Population 38.233 million
GDP 470.354 US$ billion
@rating
country
Business climate
assessment
| 2010 | 2011 | 2012(e) | 2013(f) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
GDP growth (%)
|
3.9 |
4.3 |
2.5 |
1.3 |
|
Inflation (yearly average) (%)
|
2.7 |
4.2 |
3.8 |
2.6 |
|
Budget balance (% GDP)
|
-7.8 |
-5.2 |
-3.5 |
-4.0 |
|
Current account balance (% GDP)
|
-4.7 |
-4.3 |
-3.8 |
-3.6 |
|
Public debt (% GDP)
|
54.9 |
56.4 |
55.1 |
55.3 |
| (e) Estimate (f) Forecast | ||||
STRENGTHS
- Attractiveness for foreign direct investment strengthened by the size of the domestic market
- Diversified economy
- European structural funds take-up rate the highest in emerging Europe
WEAKNESSES
- Insufficient investment rate
- Big regional disparities
- High level of household debt in foreign currency
Risk assessment
Growth will slow in 2013
After recording the strongest growth in the EU in 2011, the economy slowed sharply in 2012. One of the main reasons is the decline in investment. The sharp European slowdown, combined with a set of government measures intended to reduce the public deficit has strongly affected the economy. Private consumption has been hit by the fall in household confidence, by the deterioration in the labour market (13% unemployment) and by the freezing of civil service salaries. Moreover, inflation reached 3.8%, which contributed to depress domestic demand. In 2013, the government will support growth through investment and a targeted stimulus policy. A €52 billion support scheme spread over 3 years (8% of GDP) was approved at the end of 2012. Investment will be boosted by €10 billion of spending on road and rail infrastructures and by a €10 billion capitalisation of the national bank to support the demand for projects (1.6% of GDP). Meanwhile, the government is making armament a priority. Poland is thus the only European country increasing its defence budget in 2013 (+7%). Donald Tusk hopes to boost employment through this sector. In addition, as a result of the austerity measures in place, the current account deficit fell in 2012. In 2013 European activity will remain sluggish. Consequently, the volume of Polish exports, largely directed towards Germany (30% of exports) is expected sluggish. As to imports, Poland renegotiated the price of gas from Russia (90% of gas imports) and obtained 15% reduction, or about 1 billion dollars. The impact of foreign trade on GDP is, however, limited because of the lack of commercial openness compared with other central European countries. As in the second half-year 2012, inflation is expected to decrease in 2013 in connection with the fall in the oil price.
In response to the observed slowdown, the Polish authorities are loosening their monetary policy. For the first time since 2009 and after having even raised the key rate by 0.25 basis points early in 2012, the authorities began to soften their monetary policy in November 2012 by 0.25 basis points. If, as in 2012, the zloty does not depreciate against the euro, the Central Bank will adjust its key rate (by 0.5 basis points) to 4% in 2013 to support private consumption, which represents 50% of GDP. The government has set itself the objective of increasing consumption by 5% of GDP. The governor of the central bank has, moreover, undertaken to reduce interest rates in the event of an economic slowdown. In 2012, the construction sector suffered from a slowdown in investment and a decline in household confidence. The multiplicity of players has weakened the sector, which will benefit in 2013 from public investment support.
Public finances improving
The Public Finance Development and Consolidation Plan drawn up by the government in order to be compliant with Maastricht criteria from 2013 will be continued. The public deficit is expected to be slightly higher than that of 2012, because of the public spending measures to stimulate the economy. The increase in this spending, estimated at 1.9% of GDP, will be offset by a rise in revenues linked to the recovery of consumption. Moreover, Donald Tusk has announced numerous privatisations in key economic sectors such as banks (PKO Bank) and energy (ZE Pak, Lotos). Public debt is expected to stabilise, as a result, at about 55% of GDP. However, it is vulnerable to investors’ risk aversion as a large proportion of the debt is held by non-residents. Furthermore, foreign direct investment flows will suffer from European sluggishness meaning that the current account deficit will not be fully funded. However, Poland has the best European structural fund take-up rate, although as the main beneficiary country it could see a cut in the flow of structural funds, as France and Germany want to reduce their contributions. The Polish banking system seems relatively robust with capitalisation ratios in excess of the Basel III minimum. However, the subsidiaries of foreign banks (BNP, Uni Crédit, Citi, Deutsche bank), whose head offices are mostly located in the eurozone, represent two thirds of the banking sector, which weakens the financing of the economy. Nevertheless, there was no marked deleveraging by European banks in 2012 with regard to Poland. The banks remain strongly exposed to exchange rate risk, foreign currency loans to household amounting to 14% of GDP.
A fairly stable political context
The autumn 2010 presidential election brought Bronislaw Komorowski to the presidency. The Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, leads a coalition between his centre-right party (PO), in power since October 2007, and the Polish People’s Party (PSA). The general elections of 9 October 2011 confirmed the coalition’s position. The government’s action has contributed greatly to improving the Polish business environment, although the Prime Minister, was slow to become aware of the effects of the European crisis on the Polish economy. The latest opinion polls show growing popular discontent with the current policies of fiscal austerity. The radicalisation of the opposition parties and the rising unemployment rate could result in social unrest and violent protests. Moreover, wealth gaps are increasing rapidly, notably between the east and the west of the country.



