• The leu risks a depreciation of 15-20%
The severe worsening of the crisis in the Eurozone, which has an average likelihood of coming true, would have a major impact on Romania, as an economic drop of 5% and a depreciation of the leu of 15-20% is possible, the experts of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warn.
Taking into account the experience of 2008-2010, an economic drop of 5% would be possible, whereas a depreciation of the exchange rate of 15-20% would seriously affect the portfolios of banks, according to the country report drawn up by the Board of the Fund. In the event of a serious worsening of the crisis in the Eurozone, Romania would need emergency liquidity and accessing the stand-by agreement with the IMF may become necessary.
The crisis left "deep scars" in the Romanian economy, and the potential growth of the GDP would need time to recover, according to the IMF. The experts of the Fund estimate a potential growth of less than 2% until 2014 and a gradual acceleration to 3.1% in 2017. The growth levels of 5-6% which existed before the crisis are difficult to achieve in the absence of major reforms, which would attract more people to the labor market and attract investments.
The IMF revised the estimate for the potential growth of the GDP from 2% to 1.4% for this year and from 2.9% to 1.8% for next year. In 2014, the potential growth could amount to 2.2%, to 2.7% in 2015, 2.9% in 2016 and 3.1% in 2017.
Romania has made significant progress in its macroeconomic stabilization, under the two stand-by agreements, but the economic recovery remains fragile, the report says.
The IMF experts said: "It is to be expected that the short-term growth would remain subdued and only a gradual recovery could take place in the medium term, with the risk of a rather negative outlook. Strongly connected to the economic and financial sectors, Romania is exposed to the crisis in the Eurozone. The fiscal and foreign reserves provide a buffer and the banking sector remains strongly capitalized".
The International Monetary Fund revised its forecasts on Romania's medium term economic growth down, from 4% to 3.5%, due to the delays in the implementation of structural reforms and the less than expected capacity to absorb European funds, according to the country report.
In the opinion of the Fund, Romania's main challenges remain ensuring the macroeconomic stability and stimulating economic growth. In that regard, the IMF considers that the main priorities of the Romanian authorities are: maintaining a fiscal discipline to ensure the reduction of the deficit and reaching fiscal sustainability by 2014; the pursuing of a prudent monetary policy; ensuring that banks have sufficient capital and liquidity and the relaunch of growth and of the creation of new jobs through reforms in the area of energy and transports, the reform of the public sector, the increase of the absorption of EU funds and the continuation of the reform of the labor market.
• The impact of accelerating the financial deleveraging: lending would collapse
The impact of an acceleration of the financial deleveraging of the major foreign banks in Romania would be high, lending would collapse, dragging down investments and consumption and non-performing loans would advance severely, according to the forecasts of the IMF.
Also, the pressure on the exchange rate would intensify, and the lenders' financial situation would deteriorate. The consolidation of banks would require emergency liquidity, and, in an extreme case, an intervention may even be necessary to support banks, if depositors were to lose their confidence in the individual lenders.
The deleveraging process of foreign banks has been moderate and orderly in Romania, partially due to the efforts of the European Banking Coordination Initiatives, the IMF experts claim. The estimated high correlations between asset prices in Romania and lending costs mean that the country is vulnerable to an intensification of the crisis in the Eurozone, according to international analysts.
A disorderly deleveraging process of the foreign banks risks leading to a severe shortage of money or loans, pressure on the balance of payments, and loss of reserves, a significant depreciation as well as negative effects on the economy, the report of the IMF states.
So far, an excessive deleveraging process in the countries of Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe (CESEE) was prevented from happening, partly due to the European Initiative for Bank coordination which encouraged parent banks to maintain exposure to their subsidiaries in the region and due to the ECB'S decision to support the banks in the Eurozone, which helped banks in Western Europe. Compared to other emerging markets, Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe saw recorded a larger process of deleveraging, after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, the IMF report states. Romania was severely affected by the financial crisis of 2008-2009, as well as by the recent intensification of the crisis in the Eurozone, which caused lending costs to increase, even though they remain lower than in Hungary, but higher than in Bulgaria or Poland. The internal political tensions in Romania have also contributed to the weak performance of the prices of Romanian assets, as well as to the depreciation of the leu.
