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Documento 52013DC0905
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION Croatia Report prepared in accordance with Article 126(3) of the Treaty
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION Croatia Report prepared in accordance with Article 126(3) of the Treaty
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION Croatia Report prepared in accordance with Article 126(3) of the Treaty
/* COM/2013/0905 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION Croatia Report prepared in accordance with Article 126(3) of the Treaty /* COM/2013/0905 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION Croatia
Report prepared in accordance with Article 126(3) of the
Treaty 1. Legal
Background Article 126 of
the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) lays down the
excessive deficit procedure (EDP). This procedure is further specified in
Council Regulation (EC) No 1467/97 “on speeding up and clarifying the
implementation of the excessive deficit procedure”[1], which is part of the Stability
and Growth Pact (SGP). According to
Article 126(2) TFEU, the Commission has to monitor compliance with budgetary
discipline on the basis of two criteria, namely: (a) whether the ratio of the
planned or actual government deficit to gross domestic product (GDP) exceeds
the reference value of 3% (unless either the ratio has declined substantially
and continuously and reached a level that comes close to the reference value;
or, alternatively, the excess over the reference value is only exceptional and
temporary and the ratio remains close to the reference value); and (b) whether the
ratio of government debt to GDP exceeds the reference value of 60% (unless the
ratio is sufficiently diminishing and approaching the reference value at a
satisfactory pace). Article 126(3)
TFEU stipulates that, if a Member State does not fulfil the requirements under
one or both of the above criteria, the Commission has to prepare a report. This
report also has to “take into account whether the government deficit exceeds
government investment expenditure and take into account all other relevant
factors, including the medium-term economic and budgetary position of the Member State”. This report,
which represents the first step in the EDP, analyses whether Croatia is compliant with both the deficit and debt criteria of the Treaty, with due regard to
the economic situation and
other relevant factors. Following the
amendments to the SGP in 2011, the debt requirement has been put on an equal
footing with the deficit requirement in order to ensure that, for countries
with a debt-to-GDP ratio above the 60% reference value, the ratio is brought
below (or sufficiently declining towards) that value. Data notified
by the authorities in autumn 2013[2]
and subsequently validated by
Eurostat[3],
show that the general government deficit in Croatia reached 5% of GDP in 2012, while the debt ratio stood at 55.5% of GDP. According to the 2013 Economic and Fiscal Policy Guidelines[4], a document
produced on 26 September in preparation of the budget, which does not however
apply the ESA 95 methodology[5],
the general government deficit in Croatia is planned to remain above the 3% of
GDP reference value in the years between 2013 and 2016. In the same Guidelines,
the general government debt ratio is projected to breach the 60% reference
value by the end of 2014. The Commission 2013 Autumn forecast projects the
general deficit significantly above the 3% of GDP reference value in the period
2013-2015, while the debt ratio is forecast to breach the 60% reference value
as of 2014. Even when adjusted for cyclical effects the general government debt
ratio remains above the 60% reference value at the end of 2014. Table 1. General government
deficit and debt (% of GDP)[6]
The draft budget for 2014 has not yet been
presented. However, according to the projections in the 2013 Economic and
Fiscal Policy Guidelines, the planned general
government deficits for the years 2013, 2014 and 2015, which continue to be
above 3% of GDP, together with the projected general government gross debt ratio
in 2014 and in 2015 above 60%, provide prima facie evidence on the existence
in Croatia of an excessive deficit based on the deficit criterion and of the
risk of a breach of the debt criterion in the sense of the SGP. The Commission
has therefore prepared the following report to comprehensively assess the
excess over the reference values, in order to conclude whether this merits the
launch of an EDP. Section 2 of the report examines the
deficit criterion. Section 3 examines the debt criterion. Section 4 deals with
public investment and other relevant factors. The report takes into account the
Commission 2013 Autumn forecast, released on 5 November 2013.
