General information on the polish economy
Since
the turning point of 1989, Poland has undergone great political, social
and economic changes. The introduction of democratic structures, the
shift from a command economy to the free market and wide-ranging
systemic reforms are all achievements of which Poles can be proud.
The
start of the economic reform process was extremely tough, though few in
Poland doubted how the new economic system should look. Communist rule
had over many years brought the country - and an increasingly
impoverished society - to its knees. During the period of
transformation, the Polish economy was still therefore in an awful
state and radical reform was selected as the only solution to save it.
To this day, Polish opinion is still divided as to the effects of this
decision. But there is little doubt about one thing: without such
reforms the costs of the transformation would have been significantly
higher and Poland would not have come as far down the road towards the
EU as it has.
In
January 1990, state-controlled prices were lifted and from then on food
and trade margins were largely shaped by market forces. The market
reform plan assumed that prices would rise on average by 50%. In fact,
they rose at the time by 78% and some goods and services by even as
much as 600%. But this was a first step towards prices as they operate
in developed capitalist economies. Furthermore, demand and supply were
again activated.
There
was also a revolution in the liberalisation of international trade. The
zloty became convertible to other currencies and internal
convertibility was also established, providing another platform for
dynamic economic growth. New markets in countries that had been treated
not so long before as ideological as well as economic enemies were
opened up to Polish companies. The EU and USA became the key directions
in which Polish goods were exported.
The
Leszek Balcerowicz Plan, its author being Finance Minister in the early
1990s, liberalised domestic prices and led to rising imports, a
tightening of enterprises’ pay structures and financial policy in
relation to enterprises, the introduction of interest rates above the
rate of inflation, the stabilisation of the zloty against the dollar
and the introduction of zloty exchangeability. The Polish economy
stabilised and opened up to the world.
But
liberalisation and stabilisation would not have brought any long-term
effects and an efficient market system if not for structural reforms.
Banking and lending policies were reformed, while newly reshaped
ownership relations, independent enterprises and strengthened domestic
competition all had massive impacts. Capital and labour markets also
started to operate in Poland.
Consistently
implemented economic policies led Poland in a relatively short time on
to the list of the most dynamically developing economies in Europe.
Already by the mid-1990s Poland had become known as the ‘flying Eagle
of Europe’ and the ‘Tiger of Europe.’
One
fundamental priority of successive governments has been economic
growth. This is not only a condition of improving Poles’ standards of
living, but is also a foundation for realising the strategic goal of
catching up with the developed economies of Europe and the rest of the
world. The means of achieving this goal is EU membership. To this end
all main political forces in Poland are agreed, although there are
differences, of course, on how to achieve it.
The
reforms of the transition period and subsequent hard and consistent
monetary policy gave the Polish economy solid foundations: a strong
currency and permanently falling inflation (currently at about 1%). The
implementation of systemic reforms and responsible government policies,
as well as improved global competitiveness, mean that expectations of a
return to fast-track economic growth are justified.
SOURCE:www.poland.gov.pl