According to IMF officials, a negative reaction of the population and of politicians to reforms would prevent their implementation, affecting the outlook for growth, and could induce a loss of consumer confidence and of investors, as well as increased volatility on the financial market, including putting pressure on the exchange rate.
The rate of accessing European funds below expectations, a situation which has a high likelihood, would affect the growth forecasts, which depend heavily on the acceleration of the use of European funds. At the same time, the economic advance could be smaller in the medium term, the IMF experts claim.
If the financial markets stopped lending to Romania, a situation which has a low likelihood of happening, the impact of such an event would be moderate, because the fiscal and monetary reserves cover most of the debt which is coming due in the short term. A degree of fiscal consolidation and financing through the IMF program may be necessary.
• The reform of state owned companies would reinforce the outlook for economic growth
The reform of state owned companies will consolidate Romania's long-term growth outlook, but the economy needs massive investments in the next decade, the country report states.
In Romania, the quality of the infrastructure in the key economic sectors, such as energy and transports, where state owned companies are dominant, is weaker than in other countries. Their reformation, an improved corporate governance and a higher involvement of the private sector would lead to better investments in these essential sectors, the IMF report states.
The reformation of the state owned companies could also create a fiscal space for investments in social sectors and infrastructure, to allow all of the Romanians to benefit from these reforms.
Amid the uncertainty in the markets and the risks caused by the Eurozone crisis, such as an acceleration of the deleveraging process of foreign banks, it is important for the Romanian National Bank to continue with the intensive banking supervision and to draw up supplemental crisis preparations, the IMF experts warn. It is important for the National Bank of Romania, in coordination with other relevant authorities, to be prepared to implement measures for the management of the crisis.
• Romania continues to follow a good direction as part of the IMF program
Romania remains on the right path as part of the agreement with the IMF, and all of the performance criteria of the sixth revision of the agreement were fulfilled, except for the reduction of the government arrears, the country report states.
The IMF officials said: "All the indicative targets, with the exception of government arrears have been reached. Corrective actions were taken to reduce the arrears stock and to prevent the accumulation of new ones. The structural benchmarks for the increases in the price of electricity, the integration of the accounting reporting system with the payment system of the Treasury and the preparation of comprehensive amendments to the healthcare legislation have been reached".
In spite of all of the above, the progress in the structural agenda, especially when it comes to the privatization of the public companies, remains slow. As priority steps to fulfilling this requirement, "the Government has made the commitment to launch IPOs in two public companies, and the preparations are at a significantly advanced stage", the document states.
The Board of the Fund considers that the fiscal and monetary policy and the resolute implementation of the structural agenda are necessary to ensure the macroeconomic stability and the acceleration of the growth.
The report states that the fiscal discipline will be necessary, especially in the context of the nearing parliamentary elections, in order to reach the targets in the fiscal program and the achieving of the fiscal stability.
The IMF experts said: "The assumed fiscal policy should lead to consolidation, in light of the inflation risks, the possible capital exits and the pressure on the exchange rate. In the financial sector, where vulnerability of the Romanian banks is great, due to their parent banks, steps are needed to ensure adequate capital buffers and liquidity, the slowdown of the increase in non-performing loans and the completion of the strategy for reacting to the unpredicted events. The strong continuation of the structural reforms, especially in the energy and transports sector and in the public companies sector could provide a greater stimulus to the need for investments and growth. Improving the absorption of the EU funds is a priority for the significant unlocking of the resources which could continue helping Romania to achieve a real convergence with the other European countries".
At the end of September, the Board of the IMF approved the sixth revision of the preventive agreement with Romania, which resulted in the release of a new tranche of 430 million SDRs (special drawing rights), the equivalent of 519.2 million Euros (663.1 million dollars).