2. Deficit
criterion The authorities
currently plan a deficit of 3.6% of GDP for 2013, after 5% in 2012, and expect
it to increase further in 2014 and 2015. According to the Commission 2013 Autumn
forecast the deficit will be well above the 3% of GDP Treaty reference value in
the period 2013-2015. Thus, planned and forecast deficits are above and not
close to the Treaty reference value. The excess of
the deficit over the 3% of GDP reference value results in part from a severe
economic downturn in the sense of the SGP. Croatia is in a protracted recession
that started in 2009 with the onset of the global financial crisis, which led
to a reversal of foreign capital flows that had supported economic activity
during the pre-crisis years. Domestic demand also contracted severely as the
crisis unfolded. This resulted in five years of falling economic activity, with
a brief intermission in 2011, when the economy stagnated. The protracted recession
was the combined result of a worsening external environment, a deteriorating labour
market, on-going deleveraging from a significant private debt overhang, as well
as fiscal consolidation measures that negatively impacted on capital
expenditure and household spending. Structural
weaknesses exacerbated the contraction of domestic demand[7]. Net exports made a positive
contribution to growth largely on account of a sharp fall in imports induced by
weak demand from both households and businesses. Export performance remained fragile,
also reflecting the low competitiveness of domestic producers and Croatia’s narrow export base. Thus, in 2012 the negative output gap, which had opened up at
the onset of the recession, widened again. Table
2: Macroeconomic and budgetary developments a, b Altogether, the
depth and length of the economic contraction can be considered a key factor
driving the strong deterioration in public finances since 2009, even though
other aspects of fiscal policy, including the take-over of debt from
state-controlled enterprises and health care entities, also played a role. Moreover,
discretionary policy measures, such as the reduction of social contributions to
the health sector or changes in the system of corporate income taxation have
added to the deficit and partly account for the deterioration in the structural
balance in 2013[8].
All in all, the rise in headline deficits can be considered to a substantial
degree exceptional. However, the excess
over the 3% of GDP reference value is not temporary in the sense the Stability and Growth Pact. In
particular, the budgetary forecasts as provided by
the Commission indicate that the deficit will remain significantly above the reference
value not only in 2013 (at 5.4% of GDP), but also in 2014 and 2015 (with a headline
deficit projected to remain above 6% of GDP), when the economy is expected to expand
again and economic growth is projected to move above its potential rate. The
budgetary projections of the Commission 2013 Autumn Forecast take into
consideration the 2013 Economic and Fiscal Policy Guidelines leading up to the
2014 budget proposal, that were approved by the government on 26 September,
before the 2013 fiscal notification was published. However, the Commission baseline
projections do not take into account medium-term fiscal consolidation measures announced
in late September 2013 along with the publication of the Guidelines, as they
were not sufficiently specified. According to the authorities, the intended consolidation
package will consist of measures on both the revenue and the expenditure side that
are projected to produce savings of HRK 2 billion (approximately 0.6% of GDP)
in 2014 and HRK 4 billion (some 1.2% of GDP) in 2015 compared to the baseline. Even
if realised fully, the impact would still fall well short of what would be
required to bring the headline deficit close to or below the 3% of GDP
reference value in 2014 and 2015. Finally, the
announced but not yet adopted revision of the 2013 budget is expected to have
only an effect on the very last part of the year and would not substantially
alter existing trends. In sum, the deficit is not close to the 3% of GDP
reference value, and although the excess over the reference value could be considered
partly as exceptional in the sense of the SGP, it cannot be deemed temporary.
