Title: Andreas Wrgtter
1Prospects of Economic Integration Are the
Candidate EU Member States from the Balkans Ready
to Catch-Up in the Wider EU?
THE COMING ENLARGEMENT OF THE EU WITH ROMANIA,
BULGARIA AND CROATIA ECONOMIC, POLITICAL, AND
SECURITY CONSEQUENCES International Seminar for
Experts in the series Great Debates organised by
the Cicero Foundation 12 October 2006
- Andreas Wörgötter
- Andreas.Woergoetter_at_oecd.org
- OECD Economics Department
2GDP per capita in per cent of Greecein constant
2000 PPP in USD
3How to get ready for EU Enlargement
- Past Present Future
- Benefits
- Pre-conditions
- Convergence Going for Growth
- Bulgaria, Romania
- Croatia
- Western Balkan
4Past Present - Future
- Earlier enlargements were differentEU was less
integratedEntering countries were less
differentTransition phases were longer and more
substantive - Current (EU10 ? EU25) enlargement is a
successEntering countries are growing
stronglyOld members reap benefits Win-win
situation - Future enlargement is a challengeBulgaria and
Romania are much poorerOld member countries are
worried about costs (migration)
5Benefits of enlargement
- Elemination of entry barriers
- Better allocation of resources according to
comparative advantages - Freeriding on institution building (euro)
- Anchoring of sound policy frameworks
6Pre-conditions
- Decision making in the EU
- Separation between Private and Public Economic
Units - Macroeconomic stability to generate stable
framework conditions - Clear property rights to maintain incentives to
save and invest - Low entry/exit barriers in labour and product
markets to facilitate reallocation of resources
7A comparison of investment expenditure shares
8The Worldbank Doing Business Ranking
9Relative prices of expenditure for education
10OECD recommendations for growth friendly policies
I
- Macroeconomic policy framework, which does not
add further noise to the business cycleMedium
term budgeting framework with expenditure
ceilings based on cautious assumptions and
responsible public sector managers, which can
decide about how to best use available inputs to
reach maximum outputs Independent monetary
policy, which establishes a credible anchor for
expected inflation
11OECD recommendations for growth friendly policies
II
- Structural policies tostrengthen property
rightsreduce administrative burden on doing
businessreduce entry/exit barriers on product
and labour marketsfoster competitionreduc e
distortionary taxation on laboureliminate fiscal
incentives to withdraw from activity
12Growth decomposition
13GDP per capita Growth and level differential
vis-à-vis U.S.
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16The OECD PMR indicators system
17Analytical work on key aspects of performance
- The OECD Jobs Study (1994)
- Work on ageing
- OECD-wide study Maintaining Prosperity in an
Ageing Society (1998) - Work on the determinants of participation rates
- Retirement decision
- Female participation
- Work on product markets regulation
- The growth project (2002)
- The Sources of Economic Growth
18Indicators of policy stances in various areas
- Indicators of product market policies
- Product market regulation database, 1998 and 2003
- Producer support estimates in agriculture, annual
- Indicators of policies mainly affecting labour
markets - Tax wedges
- Implicit tax rates on continued work
- Minimum wages and labour costs
- Unemployment benefit replacement rates
- Employment protection legislation
- Disability/sickness beneficiaries
- Educational attainment and achievement
19The stocktaking exercise key features
- A regular cross-country structural surveillance
based to an important extent on benchmarking
performance and policies on best practice. - The key objective Increase GDP per capita and
speed up convergence in living standards. - Five policy priorities
- Three priorities based on explicit benchmarking
- Two priorities determined on the basis of country
expertise - A thematic part an examination of the link of a
particular policy area to growth.
20Conclusions
- Bulgaria and Romania should not waste any time to
make use of the granted EU membership - Main attraction of EU membership is not the
access to EU structural funds - EU membership should be used to amplify the
impact of growth friendly policy - Croatia should be even more ambitious to
compensate for having to wait for membership - Western Balkans should demonstrate to be ready
for membership, by (re)integrating with
neighbours, whith whom they will find themselves
in an enlarged EU