Transcript Document
UNCTAD Training course on key issues on the international
economic agenda, Belgrade, 18-21 September 2006
Foreign Trade and institutional
changes of countries in transition,
the experience of Serbia
Prof. Danica Popović
Faculty of Economics and CLDS
[email protected]
1
Topic One: Where are we today?
7/8/2015
2
Champions from below...
Real GDP Percentage Change Index (1989 = Base), 1989-2004
Poland
EU
Slovenia
Hungary
Slovak
Czech R
Romania
Croatia
Bulgaria
Russia
Serbia
140
120
100
80
60
40
19
89
19
1
90 991
19
92
19
93
19
1
94 995
19
96
19
97
19
1
98 999
20
00
20
01
20
2
02 003
20
04
Mind the gap ...
$ bn
Serbia: exports, imports and foreign trade deficit, 19652005.
7/8/2015
11
9
7
5
3
1
-1
-3
-5
-7
-9
1965
imports
exports
resource gap
resource gap
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
4
7/8/2015
5
Trade and industrial output
7/8/2015
6
Debt crisis knocking on our door?
miliona USD
Public debt repayments, 2001-2010.
297
675
2004
656
745
1076
815
897
960
1065
interest
principal
2182
2609
2754
1034
1658
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2001
2002
218
2003
total
107
183
451
972
1732
1779
2473
3079
3569
3819
interest
74
140
233
297
656
745
815
897
960
1065
principal
33
43
218
675
1076
1034
1658
2182
2609
2754
0
7/8/2015
Izvor: MMF, na dan 31.12 04. Iznos zavise od vrednosti kursa USD
7
WHAT DO WE EXPORT
7/8/2015
8
WHAT THE SANCTIONS DID TO US
Table 2.1.2
DEGREE OF OPENNESS
(export and import of goods divided by GDP)
%
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999*
EXPORT SHARE
10.0
12.2
14.8
15.5
9.9
IMPORT SHARE
17.4
25.0
26.6
26.2
21.8
EX&IM
27.5
OF GOODS / GDP
37.2
41.3
41.7
31.7
FSO, estimated; without data for Kosovo and Metohia.
7/8/2015
9
EXPORTS AND IMPORTS SHARE IN GDP, 2005.
100
90
80
78
82
79 78
68 65
70
60
68
65
62
prirast
u 2004-5
54
48
50
39
40
30
16
20
uvoz
izvoz
10
7/8/2015
0
10
Belgija
Slovačka Mađarska Češka rep Bugarska
Srbija
“Extenuating” circumstances for
Serbian government
The sanction
The Hague tribunal
Kosovo
Montenegro
7/8/2015
Since 2000 e ach republic established its own tariff structures
(slashing and streamlining rates), causing some confusion in
trade between the two republics.
The average tariff rate assessed on imported goods was 9
percent in Serbia and 4 percent in Montenegro.
In August 2003, the two republics agreed to an Internal
Market and Trade Action Plan on harmonizing tariffs and excise
taxes to create a single market.
Harmonization has been achieved on 93 percent of products,
resulting in an average (outweighed) tariff rate of 7 percent.
Following the September 2004 EU decision to provide a “dualtrack” for SAM accession the rates for 56 agricultural products
tol be undetermined separately by each republic.
11
IMPORT STRUCTURE
7/8/2015
12
WHY DO IMORTS RISE SO MUCH?
Consumer goods - a consequence of the rise in
aggregate demand and the lack of high-quality (and
in some cases of any) domestic supply
TV sets rose from $1.8 to $32 MIL,
Air-conditioners from around $5 to $29.5 mil
Washing machines from around $2.2 to $15 million
Deep freezes from around $1.4 to nearly $11 million
Stoves from $0.5 to around $9 million
7/8/2015
13
THE EXCHANGE RATE POLICY
Floating – depreciation
Winners: exporters and future workers
Loosers: importers, pensioners, workers
with fixed earnings
In order to be effective and boost
exports, depreciation must be hihger
than the inflation rate
7/8/2015
14
The Real Exchange Rate
7/8/2015
15
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
EXPORT-DRIVEN
DEMAND-DRIVEN GROWTH?
WAGES
TARIFFS
FDI
CHOICE OF ANOTHER STRATEGY
Therefore, one has to apply a completely
different strategy of economic growth, which will
be driven by exports, instead by domestic
demand, and the only precondition for such a
turnaround is to bring wages in line with labor
productivity.
7/8/2015
16
WAGES AND INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT
7/8/2015
17
ELSWHERE, WAGES GROW
SLOWER THAN GDP
7/8/2015
18
EXPORTS – HUNGARY and Serbia
40% of exports with 70.000
employees in 10 firms
1.
Philips
Magyarorsag
2. Nokia komarom
3. GE Hungary
4. Samsung
Electronics
5. Electrolux
6. Siemens
nemzeti
7. Videoton
8. Sony Hungaria
9. Sanyo Hungary
10. Ericson
Magyarorsag
7/8/2015
19
Trade by destination and origin
7/8/2015
20
The choice of foreign trade policy
Korean
European model
If you choose FDIs protection is
questoinable policy
Why should we protect the best world
players
What is protection?
7/8/2015
21
Trade by countries
7/8/2015
22
7/8/2015
23
Export and import growth
Export growth in the first half of 2006 over the
same period in 2005 stood at 18.9 percent (24
percent when calculated in the euro),
Import grew in the same period by 23.6 percent
(28.9 percent when expressed in the euro).
The more rapid rise in import over export
resulted in a higher foreign trade deficit in
Serbia of 27.5 percent (32.8 percent when
expressed in the euro).
