The Fastest-growing Economy in Europe

Published: 11 December 2004 y., Saturday
Lithuania, the fastest-growing economy in Europe last year, will expand 7 percent a year through 2007, helped by 2.5 billion euros ($3.3 billion) of European Union aid and foreign investments, President Valdas Adamkus said. ``There are still huge untapped opportunities'' in the Lithuanian economy, Adamkus, a 78-year-old former U.S. citizen, said in an interview in London. ``For the next three years, we'll continue growing at 7 percent without doubt.'' The former Soviet Baltic state of 3.5 million people is one of 10 nations that joined the European Union in May. Its $18 billion economy expanded 9.7 percent last year. The rapid pace of growth and EU financial aid is helping Lithuania keep its budget deficit down, meeting a key requirement for euro adoption. Adamkus said there were no obstacles to switching to the euro within three years together with Estonia and Slovenia. The three EU entrants on June 27 started a two-year test of currency stability and could get the currency as soon as 2006. ``We are ready to introduce euros in an orderly and safe way,'' said Adamkus. ``Lithuanians will have euros in 2007.'' Lithuania already meets terms to limit the budget deficit, state debt and interest rates, and is close to the current 2.5 percent inflation target. Annual inflation slowed to 3 percent in October from 3.3 percent a month earlier.
Šaltinis: Bloomberg
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Focus on Energy and Finance in the Meeting of Nordic and Baltic Prime Ministers

In Brussels, Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas participated in the meeting of Nordic and Baltic (NB6) Prime Ministers which focused on the pressing topics on the agenda of the European Council: global finance crisis, energy, climate change, EU-Russia relations, and financial situation in Iceland. more »

The European Commission Will Develop an Electricity Grid Interconnection Plan between the Baltic States

Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas attended the working dinner with President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Latvian, Polish Prime Ministers – Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Andrus Ansip, Matti Vanhanen, Ivars Godmanis, Donald Tusk – and Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt. more »

Commission sets out proposal to increase minimum protection for bank deposits to €100,000

The European Commission has put forward a revision of EU rules on deposit guarantee schemes that puts into action the commitments made by EU Finance Ministers on 7 October. more »

Bush vows action for econ crisis

The United States began releasing long-awaited details of its $700 billion rescue plan. more »

Australia guarantees deposits

Australia's Prime Minister announces plans for the government to guarantee bank deposits for the next three years. more »

Savers move to ethical banking?

Ethical bank, Triodos, says it is offering customers an alternative way to invest their funds. more »

G. Kirkilas: Latvia Supports Lithuanian Energy Security Initiatives

Energy security was the dominant theme during the meeting between Lithuanian Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas and Latvian Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis. more »

Opening up energy markets

The draft law would require utilities to separate – or unbundle – the distribution of electricity and gas from production. more »

MEPs advocate a holistic approach to eradicating poverty and a target minimum wage for all Member States

A holistic approach to eradicating poverty, which seeks to ensure adequate incomes, quality jobs and better access to social services, is advocated by the EP in an own-initiative report. more »

Property show defies credit crunch

Dubai showcases multi-billion dollar development projects at the annual Cityscape exhibition. more »