Tag: Bulgarian economy


BULGARIA – FINANCIAL STABILITY AND SLOWING DOWN

October 24th, 2011 — 10:43am

A Greek bank group has predicted that the Bulgarian economy will slow down due to the debt crisis in the Euro zone and the negative prospects for the recovery of the European and the US economies. The Eurobank EFG Group announced that in 2011 the growth of the Bulgarian GDP will be 3,5%. In their forecast for 2011 the predicted growth of 3,2% of the Bulgarian GDP has been revised to 2,9%.

According to the Greek bank group the Bulgarian economy is slowing down, despite being above the average levels for the EU in the last quarter of 2011. The major drive of Bulgaria’s growth is the export, but in the second quarter of this year, its volume has decreased in half in comparison with the first quarter. The Bulgarian export shall continue to decrease due to the worse conditions on the EU market – the main market of the country.

On the positive side the domestic demand is gaining speed and the investments have increased. According to the forecast the investments will keep increasing because of the privatization programme of the Bulgarian government and the improved use of the European funding. Bulgaria, according to the Eurobank EFG Group has not been affected by the debt crisis and has remained stable financially, and its credit rating has improved.

Comment » | Bulgaria

The Bulgairan Economy – Forecast

August 11th, 2009 — 11:39am

The Bulgarian economy will continue sinking in 2010. The decrease of the GDP will be of 1%, according to the Agency for Economic Analysis and Forecasts.  For 2009 the expectations are of a significant  decrease of the GDP of 6.3%.  Bulgaria will be in recession for two consecutive years.  The decrease of the investments and the retail index will continue in 2010.  The expenses in Bulgaria’s budget will not increase in order to avoid deficit.  The major reason for this is the world wide recession. Although there have been signs for upcoming end to the recession in the USA, the risks for the world and the European economy are still there.

The slowing down of the economies of Bulgaria’s major trading partners has led to shrinking of Bulgaria’s export. The export of goods has decreased by 30,7% in the first five months of this year and it is expected that the decrease will be 10,5% on an annual basis. This has its effect on the transport and freight. As result the total volume of the export will shrink by 12,3%. The limited crediting and the slow increase of the personal incomes has led to a decrease in the investments and the sales in the country itself. The expectations are that in 2009 the spending of the average household will shrink by 4.5% and of the government by 3%.

In the following years the domestic demand, which has been generating mostly by the foreign investments, will be hard to resume the growth of the  Bulgarian economy to the levels of the last years.  That is why the recuperation of the economy is expected to materialise through the export. Having in mind the current world wide tendencies, this will not happen in 2010.  To the contrary, the export will continue decreasing and the expectations are that it will shrink by 3,8% next year.  That is why the forecast is for economic decrease of 1% in 2010. This will be accompanied by relatively low inflation about 2,2%.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

EU must pay price to keep Eastern poor relations in the family

March 4th, 2009 — 10:15am

Bronwen Maddox: World Briefing, The Times

The crisis in Central and Eastern Europe has been triggered by the world’s financial turmoil. But the European Union was already set for an unpleasant showdown between its older members and its newer ones. Any recession — never mind one as acute as this — would have driven home the point that the east wants more than voters in the west want to pay.

The leaders of the first to join the EU club never wanted to admit, though, that the expectations of the newcomers were bound to be dashed. They didn’t want to be thought to be condemning them to a second-class wing of Europe. Nor did they want to spell out to voters how big the bill might be — and how funds might be diverted from their own countries to meet it. The blunt truth is that the newcomers’ hopes of becoming Spain, or the Irish Republic — poor countries transformed in a decade or so by the EU — were never realistic. Spain and Ireland joined a club of a few rich countries, and their own people’s income was about two thirds of the average. In contrast, former communist countries joined a loose, large club only half of which was wealthy in any sense. Their people were comparatively far poorer than the Spanish and Irish. The magical transformation was never going to happen.

The oddity now is that this crisis — one that threatens the stability of banks across Europe and might cause some eastern governments to default on debt — creates pressure for Western Europe to help. It won’t want to. But the intertwined finances give the east a case that the west can’t afford to stand back.

