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EMERGING BULGARIA 2004
PRUDENT POLICY WINS THE DAY
The painful reform programmes are finally beginning
to bear fruit
As 2004 begins, Bulgaria seems in fine macroeconomic
fettle. Economic growth is brisk, inflation low, the
budget balanced, foreign investment at record levels,
debt ratios improving and unemployment though
still high down sharply. True, key privatisation
deals remain stubbornly unfinished, trade and current
account deficits high and living standards low. But
Bulgaria seems set on a smooth course as it moves towards
the European Union membership it hopes to achieve in
2007.
It was not always thus. The first eight years of transition
to a free-market economy were turbulent indeed. Heavily
indebted and unusually geared towards Soviet markets
and subsidies, Bulgaria suffered t umbilical cord was
cut, aggravated by the effects of a debt moratorium
in 1990. Rescheduling was achieved in 1994, but more
woes followed. Over-accommodating banks, unrestructured
state industry and ill-advised growth policies produced
a banking crisis, galloping inflation and the spectacular
crash of both the national currency and the Socialist
government in late 1996.
Its right-of-centre successor, headed by Ivan Kostov,
adopted the draconian stabilisation remedy recommended
by the International Monetary Fund the currency
board arrangement (CBA) to replace the previous
free-floating exchange rate. The CBA fixes a permanent
rate against a selected currency, then guarantees it
by strictly linking money in circulation to the level
of forex reserves held by the central bank, which is
obliged to buy the local currency at that rate. The
rate was Lv1000:DM1 when the currency board was introduced.
This has been maintained since, though redenomination
of the lev in mid-1999 and the Euros replacement
of the Deutschmark mean the rate is now Lv1.95583:Euro
1.
The following years saw stability maintained. Inflation,
restrained but not ruled out by the CBA, fell dramatically,
from 312% and 548% in 1996 and 1997, to 1.6% in 1998
and between 4.8% and 11.3% in 1999-2001. Budget deficits
ran at or under 1% of GDP. GDP itself resumed growth
after a 14.5% decline in 1996-1997, reaching 1995 levels
again in 2001. Extensive privatisation and restructuring
cut back the problematic state industrial sector.
Unemployment rose, however, peaking at 19% in April
2000. Bank lending remained low. And, in popular perceptions
at least, economic growth failed to translate into a
quick enough rise in living standards. This public discontent
in part led to the victory of the new National Movement
for Simeon II (NMSII) in June 2001 elections.
2003 SITUATION: Things have gone fairly well on the
NMSIIs watch. It started unpromisingly after the
September 11,2001, attacks on the United States and
fears of global recession. But GDP grew 4.8% in 2002
and perhaps not much less in 2003. Nine-month growth
in 2003 was 4.2%. A poor harvest sent farm output down
1.9%, but was more than offset by brisk industrial growth
of 7.3%. Most industrial branches shared in this surge,
though food processing, textiles, footwear, wood and
paper, rubber and plastics, electrical machinery, communications
equipment, and furniture production surged more than
the average.
Booming exports explain much of industrys dynamism
in a country heavily export-oriented. They nudged $6.2bn
in the first 10 months of 2003, up 32% on 2002. A weaker
dollar means euro-denominated growth of 11% is less
misleading, but still impressive, coming on the back
of three years of brisk growth. Exports in 2002 rose
an annual 42.1% in dollar terms and 62.4% in Euro terms.
Its also impressive given sluggish growth on world
markets and the dollars depreciation, which should
have affected Bulgarias Euro-linked competitiveness.
That it apparently didnt suggests Bulgarian industry
is competing on something other than low wage costs.
Of commodities, clothing and footwear, metallurgy and
oil products were the biggest exports the first
two on an upswing in 2003. Geographically, EU markets
predominated as usual, with other OECD countries and
fellow Central European Free Trade Assocation (CEFTA)
countries well behind. Sales to once key former Soviet
markets, meanwhile, continued a long slide into insignificance.
If exports rose fast, 10-month imports rose faster,
by 16.4%. This was partly due to investment growth.
Capital goods imports grew somewhat more than
average. But it was also partly a matter of Bulgarians
appetite for foreign consumer goods, imports of which
grew almost as quickly.Nine-month real growth of 3.8%
in retail sales also speaks to a minor consumer boom,
though respective growth rates suggest importers, rather
than local producers, are benefiting most.
Durables are selling especially well, partly on the
strength of consumer credits from banks, whose volume
grew 66% in the first half of 2003 alone. Fast import
growth widened the trade deficit to a record $1.786bn
(fob/fob), 68.6% up on the first 10 months of 2002,
in dollar terms. This in turn pushed up the current
account (C/A) deficit from $222m to $1.043bn, despite
a brisk, record-breaking rise in tourism revenues.
