It will take the Baltic states some 30 to 50 years to catch up to living standards in current European Union states
Published:
1 July 2003 y., Tuesday
It will take the Baltic states some 30 to 50 years to catch up to living standards in current European Union states, according to a study released this week by the Economist Intelligence Unit. Among Eastern European countries, it said that Estonia and Slovenia would close the economic gap the fastest, roughly reaching EU living standards in 31 years; it said it would take Lithuania 53 years and Latvia 58. Romania will take the longest time to catch up, some 80 years, the London-based research group estimated.
The calculations were made on the basis of relatively optimistic growth scenarios, with annual GDP growth in the Baltics states staying at or above 4 percent for the next several decades. But the report warned that it could take the countries even longer to match standards of wealth farther West if government leaders make the wrong policy choices.
“The true impact depends not on the mere fact of adding countries to the EU club, but on the interplay between policy and the potential that enlargement creates,” said Daniel Franklin, Editorial Director of the Economist Intelligence Unit. Economic performance will vary, and with it the pattern of growth across the EU, but intensified competition in an enlarged single market generally will encourage policies that make markets more open and flexible, the report said.
Šaltinis:
balticsww.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
EU animal welfare rules must be more rigorously enforced, with more inspections and effective penalties, said the Agriculture Committee on Wednesday.
more »
Fifty-three year old Rasima collects dirt everyday from a paddy field in Indonesia’s east Java province, turning it into a snack made entirely from soil, called "ampo."
more »
At the moment an Argentinian working for a French company in Spain can't travel to France for a meeting on his long-term visa.
more »
An EU-wide strategy is needed to combat violence against women, which must be recognised as a crime, said participants in a European Parliament public hearing with national parliaments and civil society representatives, held on Tuesday to mark International Women's Day.
more »
You know its Tet in Vietnam when Peach and Kumquat orange trees decorate every home, shop and public establishment.
more »
A surveyor has set up his tripod and instruments under a hot tropical sun to measure plots of land in a village where the Dac Kray minority community were settled four years ago.
more »
Japanese men are answering the call of Valentine s Day a month late.
more »
In three urgent resolutions adopted on Thursday, Parliament urges Hamas to release kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, deplores the escalating criminal violence in Mexico and calls on South Korea to scrap the death penalty.
more »
The plight of Europe's 10 million Roma population will fall under the spotlight Tuesday afternoon when MEPs discuss an upcoming Roman summit.
more »
EU Employment and Social Affairs Ministers have today adopted a Directive to prevent injuries and infections to healthcare workers from sharp objects such as needle sticks – one of the most serious health and safety threats in European workplaces and estimated to cause 1 million injuries each year.
more »