The EU’s decision five years ago to take in eight former communist countries, plus Cyprus and Malta, was one of the most generous gestures it has made. The spirit was admirable. But the idealism glossed over the difficulties, particularly on the economic side. The new members made big changes before they joined — but less so afterwards. Romania and Bulgaria, joining in 2007, have rubbed in the point that the EU has few sanctions if countries renege on reform. Romania, again, and Hungary, are now struggling with heavy debt because of reluctance to reform state industries and benefits. Others, such as Estonia, the Czech Republic and Poland, have better claim to be unlucky casualties of the collapse of export markets. Even there, debts were casually taken on in Euros while the income to meet them was in national currency, now sliding. Leaders and their people wanted to act as if they were already as rich as the rest of Europe, without income to match.

Even before this crisis the EU bill for helping these countries was large. A European Commission report last month (“Five years of an enlarged EU”) notes that in 2007 the new states received a fifth of the €99 billion that the EU gives to countries. That is set to rise between 2007 and 2013 to 35 per cent. The report blithely asserts that this “cannot be regarded as an unbearable burden” by old member states as it is only 0.2 per cent of their gross domestic product. The old members may not see it that way. To get the east out of this crisis the bill would have to be even larger, if only to rescue the banks from foreign currency loans.

There is a strong case to be made for the rescue. But it can’t be made in the airy tone in which the Commission has written its assessments of enlargement, which makes taboo any suggestion that the move was risky or expensive or overoptimistic in what it led the newcomers to expect. It was all of these. It was also worth doing.

The only argument which will now persuade Western European voters that they should pay even more is that, otherwise, Europe faces dangerous disintegration. For once, though, that kind of alarmist talk is justified.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

BULGARIAN CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY

February 5th, 2009 — 4:01pm

In the last years the bank credits have been the driving force of the Bulgarian economy. Now the credit flow has dried up, the money from the gray economy has become the majour factor.

Only credits to the amount of 33.6 million levs have been lent by the banks to Bulgarian businesses in December 2008. In comparison, the average amount of the business credits for 2008 is 626.9 million levs.

Many companies have been experiencing cash flow problems and they can not pay their expenses. The bad debt has increased and some analysts expect 30% of the companies in the country to go bankrupt. Others are more moderate in their expectations and do not expect a total collapse.

The construction industry is in a very bad state, despite the opinion of the analysts. The need for fresh cash is so serious that some of the companies have switched to barter deals. They offer their business partners apartments and office space instead of cash.  The problem of many developers is that they have started several projects at the same time and have relied on off-plan purchases. However, once the credit policy of the banks became more strict, the off-plan purchases have stopped.  As result, many investors had to freeze their projects, some of them stopped paying their subcontractors and suppliers. The banks have ignored the whole of the construction industry and now lend money only to companies who also work in another field of business, which can guarantee the repayment of the loans. There is still no official information about the level of debt in the construction industry but it is expected to be quite serious.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

Bulgaria – Economic Forecast

November 26th, 2008 — 1:19pm

Bulgaria alongside Romania, will experience a shock because of the global slow down of the world economy according to analysts. There will be job cuts both in these countries, as well as in Spain, Italy and the U.K. where many Bulgarians and Romanians work to support their families back home. The lack of access to foreign capital will be the major problem for the the East-European economies next year according to BNP Paribas. The huge foreign disbalance must be corrected now to avoid problems in the future. The expectation is that Romanian economy will shrink by 0.6%, while Bulgarian economy will shrink by 1,2%. The official unemployment figures are on the increase and has already reached 5.9% in Bulgaria and 4% in Romania in October 2008. In the last six years, unemployment has been steadily decreasing due to the emigration of work force to the West. The return of many of the this guest workers back home will combine with the inability of those who remain abroad to support their families in their homeland. In Bulgaria the money sent from workers abroad used to amount to 5% of the GDP according to the International Organisation for Migration.

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