Given normal seasonal patterns, these should translate
into annual deficits of perhaps $2.5bn for trade and
$1.5bn for the C/A high enough to cause concern,
but hardly despair. A C/A deficit around 7.5% of GDP
is not outrageous for a transition country. Bulgarias
forex reserves are high, well above CBA-required levels,
and rising (up Euro918m y-o-y by end-October 2003).
Most importantly. FDI inflows are on the rise, offsetting
the increased C/A deficit.
FDI set another record. At $1.273bn, the 10-month total
FDI already exceeded the previous 12-month high of just
over $1bn in 2000. It was achieved despite the lag in
large privatisation deals only one large sale
figured in the total, DSK banks sale to Hungarys
OTP-and mostly as additional investment by those already
in Bulgaria. Unimpressive by Hungarian or Czech standards,
it is very encouraging by Bulgarian ones and fits with
a rising trend in fixed investment generally. This rose
a real 17.2% in the first three quarters of 2003, following
a 2.5-fold increase between 1997 and 2002. Fixed investment
is still a low 20% of GDP. But things are beginning
to move.
Striking, too, is the recent drop in unemployment.
The November-registered total was 490,000 or 13.2%,
down from 16.9% a year earlier, thanks to an economic
upturn and determined job-creation schemes. True, 13.2%
is still high. And some estimates put the rate of those
unemployed for one year or longer at some 54%.
It is also important that none of this has been achieved
at the cost of high budget deficits or serious inflation.
In fact, 2003 is likely to have seen a zero deficit,
with an original target equivalent to 0.7% of GDP, brought
down to rein in the burgeoning C/A gap. The ability
to do so derived from revenue over-shoot rather than
spending cuts, admittedly, but is still impressive,
especially in a local election year. As for inflation,
Novembers was a manageable 5% y-o-y, with higher
farm prices and administered price-hikes explaining
most of it.
REFORM AND RESTRUCTURING: Reform progress has been
considerable. Around two-thirds of state assets were
denationalised under Kostov (albeit with too much emphasis
on management buyouts and second-rate investors,for
some tastes). Prime Minister Simeon Saxe-Coburg was
left with politically trickier sales, like telecoms
company BTC and tobacco giant Bulgartabac, neither of
which have yet been concluded. The last two banks in
state hands have been sold, however, while the stock-exchange
privatisation of many state-owned enterprises
(SOEs) with minority packages is at last proceeding.
A major energy privatisation drive was launched in late
2003, when the countrys seven power-distribution
companies were put on sale and a liberalising energy
law was passed in December.
The government has made a series of painful houshold
energy price hikes designed to eliminate wasteful cross-subsidies,
the last scheduled for mid-2004 . Financial sector reform
was essentially accomplished by the destructive crisis
of 1996-1997, CBA discipline and tough supervision,
and the sale of all surviving state-owned banks to foreign
buyers. Real sector privatisation and closures under
Kostov mean the problem of black holes
large loss-making, heavily indebted SOEs-is confined
to the railways and one defence producer.
The IMF and World Bank have been central to the reform
process since the early 1990s, exerting pressure, which
explains much of the progress since 1997. Ample forex
reserves and the growing ability to tap international
markets make multilateral cash much less necessary to
Bulgaria than it used to be. The two-year IMF stand-by
agreement to be negotiated in early 2004, in fact, will
be precautionary; any disbursement of IMF
funds will only occur if deemed necessary. With multilateral
approval still important for market and investor perceptions,
however, the government appears anxious to keep that
approval. A left-wing successor might be yet more anxious.
Despite periodic tensions, IMF approval has generally
been forthcoming at least after 1997, when Bulgaria
swapped delinquent for model pupil status.
The country is now completing a two-year $300m IMF stand-by
agreement.
There have been no serious tiffs lately, but IMF concerns
about the C/A and credit growth led, respectively, to
fiscal tightening and strengthened credit supervision.
The IMF has, however, been relaxed over proposals to
use reserve funds for infrastructure projects and a
target 2004 budget deficit of 0.7% (the IMF had wanted
0.5%).
The central World Bank agreement at Present is for
a three-year, three-tranche $450m Programmatic Adjustment
Loan (PAL). The first year concentrated on growth, employment
and poverty reduction, and the second year centred on
public administration, the judiciary and anti-corruption
initiatives.
