witold m.orłowski

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Bridging the development gap between two parts of Europe European Economic Congress Opportunities of Change Witold M.Orłowski

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Witold M.Orłowski. B ridging the development gap between two parts o f Europe European Economic Congress Opportunities of Change. (1): „East was always poor and underdeveloped...” (2): „Nothing works in the East...” (3): „Enlargement is an unprecedente d sacrifice of the West...” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Witold M.Orłowski

Bridging the development gap between two parts of Europe

European Economic Congress

Opportunities of Change

Witold M.Orłowski

Page 2: Witold M.Orłowski

Clichés

(1): „East was always poor and underdeveloped...”

(2): „Nothing works in the East...”

(3): „Enlargement is an unprecedented sacrifice of the West...”

(4): „Costs will be huge, gains marginal (effects have already appeared)...”

(5): ..........

Page 3: Witold M.Orłowski

Information Deficit

In Poland there exists...

-80%

-60%

-40%

-20%

0%

20%

40%

60%

Frenchmen Germans Spaniards

Democracy

and rule of law

I a

gree

Low bureaucracy

and corruption

Functioningmarket

economy

FastEconomic

growth

I di

sagr

ee

Page 4: Witold M.Orłowski

Źródło: OECD

UE-15

370 mn

Population of Europe

CEEC-10

110 mn

SLAV-3

210 mn

Page 5: Witold M.Orłowski

Źródło: OECD

UE-15 Polska

Rosja

GDP adjusted for purchasing power

Page 6: Witold M.Orłowski

Lower development levelGDP per capita, 2000 (Germany=100)

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

Germany

Italy

Spain

Portugal

Czech Republic

Hungary

Poland

Romania

Page 7: Witold M.Orłowski

GDP per capita, 1929 (Germany=100)

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

Germany

Italy

Spain

Portugal

Czech Republic

Hungary

Poland

Romania Poland in frontiers from 2000

Not always the case...

Page 8: Witold M.Orłowski

What CE Europe Wants: convergence, not eternal assistance

GDP p.c. in CEEC and EU

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000

EU-15

EU poorest (Greece)

CEEC-10

Page 9: Witold M.Orłowski

CEEC Membership: the fears

0%

25%

50%

75%

Budgetarycosts

Migra-tions

Institutionalproblems

Agriculture Crime

Frenchmen Germans Spaniards

%

Page 10: Witold M.Orłowski

Some Clichés about Enlargement

Small benefits for the EU, huge costs

Uncontrollable budgetary costs

Adjustment burden on the EU-15 frontier countries

Big losses for the current EU poor regions

Migrations, labour market mismatch

Unprecedented problems of agriculture

Huge costs for CAP

Page 11: Witold M.Orłowski

Passive Approach

There are some rationale for fears, but:Scale exaggerated

No verification

Misunderstandings (e.g. Globalization-Enlargement)

Passive Approach to Enlargement (how to „divide” instead of how to „multiply”)

Page 12: Witold M.Orłowski

Example: Costs and Benefits

Costs under control

Misunderstanding about the scale

Benefits: not just static welfare gains due to the trade effects. Investment!

Time pattern: investment (costs first, benefits later)

Page 13: Witold M.Orłowski

Example: Costs and Benefits

Costs and benefits in 2014, billion

-40.0

-20.0

0.0

20.0

40.0

60.0

80.0

100.0

EU-15:privatesector

BenefitsCostsNet gains

EU-15:publicsector

EU budget

New members (budgetaryeffects only)

C

Page 14: Witold M.Orłowski

Example: migrations

Fears exaggerated, as:Based on experience from the past

Underestimate the progress

Underestimate EU experience

Migration smaller than expected

Good for the EU-15 labour markets

Some regional problems possible

Page 15: Witold M.Orłowski

Example: migrations Wage as % of the wage in Germany

0.0

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000

Poland

Czech R.

Romania

Bulgaria

Page 16: Witold M.Orłowski

Real convergence

Long-term process

50 years divergence – 50 years convergence?

Common interest: economic, social, political

Rio Grande problem: Oder? Bug?

Page 17: Witold M.Orłowski

Real convergence possible, but:

Concluding transition

Right policies

Investment in human capital

Knowledge-based economy

Exploring comparative advantages

Supporting entrepreneurship

Market-friendly environment

Flexibility

Page 18: Witold M.Orłowski

Investment in human capital

Market-friendly environment