200 ∗ 12 ∗ 0.22 ∗ 0.8 = + , 36.4 &$ $ . (2)
This sum, which corresponds to 1.8% of the 2015 GDP, is to be seen as an underestimate, as it does
not include revenues which the Pension Fund could potentially receive from those employed officially but
whose wages and salaries are declared (and thus taxed) only partially: anecdotal evidence suggests
that the rest is being paid ‘in envelopes’.
One important reason for this under-reporting of wages and incomes is the fact that, as mentioned
above, even for (officially) low-income earners the state still guarantees a minimum pension; that is, the
size of the pension is largely unrelated to the official wage. Therefore, one way to create incentives to
declare wages would be to explicitly link the size of the pension benefit to the official wage. (Such an
approach is advocated by the IMF and the World Bank and appears reasonable.) Under such a scheme,
a more generous pension formula for those with official wages could be counter-balanced by lower
pension payments (or lower minimum pension) to those with low official incomes, so that the average
pension – and the expenditures of the Pension Fund – could be preserved at the current level, while its
revenues could go up thanks to improved tax compliance.
However, fighting the ‘shadow economy’ is a complex issue which goes far beyond mere tax-related
matters, and it would be illusory in our view to expect fast progress in this area. As long as the state
apparatus remains corrupt (and extorting), any ‘opening up’ will remain risky for both companies and
individuals – no matter how high or low the tax rate. The failure of the recent tax reform, which was
implemented in 2016 and involved a radical cut in the rate of social security contribution (from an
average rate of 41% to a flat 22%) in order to provide incentives to ‘de-shadow’, is highly indicative in
this respect; tax compliance improved only marginally, so that revenues of the Pension Fund declined
nearly in line with the cut in the social contribution rate (by 3.5 pp of GDP).
Therefore, as long as the shadow economy remains a fact of life in Ukraine, a more feasible
solution would be to partly reverse last year’s tax reform, which would involve raising again the
statutory social security contribution rate. For instance, even bringing the rate of social security
contribution from the current 22% to levels around 30% (which would be in line with the levels observed
not only in other countries of the region, such as Russia and Belarus, but also elsewhere in Europe)
would result in additional 1.7 pp of GDP of Pension Fund revenues. This sum would offset nearly half of
the 6 pp of GDP increase of the Pension Fund deficit projected by the IMF, while another half could
potentially come from ‘de-shadowing’ efforts (in the longer term and in the best-case scenario).
34. 26 UKRAINE’S PENSION SYSTEM: SOME RESERVATIONS ABOUT THE ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ REFORM
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
Finally, it should be mentioned as a general note that a potentially large and untapped source of
government revenues is the incomes – and fortunes – of Ukrainian oligarchs. Since the latter effectively
control the Ukrainian state (‘state capture’), it is little wonder that they are typically able to ensure
attractive deals for themselves, either in the form of explicit tax exemptions or by avoiding taxes
altogether (through company registrations e.g. in Cyprus and other offshore locations). Tapping these
sources would provide the government with funds which could be used not only for pensions, but for
other crucial needs as well: infrastructure, health, education, social support, etc. However, as in the case
of the ‘shadow economy’, it would be naïve to expect any major improvements in this respect as long as
the system of governance in Ukraine remains the way it is.
9. CONCLUSIONS
The above analysis suggests that the current situation in Ukraine’s pension system hardly justifies the
need for a major reform as advocated by the IMF and the World Bank. The statutory retirement age may
be indeed rather low by international standards (albeit for women, it will go up by another 2 years by
2021). However, it is more than offset by the low life expectancy of Ukrainians, which is unlikely to
increase much going forward according to UN projections. As a result, the share of pensioners in the
total population is not particularly high by international standards. Besides, while Ukraine’s Pension
Fund may be in deficit, this is not very different from the situation observed in other countries. Anyway,
there are no theoretical arguments why the Pension Fund must be necessarily balanced. The future
sustainability of the pension system is not necessarily a cause of major concern either, particularly when
one takes into account the likely future improvements in the labour market (due to both demographic
decline and emigration), which should at least partially offset the negative impact of population ageing.
To the extent that any reform of the pension system is needed at all, it should target above all efforts to
curb the shadow economy (ideally) and/or partial reversion of last year’s cuts in social security
contribution rate. Additional Pension Fund revenues raised this way could enable raising pensions to
more decent levels and thus improve the living standards of the older population and reduce inequality.
REFERENCES
ILO (2014), World Social Protection Report 2014/15: Building Economic Recovery, Inclusive Development and
Social Justice, International Labour Office, Geneva.
IMF (2017), ‘Ukraine: Selected Issues’, International Monetary Fund (IMF), IMF Country Report No. 17/84,
Washington DC, April.
Lisenkova, K. (2011), ‘Ukrainian Pension Reform in the Context of Population Ageing: A Dynamic CGE
Approach’, Institute for Economic Research and Policy Consulting (IER), Working Paper No. 01/2011, Kyiv,
February.
OECD (2015), ‘Pensions at a Glance 2015: OECD and G20 indicators’, OECD Publishing, Paris,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/pension_glance-2015-en
wiiw (2016), ‘Labour Shortages Driving Economic Growth? Economic Analysis and Outlook for Central, East
and Southeast Europe’, The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw), wiiw Forecast Report,
Vienna, Autumn.
