Slovak Republic--Joining the EU : A Development Policy Review
The Slovak Republic's external current account and fiscal deficits (net of privatization receipts) are unsustainably high (at about 8 percent of GDP in 2002), despite some recent declines. With a capital account surplus of perhaps 20 percent o...
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Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/06/2492170/slovak-republic-joining-eu-development-policy-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14629 |
Summary: | The Slovak Republic's external
current account and fiscal deficits (net of privatization
receipts) are unsustainably high (at about 8 percent of GDP
in 2002), despite some recent declines. With a capital
account surplus of perhaps 20 percent of GDP this year, the
Slovak Republic may not find it particularly difficult to
finance these deficits, but this favorable situation will
not last. Furthermore, through its impact on the real
exchange rate, this policy mix is undermining the
employability of large segments of the population
(particularly those with low skill levels) and will
ultimately choke growth (projected at 4 percent for 2002).
While much policy attention has gone to stimulating
investment, future growth will also depend on raising the
employment rate, currently one of the lowest among the
Central and East European Countries (CEECs). This report
lays out the broad thrust of a policy strategy to bolster
the recovery and bring the economy towards convergence with
the EU. This strategy consists of three key elements: (a)
Continued trade, finance, and enterprise reform to complete
the structural transformation of the economy and align it
with the EU framework (b) Fiscal consolidation, focusing on
cutting back expenditure and stabilizing revenues, while
redirecting revenue and expenditure policies to become more
fully supportive of growth and employment objectives (c)
Labor market reform, directed at enhancing labor market
flexibility by relaxing legal provisions on working
arrangements (such as part-time work, self-employment, and
fixed term contracts), by decentralizing collective
bargaining, and discarding the minimum wage as an instrument
of incomes policy, and by reforming the social assistance
system. The ultimate success of the policy reforms outlined
in this report will depend to a great extent on the
government's capacity to strengthen the institutional
framework in which those policies are conceived, decided
upon, and executed. Three priorities have been highlighted:
(i) the reform of public expenditure management systems and
practices needed to support a growth-oriented fiscal
strategy; (ii) the consolidation of the recent
decentralization moves as a prerequisite for further
devolution, and (iii) a much overdue overhaul of the
judiciary system. |
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