Title: Reflections on 20 years of transition in Eastern Europe
 1Reflections on 20 years of transition in Eastern 
Europe
- Milica Uvalic 
- University of Perugia 
- Conference  Europe 20 Years of Transition 
- Vienna, 15-17 September 2010 
2Issues
- 20 years of transition in post-communist 
 countries in Eastern Europe
- 1. The transition to a market economy 
- 2. The models flaws 20 years later 
- 3. Present challenges 
31. Transition in Eastern Europe
- November 1989 (fall of Berlin Wall) 
- ? Transition to a market economy and multiparty 
 democracy in Eastern Europe (EE)
- Unprecedented experiment radical changes of 
 systemic features of EE economies ?creation of
 capitalism by design!
- The typical transition model followed the main 
 prescriptions of the Washington consensus
 (based on experience from Latin America in the
 1980s)
-  ? Liberalization, Stabilization, 
 Privatization
-  Peak of Reaganite and Thatcherite ideology 
-  
4Transition in Eastern Europe
- Transition required various measures in parallel 
- (1) Macroeconomic stabilisation liberalisation 
 of prices  foreign trade
- (2)Microeconomic reforms rapid privatization, 
 microeconomic restructuring, reduction of
 subsidies (hard budget constraints)
- (3)Institutional reforms banking and financial 
 sector, creation of capital and labour markets,
 radical fiscal reforms
- Results? Reality very different from initial 
 expectations (generally too optimistic)
5Transition in Eastern Europe
- Transformational recession in early 1990s ? Very 
 severe and prolonged recession, fall in GDP of
 18-80, even more of industrial production...
 Economic recovery delayed, only in Poland and
 Slovenia in 1992-3...
- Causes? Partly due to economic/trade 
 disintegration (CMEA, USSR, CSSR, Yugoslavia) ?
 today 29 countries in the EE region (instead of
 9)
- Systemic vacuum passage from a centralized 
 administrative system to new market institutions
 ?disorganization and chaos
- But also wrong economic policies ? the 
 hyper-liberal model
- Overshooting of stabilization programs overly 
 restrictive monetary  fiscal policies
- Too rapid trade opening, frequently revoked and 
 therefore premature
- Much faster capital liberalisation than in 
 post-second World War Europe
- Speedy privatization, without changes in 
 corporate governance
- Non-progressive taxation of companies and 
 households, as witnessed by the widespread
 introduction of the flat tax
6Transition in Eastern Europe 
- We dispose of an ample literature on what 
 happened in EE in the 1990s, but the assessments
 greatly differ
- Today, many EE considered normal capitalist 
 economies (?)
- In the meantime, good policies have been 
 applied also in countries that were late
 reformers (e.g. the Balkans)
- Economic reforms institutional convergence 
 towards the ideal model of a market economy
 (EBRD transition indicators)
- Many lessons not learnt from the experience 
 gained in the 1990s ?prescriptions for the
 latecomers very similar to those in the early
 1990s
- Gradual integration with EU trade, FDI, banking 
 and finance
- 2004  2007 EU enlargement 10 EE countries, 
 Balkans on their way...
- Increasing FDI throughout the region after 2000, 
 not only in Central Eastern Europe (as in the
 1990s)
7Foreign Direct Investment (2001-08) 
 8Transition in Eastern Europe
- Yet in many countries the Washington consensus 
 has failed to fulfil expectations of growth,
 development  increased welfare
- Social costs of transition greatly 
 underestimated it was assumed that social policy
 and the welfare state are a luxury that must be
 sacrificed for the sake of transformation ? many
 negative consequences
- Jobless growth emergence (and persistence) of 
 very high unemployment, particularly in the
 Balkans (40 - Macedonia, Kosovo)
- Social differentiation, increasing poverty (esp. 
 in Russia, CIS countries)
- A particularly flexible labour market, with weak 
 trade unions and scarce diffusion of collective
 bargaining (with very few exceptions)
- Inadequate systems of taxation (flat-tax rate) 
- High popular dissatisfaction EBRD Life in 
 Transition (2007) only 30 of respondents from
 transition region, on average, consider their
 households today are better off than before 1989
9Transition in Eastern Europe
- Institution building much slower than expected 
- Informal economy (and informal institutions) 
 remain important in many countries, rule of law
 still not in place, widespread corruption, weak
 judiciary
- Slow catching up after the deep GDP fall in the 
 early 1990s and subsequent reversals in growth
- Ten years later, only Poland and Slovenia had 
 attained the levels of GDP they enjoyed in 1989
- By 2008, Poland had reached 178 of its 1989 GDP, 
 Slovak Republic 164, Czech Republic 142,
 Hungary 136
- But Russia only 108, and similarly the Balkans ? 