The mission of the IMF is scheduled to visit Romania between November 6th - November 14th, to talk to the authorities about the recent economic developments.
• Cîţu: The IMF manipulates the basic scenario of the evolution of our economy
The IMF is manipulating the core scenario of the evolution of the Romanian economy and offers a risk scenario concerning a contraction of 5%, to divert attention from a far more realistic scenario, a drop of 2% in 2013 for instance, economic analyst Florin Cîţu (photo) says in an article published on his own blog.
He said: "The IMF report succeeded in causing an entire country in becoming hysterical. Behind that hysteria is the scenario which sees a 5% drop in 2013 as having a 10% chance of happening. It is a risk scenario and should be viewed as such. (...) The IMF is manipulating the base scenario. Like a magician which gives us the scenario with the 5% drop to divert our attention from a far more realistic scenario, a drop of 2% in 2013, for example".
The IMF does not provide a solution in the recently published report, and in the absence of clear directives from the IMF, the Romanian politicians will keep postponing the economic reforms, the economic analyst warns.
•
• The Government has mandated the Ministry of Finance to launch a new Eurobonds issue
The Government has empowered the Ministry of Finance to launch a new issue of Eurobonds on the foreign financial markets, amounting to at least 500 million Euros and a maximum of 1.5 billion Euros. The amount will be determined based on the market conditions.
"It is a customary practice of the Ministry of Public Finance to obtain a mandate from the government to issue bonds on the international markets, so as to have flexibility and to access the markets whenever the conditions are right. We may launch a bonds issue by the end of the year, if a favorable moment appears", the secretary of state in the Ministry of Public Finance, Enache Jiru said, quoted by Mediafax.
The Eurobonds issue will have a maturity of at least seven years, according to a memorandum approved in Wednesday's meeting of the Government.
The government estimates that the public finances will thus be protected against any potential foreign shocks which could determine the increase of the interest rates on the domestic markets.
For 2012, the Ministry of Finance had a limit on borrowing from the foreign markets set at 2.5 billion Euros, which it exhausted through issues of 2.25 billion dollars on the US market and others of 720 million Euros.
•
• Ponta: "VAT should be cut gradually"
The level of the VAT should be cut gradually, as the reduction becomes sustainable for the budget, so that it could get back to 20% in 2016, prime Minister Victor Ponta said yesterday.
When asked by journalists to comment on the estimate of the IMF that a 1% hike of VAT would bring more money to the state budget, he said: "My opinion and that of the economists is that one of the big blows which Romania received was the hike of the VAT in one week, so I don't think that we should increase VAT further, but rather the opposite, by 2016, it should be cut gradually to get back to 20%, as it becomes feasible for the budget".
He said that VAT is an important and stable resource for the state budget, but it is a tax which is "unfairly divided", because it equally affects high earners as well as low earners, as it especially impacts people with average and low income, which represent 90% of Romania's population.
•
• Romania may need to hike taxes, to support the healthcare system
Romania should increase the taxpayer base and the tax rates, and, absent substantial reforms it should even operate hikes of the flat tax rate or of the VAT, to ensure the sustainability of the public healthcare system in the coming decades, according to an IMF report.
A mix of measures intended to increase efficiency, expand the contributor base and to transfer higher revenues to the general budget would allow Romania to finance future increases of 1.25% of the GDP, in the healthcare expenses according to IMF estimates, as a result of the aging of the population and other non-demographic factors.
The IMF report states: "For example, the increase of the taxpayer base and of the rate of the contribution would ensure half of the growth in the public healthcare system. The demand that those with higher income would support a larger number of co-insured family members (including youngsters which are following the daytime studies of an educational institution) could provide additional help. Considering the flat tax rate system, this would make the welfare state more fair. Greater transfers from the general government budget and the private insurance could be used to cover the remaining need for funding".