The final year will focus on human capital and the
improved delivery of social services, while other World
Bank agreements concern areas such as energy efficiency,
forest strategy and secondary roads. Like the IMF, the
World Bank has generally been appreciative recently,
but stresses the need to solve the Bulgartabac question
before the second PAL tranche is disbursed. Pressure
to rationalise the state railways has been in evidence
from both the World Bank and the IMF.
Rating agencies are fairly impressed as well. Currently,
Bulgaria is rated at BB+(outlook stable) by Standard
& Poors, Ba2 (outlook stable) by Moodys
Investor Services and BB+(outlook positive) by Fitch..
These ratings are nudging the investment-grade status
that has already been granted by Japans JCRA.
Between them, the four rating agencies gave Bulgaria
no less than 10 upgrades in the governments first
two years. Small wonder, since the countrys debt
position is pretty solid. Total debt represented around
80% of GDP at end-2000, but only around 55% at end-2003
(partly because the CBA has meant a rapidly rising nominal
GDP). The fiscal reserve of forex in excess
of CBA requirements designed to reassure creditors
of debt-service capabilities stands at around
double the intended reassurance level, and some of it
is likely to be used for debt reduction in 2004.
MOVING TOWARDS EUROPE: EU membership aspirations have
been central to policy since early transition. A Europe
Agreement came into force in 1995; formal membership
negotiations started in 2000. Unlike its second
wave colleague Romania, Bulgaria has received
recognition (in late 2002) as a functioning market
economy, and talks have gone quite swiftly. By
end-2003, Bulgaria had opened 30 of 31 negotiating chapters
and provisionally closed 26 (compared to Romanias
22). Those still open are: finance/budget, regional
policy, competition and agriculture (the miscellaneous
other chapter remains unopened). Bulgaria
hopes for membership at the start of 2007, a hope reinforced
by a statement of the Brussels meeting of EU government
heads in December 2003, which supported accession by
Bulgaria and Romania in January 2007 if they are
ready, called for completion of their negotiations
in 2004 and the signing of an accession treaty in 2005,
and urged the European Commission to provide at the
beginning of 2004 the financial framework needed for
talks on the remaining chapters.
This was as favourable a statement as could reasonably
have been expected, but some doubts remain. One concerns
Bulgarias bracketing with Romania, which might
entail delays. So might greater-than-expected difficulties
in assimilating the 10 countries acceding in May 2004
or general wrangling over the EU constitution.
Bulgarias nuclear power station at Kozloduy could
also pose a problem: Brussels is adamant that Units
3 and 4 should be shut down at end-2006 on safety grounds.
The government effectively conceded to the demand by
closing the Energy Chapter in September 2002, an unpopular
decision whose legality has been questioned. If domestic
pressure led to the chapters reopening, the accession
process could be disrupted.
Meanwhile, even a favourable scenario involves much
pre-accession work. The Brussels declaration included
a familiar to-do list, including judicial
reform, further struggle against corruption, respect
for human rights and minority protection (a reference
to Bulgarias Roma minority), and development of
the administrative capacity needed to apply the EUs
acquis communautaire in agriculture, senvironment and
regional policy. As European Enlargement Commissioner
Guenther Verheugens summer ultimatum shows, EU
officials have not hesitated to chivvy Bulgaria along
in areas where it lags.
The declaration also called for the development of
a capacity to manage pre-accession funds. It has a point:
around Euro1.2bn worth of aid will be available between
2004 and 2006 under PHARE and the agricultural and infrastructure
SAPARD and ISPA programmes. Shortcomings in using it
are already prompting
intensive finger pointing within the coalition.
PROBLEMS, PROBLEMS: A generally positive assessment
should not give the impression that Bulgaria lacks problems.
It has plenty. For instance, living standards may be
rising, but they are on average still pitifully low.
The figures of the National Statistical Institute imply
household consumption growth of around 15% since 2000
and almost 35% since the annus horribilis of 1997. But
the average monthly salary in the third quarter of 2003,
according to official statistics, was Lv282, a paltry
Euro 144. A thriving grey economy means the actual figure
may be 50-70% higher, but that still represents no great
wealth.
Another example is corruption. Sociological surveys
and international comparisons suggest that the level
of corruption in Bulgaria has declined very significantly
over the last six years or so and that the country does
not compare unfavourably with central European states
like Poland and Hungary. Yet a recent survey by the
anti-corruption non-governmental organisation Coalition
2000 revealed that 53% of firms saw corruption as the
main problem facing business.
Then theres healthcare. Bulgaria started the
move from a communist-era health system to an insurance-based
one more than four years ago, and the transition has
been reasonably successful in the sphere of primary
healthcare. Restructuring has been slow in the hospital
sector, however, and the situation in provincial hospitals
is one of shortages and financial muddle. Drug reimbursement
is also chronically underfunded, with large emergency
subventions regularly required to set the books straight,
despite a restricted entitlements budget.
