Central and Eastern Europe, once an attractive place for consumer goods companies to do business, has not proved immune to the global downturn. Over the weekend, EU leaders agreed to boost IMF emergency funding in a bid to prop up the region’s vulnerable economies. Chris Mercer and Dean Best report on the outlook east of the Oder river.


Last weekend’s agreement by European leaders to top up funds held by the International Monetary Fund should be welcomed by anyone who has an interest in the economies of emerging markets, and particularly Central and Eastern Europe.


Leaders of France, Germany, UK and Italy agreed yesterday to double the International Monetary Fund’s emergency rescue fund to US$500bn.


Eastern Europe appears particularly vulnerable, with Ukraine, Hungary and Latvia having already asked the IMF for help and Romania reported to be in talks over a bail-out. Latvia’s government collapsed last week.


Since the fall of Communism in the early 1990s, the region progressively emerged as an attractive place in which to do business. That appeal grew when, in 2004, a clutch of nations including the Baltic states, the Czech Republic and Poland joined the EU; three years later, Romania and Bulgaria joined the club. Rising GDP, greater purchasing power and a keen openness towards Western products and retail formats meant entry into countries like Poland and the Czech Republic proved fruitful for companies facing maturing economies in the West.

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Now, the party looks to be over. Industry analysts BMI have argued that the Czech retail market, for instance, is going through a “difficult” period, with high inflation and high interest rates weighing on retail sales in 2008.


More broadly, this weekend French newspaper Le Monde published European Commission figures on prospective gross domestic product declines across the Central and Eastern European countries that joined the EU in 2004 and 2007. It does not make pleasant reading for anyone who either lives or has money tied up east of the Oder river (http://polandpoland.com/germany_poland_border.html).


Declines or more than 5% in 2009 are expected in Poland, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Hungary and Slovakia, with a decline of more than 10% predicted for Romania and more than 15% in Bulgaria. Czech Republic is set to escape relatively lightly, the Commission believes, with a 2% decline in GDP.


One of the main reasons is that banks and investors are pulling their money out of emerging markets. Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank, warned this weekend of a fall in credit in Europe, and particularly among those outside the euro currency zone.


The United Nations reported in January that foreign direct investment fell by 21% worldwide in 2008, to US$1.4tn, and is likely to fall further in 2009.


Signs of a flight of investment from emerging market economies should not come as a great surprise. Historical precedents can be taken from the 1929 Wall Street Crash, which, like it or not, this current crisis increasingly resembles.


Take Germany in the immediate aftermath of 1929, for example. Cash-strapped investment houses in the US pulled considerable loans out of the fledgling German Republic. German chancellor Gustav Streseman, who incidentally died in 1929, spent much of his six years in office negotiating foreign investment loans to help rebuild his inflation-ridden and war weary country, but in the space of months, the US stock market collapse undid this work and exposed Germany’s economic frailty.


Of course, we all know what happened politically with Germany in the 1930s, and this article does not suggest that we are looking at a similar situation in Eastern Europe.


But, the global economic downturn is uncovering economic weaknesses and exposure to foreign money could be a weakness that hits home hard in Eastern Europe and on those who do business there.