Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Latvian economy on the brink

Latvia is in danger of becoming the first European Union member to face total economic ruin, experts have warned. Their economy, driven by consumer demand, was hit hard last year amid the global economic downturn. In December the International Monetary Fund approved a 7.5bn euro rescue package for Latvia. Now, the tiny Baltic state has been urged to devalue its currency or risk the collapse of its economy - despite fears such a move could cause turmoil elsewhere in Europe.

Although devaluation would damage Latvia's ambitions of joining the euro, analysts said it was the only hope of avoiding a catastrophe after an international bailout failed to reverse the country's fortunes. One economist said Latvia's economy shrank 18pc in the first three months of the year. "The IMF medicine hasn't worked," he said. "Without a devaluation, you end up in the same place. It just takes longer to get there."

When Latvia joined the EU, expectations were high that the country could soon join the euro and living conditions would improve. It fixed the lat to the euro, allowing it to move within a small band. A small and open country, Latvia quickly attracted investment. The big Swedish banks established subsidiaries and an influx of foreign capital helped sustain a real estate boom.

Rising domestic consumption, a thriving property market and capital inflows all helped spur growth. But says Ed Parker at Fitch Ratings, "one of the problems was that a lot of this foreign capital was directed to real estate development and mortgages rather than building an export oriented manufacturing base. This was in contrast to countries like Poland, where a lot of FDIn(foreign direct investment) was used to set up manufacturing plants. A lot of the development in Latvia went into the real estate sector."

At the same time, its fast growth and a fixed exchange rate pushed prices higher. Latvia became an expensive place to do business. "This excessive optimism plus the entry and aggressive lending policies of foreign banks, led to a huge credit boom and huge current account deficit," said Fitch's Parker. When the capital stopped flooding in, as the credit crunch forced banks to tighten lending, the economy froze.

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