Examples might be multiplied. Bulgaria is making progress,
but theres some way to go before the picture becomes
rosy.
OUTLOOK: The budget for 2004 is optimistic in assumption
and expansionist in substance. Faster GDP growth of
5.3% is assumed, along with somewhat lower inflation
of 4% and a C/A deficit of 6.2%, considerably under
the likely 2003 out-turn. While a consolidated budget
deficit of Lv237m(0.7%) is targeted, off-budget expenditures
of almost Lv900m in highways, forestry, agriculture
and environment arguably bring the effective deficit
up to 3.05% of GDP . Discussions with the IMF produced
plans to hold back if the C/A deficit looked like it
was getting out of control.
Whether these pledges can hold in a pre-election year
and under serious pressure from the Movement for Rights
and Freedom (MRF) party is an interesting question.
Economic risk factors exist too. Such a high growth
rate perhaps presupposes an international environment
more favourable and Bulgarian industry more competitive
than may prove to be the case.
Whatever the precise figures, theres little reason
to doubt that Bulgaria will continue to perform impressively.
The encouraging FDI total for 2003 is unlikely to be
a one off. It shows increasing confidence in the Balkan
nation from the investors best placed to judge-those
already in place.
It also shows what is possible even while big privatisations
stall and energy investments has yet to start in earnest.
Most likely 2004 will see substantial progress in both
respects. Similarly, Bulgarian exporters performance
in the context of a sluggish international economy and
an over-strong Euro suggests competitiveness is already
improving. Investment, foreign and otherwise, will improve
it further.
Finally, rising imports of consumer goods and consumer
credit volumes are not just a source of current account
embarrassment. They are also a sign Bulgaria is beginning
to address a long-standing foreign investor complaint:
the absence of a buoyant local market. True, not all
of the population is enjoying the effects of that buoyancy.
True also, Bulgarians a pessimistic lot
may not recognise improvement as soon as they see it.
But its a start. As long as stability is preserved,
things can only get better.
| Macroeconomic
indicators |
| |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
| GDP (current prices) (Lvm) |
22,421 |
23,790 |
26,753 |
29,709 |
32,324 |
33,900 |
35,800 |
| GDP (current prices)($bn) |
12.7 |
13.0 |
12.6 |
13.6 |
15.6 |
20.3 |
22.9 |
| GDP(current prices)(Eurobn) |
11.46 |
12.16 |
13.68 |
15.19 |
16.53 |
17.33 |
18.30 |
| GDP growth (real)(%) |
4.0 |
2.3 |
5.4 |
4.1 |
4.8 |
4.3 |
5.5 |
| Population(m) |
8.22 |
8.16 |
8.10 |
8.03 |
7.96 |
7.90 |
7.84 |
| GDP per capita (Euro) |
1,394 |
1,490 |
1,689 |
1,891 |
2.075 |
1,194 |
2,335 |
| Inflation(avg.of period)(%) |
18.7 |
2.6 |
10.3 |
7.4 |
5.8 |
2.1 |
3.4 |
| Exports($m) |
4,194 |
4,006 |
4,825 |
5,113 |
5,692 |
6,333 |
7,059 |
| Imports ($m) |
-4,574 |
-5,087 |
-6,000 |
-6,693 |
-7,287 |
-8,049 |
-8,748 |
| Trade balance ($m) |
-381 |
-1,081 |
-1,176 |
-1,580 |
-1,594 |
-1,716 |
-1,689 |
| Foreign direct investment($m) |
620 |
819 |
1,001 |
812 |
482 |
864 |
911 |
| Foreign exchange reserves
($m) |
2,608 |
2,765 |
3,027 |
3,247 |
4,361 |
5,961 |
5,531 |
| Foreign debt($bn) |
10.89 |
10.91 |
11.20 |
10.63 |
10.55 |
10.78 |
11.34 |
| Foreign debt as % of GDP |
85.5 |
84.2 |
88.9 |
78.1 |
67.8 |
53.2 |
49.4 |
| Base interest rates(effective)(%) |
5.1 |
4.5 |
4.7 |
4.8 |
3.4 |
2.6 |
2.8 |
| Exchange rate ($)(avg.) |
1.760 |
1.836 |
2.123 |
2.185 |
2.077 |
1.673 |
1.560 |
| Exchange rate(Euro)(avg.) |
1.956
|
1.956 |
1.956 |
1.956 |
1.956 |
1.956 |
1.956 |
| Source : IMF,
OBG Research, 2004 |
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