The increase of the revenues of the healthcare system can be done through public resources, as well as through contributions from the general budget, whereas the private resources include private medical insurance and co-payments.
The analysis of the IMF experts does not take into account the development of the private healthcare system and the impact it might have on the need for public spending in the sector.
The representatives of the IMF said: "If the current policies are maintained, the healthcare costs will increase as percentage of the GDP in most countries in the coming decades. Reforms are necessary to stop or even to eliminate these increases. In some countries, the costs would increase even after the implementation of reforms, meaning that all of the options for collecting these funds in the future need to be reviewed".
The experts of the institution said that in the EU, the supplementary social security contributions do not have a major contribution to the funding of the healthcare systems of the member countries, a situation which probably reflects the high quality of the services provided in those countries by their respective public systems, which were built on the basis of the Bismarck or Beveridge systems, which limit the attractiveness of private insurance policies.
The IMF report mentions: "This may not be Romania's case. Even though in Central and Eastern Europe the voluntary additional insurance only plays a minor part, it could be expanded to contribute to funding. Still, the contribution of the voluntary insurance policies will depend on the size of the basic medical services package, a situation which raises fairness issues".
The experts of the Fund are also reviewing several options for ensuring the adequate financing of the costs of the public healthcare system over the public decades.
In Romania, the number of people which receive coverage from the healthcare system is double compared to that of the contributors. Pensioners with a monthly income of over 740 lei and the freelancers only pay the contribution levied from the employees, of 5.5%. A large number of people are excluded from the payment of personal contributions, including children of less than 18 years old, the unemployed (for whom the state is the one who pays), youngsters of up to 26 people who follow the daytime classes of an education institution, war veterans, people on welfare and the employees in the agricultural sector.
Among the options to increase the revenues, the IMF includes the increase of the contributor base and of the tax rate, measures which should represent a priority for the authorities, as well as potential tax hikes.
The increase in the number of contributors can be done by including the almost 2 million employees who don't pay healthcare contributions, (especially in the agricultural sector), the introduction of the withholding by the employer in the case of freelancers and the extending of payments to some of the co-insured of the high earners.
The total contribution (employee-employer) to the social security contributions is 10.7%, and the income tax rate is 16%, which are low levels compared to the international standards, the IMF experts estimate, who went on to say: "While the increase of these rates would have a negative effect on the labor market - by encouraging black market labor - this should be less of a cause for concern in the timeframe taken into consideration. Over the next two or more decades, Romania's economy may become more formalized, after its development and integration in the EU".
The IMF is reviewing scenarios for the revenue increases resulting from a 1% increase in the flat tax rate, the healthcare contributions and VAT.
Thus, the hike of the total contribution (employee-employer) to the healthcare system by 1%, up from its current level of 10.7%, could easily result in additional revenues of almost 1 billion lei, almost 0.2% of the GDP. The current plans of the Government to include all the revenue sources as taxable income would further increase the resources.
The flat tax rate of 16%, last year brought revenues of 20 billion lei, and a hike of 1% would bring in an additional 1.2 billion lei in revenue.
Romania has a standard VAT of 24% and two reduced rates, of 9% and 5%, which apply to books, newspapers, hotel services, drugs and construction materials. The increase of the VAT by 1% would bring in an additional 2 billion lei. The experts of the IMF note however, that the VAT in Romania is closer to the upper threshold of the EU, which suggests that such a measure could not be implemented.
A new method for increasing the revenues proposed by the IMF is the improvement of the efficiency of the tax collection.
Before taking into consideration the increase of the expenses, Romania should approach the problem of the ineffectiveness of the healthcare system. Later, the financing of the increased expenses of the healthcare system over the next decades, represents a formidable challenge.
A return to the pre-crisis level of the healthcare contributions (14%) compared to its current level of 10.7%, should be considered a priority and would ensure an important part of the need to increase the expenses over the next decades.
At the same time, Romania could rely more on the revenues of the general state budget, as is the case in many other countries.