Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Polish economy braces for impact of Ukrainian influx

The war in Ukraine means a worsening of Poland’s economic outlook, an increase in inflation and possible stagflatio­n. But it also means a big hole in the country’s labor market is being filled.

- Edited by: Hardy Graupner

The number of refugees from Ukraine in Poland exceeds 2 million. According to the UNHCR, about 1.5 million people will eventually decide to stay in Poland. If these estimates are correct, it will mean at least a temporary increase in the country's population of about 4%.

"Poland’s economy is likely to be hit hard by the effects of the war in Ukraine," says Liam Peach, an emerging-market economist at Capital Economics.

Capital Economics has revised its 2022 GDP forecast from 4.5% to 3.5%, below consensus expectatio­ns.

Public finances

During the first two months of the crisis, the Polish government has allocated about 8 billion zlotys ($1.8 billion, €1.6 billion) for direct or indirect aid.

All refugees have been permitted to stay and work in Poland for 18 months, with free access to the health care system, small startup grants and a children’s allowance of €120 a month (equal to the amount Poles receive). Poland has exempted the refugees from paying for public transporta­tion and has also issued work IDs. Over 50,000 refugee children have been enrolled in Polish schools.

The direct fiscal cost is around 3% of GDP, in the form of higher expenditur­e on health care, education, social policy and housing.

Poland could receive around €1.4 billion of EU ad hoc aid to help finance refugee aid, but the nationalis­t government has complained that a large part of these funds will not be new, but instead represent transfers under existing EU programs.

In March, the European Commission proposed launching ad hoc aid of €3.4 billion for member states receiving refugees. The funding comes from the REACT-EU instrument, which was launched to help Europe recover from the pandemic.

Supply chain disruption­s

"The impact on Polish industry will be compounded by supply chain disruption­s," said Peach.

Some 5% of intermedia­te goods imports used by Polish manufactur­ers are from Russia, while imported intermedia­te inputs from Russia account for around 50% of total imported inputs in Poland’s mining sector. Poland also depends heavily on imports of iron ore from Ukraine, Peach added.

Some Polish firms have been affected by shortages of raw materials, weighing on export prospects.

Restrictio­ns on exports to Russia, Ukraine and Belarus are not, however, a macro problem for Poland. The share of Poland's total exports to Russia, Ukraine and Belarus is limited and there is no special group of goods or services in which Poland specialize­s that could suffer badly, according to Piotr Szpunar, director of the Polish central bank’s Economic Analysis and Research Department.

Higher prices

Inflation, however, is a problem. In March, retail inflation rose to 10.9% year on year, from 8.5% year on year in February, in double-digit levels for the first time since the late 2000s. This mainly arose from a snap rise in gasoline prices (up 33.5% year on year, compared with 11.1% year

on year in February). The latest forecast issued by the central bank assumes that consumer inflation in 2022 will amount to 10.8%.

In January, the government temporaril­y cut VAT on gas, food and gasoline to contain rising consumer prices and headline inflation dropped to an annual 8.5% in February from 9.4% in January as a result.

Food inflation in Poland looks set to rise towards 15% this year, due to the effects of higher global agricultur­al commodity prices and the increased cost of fertilizer­s in production.

If there are shortages of products sourced from Russia or Ukraine, food inflation could rise even further, as Poland imports more than 50% of its sunflower and soyabean oil from Ukraine.

The dampening effect of higher inflation on households' real incomes and consumer spending will be reinforced by tighter monetary conditions, Peach argued.

It will also have a negative impact on private-sector investment, said Piotr Kalisz and Cezary Chrapek from Bank Handlowy, which will only be partially offset by higher publicsect­or spending.

"When the government’s tax cuts expire mid-year, energy prices are likely to rebound, pushing inflation toward the 12% area," JPMorgan’s emerging Europe team said, although the increase in energy prices means the government will likely extend its anti-inflation shields until the end of the year.

Pressure on housing

The influx of refugees is increasing housing needs on a scale strongly exceeding constructi­on capacity, said Piotr Arak, director of the Polish Economic Institute.

In 2020 Poland built 200,000 dwellings, three times lower than refugee needs should they decide to stay.

"We expect two consequenc­es — first, the housing conditions will deteriorat­e," Arak said.

According to Eurostat, in 2020 the average number of rooms in Polish dwellings per occupied person was equal to 1.2, much lower than in the eurozone (1.9).

"We expect both housing and rent prices to increase. Given the rapid increase of interest rates, fewer people could be eligible to obtain mortgages and current creditors would be under additional financial stress, making renting the more affordable option,” Arak noted.

Offsetting factors

Although the direct impact of the war will weigh on growth in Poland’s economy this year, there will be some offsetting factors.

The government has loosened fiscal policy by cutting personal income tax rates and the influx of Ukrainian refugees will boost spending.

"Government spending will undoubtedl­y increase, including on education and health care. It will be quite a strong demand impulse," Szpunar said.

Bank Handlowy experts believe that in the long run, changes related to the influx of refugees may have a big impact on the Polish labor market.

"As experience from the period 2014-2021 shows, slight linguistic and cultural barriers make it relatively easy for Ukrainian citizens to enter the domestic labor market," argue the authors of the report.

"We assume that with a very low unemployme­nt rate in the country (3%), the integratio­n of newly arrived refugees into the Polish labor market will be relatively effective," Bank Handlowy writes.

The impact this year may be small since most refugees are children, women and over 60s and it will take time to integrate into the labor market, but in the medium term refugees could have a positive impact on Poland’s growth prospects, said Peach.

Unsustaina­ble

“This outpouring of aid may create the impression that Poland is fully equipped to manage the crisis. It isn’t. If Western government­s do not find a way to help Poland financiall­y and logistical­ly, they could end up confrontin­g another nationalis­t backlash," the commentato­r Slawomir Sierakowsk­i wrote in Project Syndicate.

Sierakowsk­i noted that there were already signs the EU and the US might accept semi-authoritar­ian rule in Poland as the price that must be paid for solidarity against Russia. "In that case, Polish democracy will become yet another victim of the war," he concluded.

 ?? ?? Refugee centers have been put up in Poland for Ukrainians fleeing the war
Refugee centers have been put up in Poland for Ukrainians fleeing the war
 ?? ?? Poland has shown an incredible amount of solidarity with Ukrainian refugees
Poland has shown an incredible amount of solidarity with Ukrainian refugees

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany