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EBRD president Jean Lemierre. |
The growing economic strength of the eight EBRD countries of operation that
joined the European Union in 2004 means Bank resources can be shifted from
those new EU members to less-sturdy economies to the south and east, EBRD
President Jean Lemierre announced Monday.
In his address to the EBRD’s Board of Governors at their annual meeting in
London today, Mr Lemierre noted that he and the Board expect the EU-8 (Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovenia and Slovakia)
will ‘graduate’ by 2010.
“The Bank’s investment in these countries will decline and next year we will
start to close offices and shift resources to countries where EBRD financing
is more necessary,” Mr Lemierre said.
Prospect of EU membership has driven transformation
The prospect, and later the realisation of EU membership have driven economic
transformation in these former command economies, he said. “ There has been
much increased trade and investment in both the new EU members and the
original EU countries. Foreign direct investment has gone from almost zero to
€200 billion a year. Three-quarters of that has come from EU-15 investors – a
remarkable achievement in just a decade and a half.
“The EBRD has helped forge the way for that investment. The Bank participated
in privatisations, and was the first investor to take the risk in many
enterprises that private investors would not take on…Now there are fewer and
fewer industries that do not have access to capital markets without the
support of the EBRD,” Mr Lemierre said, so by 2010, the Bank envisages that
its work in these countries will be done.
EBRD investment in the EU-8 has been falling for some time. Meanwhile it has
been building in the less-developed economies of the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS) and southeast Europe where the Board has agreed to
direct more staff and capital.
The prospect of EU membership for Bulgaria, Romania and the western Balkans
has been a powerful incentive for economic transition in those countries as it
was for the EU-8, and strong growth has been the result.
“This was the part of the region where the Bank increased operations most in
2005, to 28 per cent of business volume,” Mr Lemierre noted. “In Ukraine, the
EBRD doubled investments last year and with a better investment climate and
investor appetite there is scope to increase it further.” The Bank also has
made a great deal of progress in its two-year-old programme for the seven
poorest countries of the CIS, called the Early Transition Countries Initiative
which Mr Lemierre said “has supported many smaller businesses, infrast
ructure and industries, creating jobs and a stronger market economy.”
Russia’s struggle to achieve political and economic stability
Mr Lemierre said Russia’s struggle has been to achieve political stability and
then economic stability after the 1998 financial crisis. “In many ways Russia
is just now engaging in the most difficult part of the transition process.
“It is taking decisions about equitable sharing of oil wealth, and about
structuring its economy to make the most of its strategic resources. Partly
that has meant correcting the way resources were distributed after the
collapse of the Soviet Union. If there is public support for more state
control of key national resources, the challenge is to ensure that resources
are redistributed and managed in a way that the people and investors can
understand.”
Despite Russia’s oil wealth, economic diversification is key to ensure
long-term prosperity. “To build its market economy, there are massive needs
for long-term investment that far exceed the flow of cash from oil revenues,”
particularly outside major cities and the banking sector.
Overarching need to improve energy efficiency
One overarching need across the region is to improve energy efficiency.
Wasteful use of energy is a legacy of the command economy: compared with the
western European economies with which they increasingly compete, EBRD
countries of operation use up to seven times as much energy to produce each
unit of GDP. Their greenhouse gas emissions are commensurately high.
“That is why the Bank is launching a sustainable energy initiative,” Mr
Lemierre said. “It will accelerate investment in energy efficiency projects
where the returns are quick and significant…The EBRD intends to double its
financing for energy efficiency and renewables,” he explained, asking the
Governors for support with donor funding “that would help increase awareness
of the returns on investment from energy efficiency and develop the business
case for newer technologies.”
In summarising the Bank’s achievements in 2005, Mr Lemierre noted that staff
had signed more operations than ever, totaling 151 projects with a value of
new business of €4.3 billion. The Bank realised a profit of €1.5 billion.
Because the EBRD is going to be doing more, yet smaller deals in more
difficult investment environments, the Board has agreed to increase resources,
for example by putting more staff in the field and opening new offices in
regions beyond capital cities.
Mr. Lemierre ended by saying the historic decisions of this medium-term
strategy will rejuvenate the Bank and help it to stay innovative and focused
on the priorities of the region.
Read the entire statement.
Written by EBRD Senior Writer Kate Dunn.
22 May 2006
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