 by 2008, three countries had still not reached
 their 1989 level of GDP (Bosnia, Montenegro,
 Serbia)
10Real GDP growth in the Balkans, 1989-2008 (1989 
100) 
 112. The models flaws 20 years later
- In 2007-08, average GDP growth in the transition 
 region was still high, only in last quarter of
 2008 was there a drastic deterioration of main
 indicators
- In late 2008, EE was severely effected by the 
 global economic crisis, hit by two external
 shocks
- Financial sector sharp reduction in foreign 
 capital inflows (FDI, remittances, foreign loans)
- Real sector reduced demand for exports on 
 EU/global markets
- Since early 2009, forecasts for 2009 have been 
 changing continuously, from positive to highly
 negative growth rates (exc. Albania, Poland)
- 2010 Recovery on its way but not in all 
 countries  growth sluggish, 50-90 lower than in
 2008
12Real GDP in 2010 (EBRD July 2010) 
 13The models flaws 
- Eastern Europe among the most severely hit 
 regions!
- The global economic crisis revealed many 
 structural weaknesses of EE economies
- Factors of vulnerability of EE countries 
- Huge external imbalances, for years covered by 
 massive foreign capital inflows (foreign loans,
 FDI, official assistance, workers remittances)
- High dependence on trade with EU (more than many 
 old EU member states) ?vulnerable to
 deteriorating conditions in EU
- Banking and financial sector characteristics 
14Current account deficits (Oct. 2008)( of GDP) 
 15Gross external debt (2008) ( of GDP) 
 16The models flaws 
- Characteristics of the banking and financial 
 system
- Privatization of banks in EE ?sales to foreign 
 (EU) banks, 75-98 of banking assets in EE are in
 foreign ownership (Slovenia the only exception)
- Foreign banks lending policies of easy credit ? 
 credit boom, increased lending to private sector,
 many loans in foreign currency
- Credit boom was followed by credit crunch 
 ?foreign banks vulnerable to deteriorating
 conditions in home countries, reduced credit to
 local clients
- 2008-09 Depreciation of national currencies in 
 EE causing many credit defaults, increase in
 non-performing loans
- Liberalization of financial markets has also 
 greatly stimulated cross-border borrowing
 directly from banks abroad
173. Present challenges
- Global 2008-09 crisis ? a new course in developed 
 market economies return to protectionism, state
 intervention, expansionary fiscal policies, more
 regulation
- In EE Which growth model for the future? 
- Transition-related economic reforms ? 
 hyper-liberal model (fast trade opening, free
 capital inflows, weak social protection...)
- Should EE countries also return to more state 
 intervention, undoing what was done during the
 last 20 years?
- Partly ...yes! More active government policies 
 necessary in several important areas
18Present challenges...
- Global crisis? the fragility of EE economies due 
 to the model of credit-driven growth and
 resulting dependence on foreign capital
- Global crisis ? more general flaws of the 
 transition strategy, since many problems were
 becoming unsustainable
- Consumption much higher than production, financed 
 by foreign savings  investment (increasing trade
 and current account deficits)
- High unemployment, limited restructuring, slow 
 growth of new private sector, mounting social
 problems
- Inadequate structural changes, favouring the fast 
 expansion of primarily services linked to
- Structure of FDI frequently not in industry, but 
 in services (banking, telecommunications, real
 estate), therefore in non-tradables, not
 facilitating industrial restructuring, export-led
 growth, East-West industrial integration
19Present challenges...
- Today need to change the target model of the 
 hyper-liberal market economy
- In 2009, the best transition results (EBRD score 
 4) were attained in Estonia and Hungary, among
 the most severely hit by the global crisis!
- Changes in which direction? Further integration  
 certainly not autarchy - but prudently
- Trade liberalization not necessarily in all 
 sectors (e.g. agriculture)
- Financial liberalization too fast, ought to be 
 in line with development of financial markets (as
 in Western Europe)
- Improve the quality of government institutions to 
 enforce laws, collect taxes, supervise the
 financial sector ...
- Introduce a levy on the financial sector? 
 Probably justified, but since most banks are
 foreign owned, there is no direct political power
 to effectively negotiate a tax ?EU coordination
 is critical!
20Present challenges...
- Industrial policy to promote investment, 
 encourage innovation, quality standards, enhance
 competitiveness (in line with the current EU
 approach to industrial policy)
- Despite remaining privatization opportunities, EE 
 cannot count much on FDI over the coming years,
 need to rely much more on own resources
- More effective employment policy, more elements 
 of the European Social Model which was not
 seriously considered by the EE countries (not
 part of the Acquis)?so the model was diluted by
 the 2004/07 entry of New Member States
- How to strengthen trade unions and social 
 dialogue? Many lessons from the old EU member
 state
- Increasing labour flexibility (Germany, France, 
 Italy) has led not to greater international
 competitiveness, but to higher profit margins
- Strong East-West interdependence EE countries 
 cannot solve current problems by themselves, as
 they are strongly integrated with the EU/global
 economy!
- ? Necessitates coordinated action...