Title: Poland
1Poland
2Background
- dates back to mid-tenth century
- http//www.countryreports.org/poland.htm
- http//www.kasprzyk.demon.co.uk/www/HistoryPolska.
html - Once very powerful country in Europe with
territory stretching from the Baltic to the Black
Sea - Occupied between late 18th century until
independence in 1918 - About the size of New Mexico
3- Overrun by Germany and Soviet Union in WWII
- Became Soviet satellite after war and adopted
planned socialism - System never took hold as strong as in Soviet
Union - Resentment of Soviet Unions influence
- Catholic Church remained a powerful influence in
opposition to the system - Strong information flows from outside
- Agriculture remained primarily private
4Problems with Polish Socialist Economy
- Prior to socialism, Poland was a major food
exporter - By 1970s, Poland has to import food
- low priority
- farms too small and under-equipped
- processing facilities run by inefficient state
enterprises - distribution inefficient leading to waste
5- Priority on heavy industry
- Poland is small and resource-poor
- no comparative advantage
- result was shortages that led to food riots and
shakeup of Party - had to subsidize enterprises heavily
- resorted to heavy borrowing from US but funds
wasted
6- Usual problems associated with socialist economy
- shortages
- irrational prices
- irrational resource allocation
- stunted banking system
- soft budget constraints
- lack of incentives
- high absenteeism and alcoholism
71980s
- Period of economic and political instability
- Per capita GDP declined almost the whole period
- Galloping inflation develops into hyperinflation
in 1989 - External debt mushroomed
- boom in industrial and consumer spending financed
by borrowing - Massive shortages and rationing
8- Labor unrest
- birth of the Solidarity movement
- led to wage explosion
- Martial law off and on during early 1980s
- Attempted reform in 1982 a failure
- limited SOE autonomy and worker management
- abolished central planning for certain final
product - replaced by government orders
- partial price liberalization
9Price Regimes in Poland, 1982 and 1987
(percentage of total) 1982
1987 Consumer Industrial
Consumer Industrial
Goods Inputs Goods
Inputs Type of Control Administered
35 45 20
29 Regulated 15 2 5
3 Free 50 53
75 68
10- partial demonopolization of foreign trade
- limited openings for domestic and foreign
private-sector investment - some liberalization of SOE financing and wage
setting - Government collapses late 1989
- Big Bang or Shock Therapy transition begins
January 1, 1990
11Better Initial Conditions
- It had a higher share of its economic activity
coordinated by the market. - Its agricultural sector was predominantly
private, and though in need of rationalization,
no major land reform was required. - It had an existing system of commercial
regulations and legalized private property.
12- Its state enterprises already achieved a high
degree of independence from the ministries. - Reforms had already encouraged the expansion of
private entrepreneurial activity. - It had developed strong trade links with the
West, facilitating information and investment
flows.
13Shock Therapy
- Fast transition, everything at once
- price liberalization
- most subsidies eliminated
- fiscal reform
- currency reform
- SOEs privatized
14Price Liberalization
- Immediate increase in prices
- consumers purchasing power reduced by the
inflation - incentives to produce increased
- shortages eliminated as supply increased
15Fiscal Reform
- Central government balanced its budget to achieve
maximum macroeconomic stability - an important prerequisite for success in
transition - Had engaged in inflationary deficit spending
during 1980s
16Currency Reform
- Zloty devalued
- Then made convertible
- Then allowed to float according to dictates of
supply and demand - Devalued currency made Polands exports cheaper
and foreign investment more attractive
17Privatization
- There was already a considerable private sector
to start with - private sector share almost 29
- restaurants and service enterprises
- hotels built and run by foreign chains
18- Like other socialist countries, the Polish
economy was dominated by large state-owned
enterprises - An example is the Lenin steel works
- 36,000 workers in 1990
- 11,000 six years later and still losing money
- too politically important to shut down
- too obsolete and inefficient to be an attractive
buy for investors
19- Initial stages of privatization included
- sale of entire enterprises to foreign investors
- very unlike Russia
- liquidation of assets and sale to private
investors - free distribution of shares
- Nearly 80 of retail and wholesale outlets
privatized by October, 1991 - Half of trucking industry privatized within 16
months - 1.2 million private firms created in first 16
months
20- Large SOEs were much harder to privatize but
process continues - politicians loath to risk losing the votes of the
hundreds of thousands of workers who would be
laid off - Process changed many times
- public offerings
- sealed bids
- leasing
- vouchers
- investment certificates
21Mass Privatization
- Mass privatization was instituted on in 1995.
- Unique method to create 15 government-sponsored
national investment funds (NIFs) - They will hold the equity of large SOEs,
restructure the companies by changing management,
improving marketing, etc. - Avoid the problem of insider control prevailing
in Russia
22Structure of Equity of Large Privatized
Enterprises Lead shareholding fund
33 Other 14 funds (1.93 each)
27 Employees
15 State
25
23Banking
- Prior to 1988, the National Bank of Poland
existed has a typical socialist state monopoly - Nine state-owned commercial banks created in 1988
- National Bank conducts monetary policy and
regulates banks
24- New private banks have been charted since 1989
- Most of the original state-owned banks have been
privatized - Over 1,500 cooperative banks
- main purpose to make housing loans
25Public Finance
- During socialist period, the most important tax
was the turnover tax - The most important expenditure was SOE subsidies
- 16 of GNP
26- Replaced by capitalist pattern of taxation and
expenditure - Most important taxes at national level are
Value-added tax (VAT) and personal income tax - At local level, the property tax is the major
source of revenue
27Performance
- Overall, one of the most successful transitions
- much more successful than Russias
- Initial collapse relatively short and recovery
strong - Inflation and unemployment has declined
- although recent performance has not been so good
28- Capital inflows exceed outflows
- investor confidence in economy
- credit rating good
- Corruption not a major problem
- Unemployment high
- Inflation high but generally declining
- Entering European Union in 2004
29(No Transcript)
30Â Â 1998 1999 2000 2001Â GDP per head ( at
PPP) 7,970 8,450 8,990 9,280 GDP ( real change
pa) 4.8 4.1 4 1 Government consumption ( of
GDP) 16.37 16.5 16.53 16.59 Budget balance ( of
GDP) -1.01 -0.93 -0.1 -4.6 Consumer prices
(average change) 11.73 7.31 10.14 5.5 Public
debt ( of GDP) 42.89 42.98 39.3 39.9 Labor
costs per hour (USD) 2.01 2.39 2.46 2.8 Recorded
unemployment () 9.98 11.98 14.01 16.22 Current-a
ccount balance/GDP -4.31 -7.45 -6.31 -4.05 Foreig
n-exchange reserves (m) 27,325 26,354 26,562 25
,648 Source The Economist