7/8/2015
24
And volume
Serbia's total foreign trade in the first
half of 2006 reached USD 8,301.6 million
or EUR 6,744.6 million, which was an
increase of 22 percent over the same
period in 2005 (a 27-percent growth
when expressed in the euro).
Export was worth USD 2,508 million
(EUR 2,037 million)
Import USD 5,793.5 million (EUR
4,707.5 million).
7/8/2015
25
TRADE POLICIES
1986 – subsidies for
Broomsticks
Beehives
Fireworks - arms
7/8/2015
26
Trade policies and institutions
Reforms have included
the elimination of import quotas,
reduction of import licensing and
prohibitions,
streamlining of customs procedures and
reduction of tariff and non-tariff barriers.
7/8/2015
27
TRADE POLICIES
7/8/2015
28
FIRST LIBERAIZATION FRY
The degree of tariff protection
Non-weighted tariff rates
New
Previous Difference
9.48
14.43
-5.05
Weighted tariff rate
New
Previous Difference
8.09
9.71
-1.62
Source: Federal Statistical Office, mimeo.
7/8/2015
29
The rationale
Table 4.1.2.
The methodology of tariff protection
Tariff rates %
Products
1
Raw material and equipment not domestically produced
5
Raw materials domestically produced
10
Equipment domestically produced, consumers goods not domestically produced
20
Consumers articles domestically produced
30
Consumers articles domestically produced and luxurious articles
Source: Federal Government mimeo files
7/8/2015
30
Harmonization with Montenegro
Doomed to be a failure
The Federal Government carried out a comparatively fast and fairly good
initial liberalisation of foreign trade,
by abolishing the regulations on compulsory deposits for foreign trade
transactions,
on compulsory sales of foreign exchange to the National Bank of Yugoslavia,
on minimal opening capital of foreign trade enterprises,
on annual registration tax on business operations etc.
The first to be abolished were quotas, licences, approvals and other
restrictive measures that used to be in force.
This caused numerous protests and complaints, even after the concessions
made to the Zastava Automobile Works (which worked out the decision that
the duty on imported motorcars be set at 20% instead the of 10% that they
would have been entitled to according to the established methodology).
Concessions were also made to SARTID Steel Works, that is protected from
Russian dumping by import licences,
while export quotas on twelve products were retained in agriculture, to
prevent the goods from "escaping" into exports due to depressed local
prices.
7/8/2015
31
Remaining obstacles
Montenegro is not an obstacle any
more, but even before
(16 February 2005: General Council
accepts separate applications from
Serbia and Montenegro)
Monopoly of oil imports
___________
Good thing – FTAs
7/8/2015
32
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia,
Moldova and Romania. The agreement liberalizes at least 90 percent of
mutual trade by the end of 2008.
Previous FTAs signed with Hungary and the Slovak Republic were
abolished with these countries’ admission to the European Union in
May 2004.
In addition, a free trade agreement with Russia is fully active,offering
access to a market of 150 million people.
Goods originating from Serbia and exported to the EU customs area
are subject to preferential custom regimes. In 2000, the European
Commission introduced Autonomous Trade Measures for Serbia and
Montenegro. These measures permit exports to the EU without
customs and quantities restrictions for almost all products originating
from Serbia and Montenegro.
In addition, trade with Kosovo, which is under UN administration,
proceeds duty free, although goods are assessed relevant taxes. There
are transitional periods built into these FTAs for sensitive sectors,
meaning that the reduction of tariffs will be phased-out over an agreed
7/8/2015
33
period.
Foreign Direct Investments
in the Western Balkans, 1997- 2004
FDIs per capita and share in GDP
1777
2000
6,00%
3500
5,00%
1500
3000
2500
1000
Serbia
2000
3,00%
479
CRO
1500
4,00%
500
1000
252
256
350
1,00%
0
500
MAC
BIH
0,00%
ALB
ALB
0
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
2,00%
BIH
CRO MAC Serbia
cumulative FDIper capita
FDI/GDP
Key determinants for attracting FDIs
68%
Market size
65%
Political stability
61%
GDP growth
58%
Institutional framework
57%
Profit repatriation
53%
Macroeconomic stability
49%
Market size
48%
Business climate
42%
Presence of competition
39%
Price/quality of labor
0%
Greenfield FDIs
can help...
10%
20%
7/8/2015
Izvor: FDI Confidence
Index, AT Kerney 2002
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
34
Trade Barriers
Serbia and Montenegro, in preparation for its efforts to initiate
its accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), has
already made major trade policy reforms to bring practices in
full conformity with WTO requirements and eventual
membership in the European Union (EU).
7/8/2015
35
A handful of laws establish the legal basis for governing the
trade of goods in Serbia: Law on Foreign Trade Transactions
(FTT) (amended in 1999 and 2002), Law on Customs, Law on
Customs Tariffs, Decision on Classification of Goods on Regimes
of Exports and Imports. The FTT law, originally promulgated in
the early 1990s as a federal law, is a comprehensive law
addressing all aspects of foreign trade activities by or with
companies and individuals in Serbia. These laws also provide the
government with the authority to implement temporary
measures to regulate trade. The government has phased-out
quantitative restrictions although certain goods require a license
from the government. New laws are being promulgated to
improve the customs and trade regimes. The government is now
drafting a new Foreign Trade Law was adopted later in 2005.
A new Customs Law and Custom Administration Law were
implemented in January 2004. These laws were drafted with the
assistance of international advisors and is in compliance with
WTO, World Customs Organization and EU standards.
7/8/2015
36
7/8/2015
37
7/8/2015
38
Investment climate
Trade regulations and standards
On the web
http://danica.popovic.ekof.bg.ac.yu/UN
CTAD
7/8/2015
39
Further steps
WTO accession Harmonization with
EU
Choosing a strategy
7/8/2015
40