Czech Republic: Staff Report for the 2002 Article IV Consultation

This 2002 Article IV Consultations highlights that following a period of inaction on the structural front and a protracted recession, economic growth in the Czech Republic has picked up. Underlying this performance have been supportive macroeconomic policies, large foreign direct investment, and steady progress with structural reform. However, enterprise restructuring has led to rising structural unemployment and large regional disparities in unemployment rates. Sizable losses were accumulated by banks, which had to be transferred to the government to allow the banks to be sold to strategic investors, adding to medium-term fiscal pressures.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2002 Issue 167
Publication date: August 2002
ISBN: 9781451810059
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Business and Economics , Exports and Imports , Inflation , Public Finance , ISCR , CR , deficit , koruna , privatization , government , FDI inflow , privatization receipt , Maastricht deficit criterion , Euro rate , EMU accession , Foreign direct investment , Government debt management , Inflation , Global

Summary

This 2002 Article IV Consultations highlights that following a period of inaction on the structural front and a protracted recession, economic growth in the Czech Republic has picked up. Underlying this performance have been supportive macroeconomic policies, large foreign direct investment, and steady progress with structural reform. However, enterprise restructuring has led to rising structural unemployment and large regional disparities in unemployment rates. Sizable losses were accumulated by banks, which had to be transferred to the government to allow the banks to be sold to strategic investors, adding to medium-term fiscal pressures.