35. SHORT LIST OF RECENT WIIW PUBLICATIONS 27
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
SHORT LIST OF THE MOST RECENT WIIW PUBLICATIONS
(AS OF DECEMBER 2017)
For current updates and summaries see also wiiw's website at www.wiiw.ac.at
UKRAINE: SELECTED ECONOMIC ISSUES
by Vasily Astrov and Leon Podkaminer
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports, No. 19, December 2017
29 pages including 3 Tables, 8 Figures and 1 Box
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw’s website)
WIIW HANDBOOK OF STATISTICS 2017: CENTRAL, EAST AND SOUTHEAST EUROPE
by Alexandra Bykova, Nadya Heger, Beate Muck, Renate Prasch, Monika Schwarzhappel, Galina
Vasaros and David Zenz
Countries covered: Albania, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Estonia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania,
Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkey, Ukraine
wiiw Handbook of Statistics No. 2017, November 2017 (ISBN: ISBN- 978-3-85209-056-6)
334 pages including 248 Tables and 15 Maps
Hardcopy + CD-ROM with PDF: EUR 70.00 (time series given for 2000, 2005, 2010, 2014-2016)
Download PDF: EUR 50.00 (PDF with identical content as hardcopy)
Download Excel tables + PDF: EUR 245.00
USB drive Excel tables + PDF + hardcopy: EUR 250.00
GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS AND STRUCTURAL UPGRADING
by Roman Stöllinger
wiiw Working Papers, No. 138, November 2017
41 pages including 6 Tables and 2 Figures
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw’s website)
WIIW MONTHLY REPORT 2017/11
ed. by Vasily Astrov and Sándor Richter
› Graph of the month: Total Forbes billionaire wealth in selected countries, in % of national income
› Opinion Corner: What may be the future of EU cohesion policy in the light of currently discussed
reforms?
› Self-imposed food embargo and consumer prices in Russia
› Can economics explain the current bad EU-Russia relations?
36. 28 SHORT LIST OF RECENT WIIW PUBLICATIONS
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
› Non-tariff barriers in the EU inhibiting DCFTA trade
› The editors recommend for further reading
› Monthly and quarterly statistics for Central, East and Southeast Europe
› Index of subjects – November 2016 to November 2017
wiiw Monthly Report, No. 11, November 2017
47 pages including 3 Table and 21 Figures
exclusively for wiiw Members
CESEE BACK ON TRACK TO CONVERGENCE
by Vladimir Gligorov, Richard Grieveson, Peter Havlik, Leon Podkaminer, et al.
wiiw Forecast Report. Economic Analysis and Outlook for Central, East and Southeast Europe,
Autumn 2017
wiiw, November 2017
149 pages including 31 Tables, 51 Figures and 1 Box
hardcopy: EUR 80.00 (PDF: EUR 65.00)
WIIW MONTHLY REPORT 2017/10
ed. by Vasily Astrov and Sándor Richter
› Graph of the month: Regional GDP per capita in the EU, 2014
› Opinion Corner: What are the potential consequences of decertifying the nuclear deal with Iran by
US President Trump?
› Austria’s economic geography position in Europe
› Visit thy neighbour: Compositional trends in the Austrian tourism sector
› Economic relations between Austria and Slovakia
› The editors recommend for further reading
› Monthly and quarterly statistics for Central, East and Southeast Europe
› Index of subjects – October 2016 to October 2017
wiiw Monthly Report, No. 10, October 2017
48 pages including 4 Table and 32 Figures
exclusively for wiiw Members
ÖSTERREICHS STAATSAUSGABEN-STRUKTUREN IM EUROPÄISCHEN VERGLEICH
by Philipp Heimberger
wiiw-Forschungsberichte / wiiw Research Reports in German language, No. 8, October 2017
75 pages including 15 Tables and 45 Figures
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw's website)
37. SHORT LIST OF RECENT WIIW PUBLICATIONS 29
wiiw Policy Notes and Reports 19
MACEDONIAN EXPORTS
by Vladimir Gligorov
wiiw Research Reports, No. 420, September 2017
47 pages including 10 Tables and 40 Figures
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw’s website)
CAN’T KEEP UP WITH THE JONESES: HOW RELATIVE DEPRIVATION PUSHES INTERNAL
MIGRATION IN AUSTRIA
by Stefan Jestl, Mathias Moser and Anna K. Raggl
wiiw Working Papers, No. 137, September 2017
25 pages including 7 Tables and 5 Figures
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw’s website)
IS EUROPE DISINTEGRATING? MACROECONOMIC DIVERGENCE, STRUCTURAL
POLARISATION, TRADE AND FRAGILITY
by Claudius Gräbner, Philipp Heimberger, Jakob Kapeller and Bernhard Schütz
wiiw Working Papers, No. 136, September 2017
21 pages including 1 Tables and 6 Figures
hardcopy: EUR 8.00 (PDF: free download from wiiw’s website)
WIIW MONTHLY REPORT 2017/9
ed. by Vasily Astrov and Sándor Richter
› Graph of the month: Real GDP growth in 2015, 2016 and first half of 2017 by major groups of
countries of the European Union
› Opinion Corner: What can be said about the status of Brexit in September 2017?
› Cohesion policy meets heterogeneous firms
› On the use of different public innovation commercialisation measures in the EU-28
› Choosing the right partner: R&D cooperations and innovation success in CESEE and CIS
economies
› The editors recommend for further reading
› Monthly and quarterly statistics for Central, East and Southeast Europe
› Index of subjects – September 2016 to September 2017
wiiw Monthly Report, No. 9, September 2017
46 pages including 1 Table and 26 Figures
exclusively for wiiw Members
38.
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