The analysis suggests that the deficit criterion in the Treaty is not
fulfilled. 3. Debt criterion According to the
Eurostat notification, of 21 October 2013 from 2009 to 2012 the general
government gross debt ratio in Croatia increased by almost 20 percentage points
from 36.6% in 2009 to 55.5% in 2012. This increase was mainly driven by the accumulation
of persistent deficits on the back of a protracted recession. The impact of a string of negative primary balances (except in 2012)
was compounded by debt-increasing "snowball" effects on the back of
rising interest expenditures. However, the debt ratio was also impacted by sizeable debt assumptions by the
government, in particular the transfer of debt of some public and state-owned
enterprises, such as several now privatised shipyards. Stock-flow adjustments had
a debt-increasing impact of about 1.3 percentage point of GDP in 2010. On the
other hand, in 2012, the contribution of stock-flow adjustments to the debt
level equivalent was negative, due to decrease of government financial assets. Table
3: Debt dynamics In the 2013 Economic
and Fiscal Policy Guidelines, the government foresees an increase in the
debt-to-GDP ratio from 56.6% of GDP in 2013 to 60.6% of GDP in 2014, thus above
the reference value in the Treaty, and further to 63.4% of GDP in 2015 and
65.3% of GDP in 2016. In the
Commission Autumn 2013 forecast, the general government debt ratio is projected
to increase to 59.7% of GDP in 2013. On unchanged policies, the debt ratio is
expected to rise above 60% of GDP in 2014, thus exceeding the 60% of Treaty
reference value. Article 2(1a)
of Regulation 1467/97 stipulates that the requirement under the debt criterion shall
also be considered to be fulfilled if the budgetary forecasts of the Commission
indicate that the required reduction in the differential with respect to the
reference value will occur over the three-year period encompassing the two
years following the final year for which the data is available. As the
Commission forecasts as well as the plans and forecasts of the authorities show
that debt is on a steep upward trend and is expected to remain so in the
forecast horizon, without changes in policies the forward-looking debt
benchmark is not fulfilled. In view of
these trends over the forecast horizon up to 2015 the debt-to-GDP ratio is not considered
as “sufficiently diminishing and approaching the
reference value at a satisfactory pace” in the
sense of the SGP. This analysis suggests that the debt criterion in the Treaty
is not fulfilled. 4. Relevant
factors Article 126(3)
of the TFEU provides that the Commission report “shall also take into account
whether the government deficit exceeds government investment expenditure and
take into account other relevant factors, including the medium-term economic
and budgetary position of the Member State”. These
factors are further clarified in Article 2(3) of Council Regulation (EC) No
1467/97, which also specifies that “any other factors which, in the opinion of
the Member State concerned, are relevant in order to comprehensively assess in
qualitative terms the excess over the reference value and which the Member
State has put forward to the Commission and to the Council” need to be given
due consideration. According to
Article 2(4) of the Regulation, "when assessing compliance on the basis of
the deficit criterion, if the ratio of the government debt to GDP exceeds the
reference value, those factors shall be taken into account […] only if the
double condition of the overarching principle – that, before these relevant
factors are taken into account, the general government deficit remains close to
the reference value and its excess over the reference value is temporary – is
fully met. However, those factors shall be taken into
account in the steps leading to the decision on the existence of an excessive
deficit when assessing compliance on the basis of the debt criterion." Finally,
Article 2(5) of the Regulation provides that the implementation of pension
reforms introducing a multi-pillar system that includes a mandatory, fully
funded pillar should be considered in all assessments in the framework of the
excessive deficit procedure. In view of the
above provisions, the following subsections consider in turn (1) the
medium-term economic position; (2) the medium-term budgetary position
(including public investment); (3) the developments in the medium-term
government debt position, its dynamics and sustainability; (4) other factors
put forward by the Member State; and (5) pension reforms as mentioned above. 4.1. Medium-term economic
position Cyclical
conditions and potential growth. The growth rate of
potential output in Croatia, as estimated by the Commission services according
to the commonly agreed method has plunged sharply since the onset of the
crisis. It averaged 3.2% in the 2004-08 period, stagnated in 2009, turned
negative in 2010 and has been negative since then. The contraction of potential
output is caused by declining contributions of labour inputs (due to a decreasing
participation rate) and the estimated negative contribution of total factor
productivity in the period 2007- 2013, which points to structural weaknesses
compounding cyclical trends. Moreover, the positive contribution of capital also
declined over the crisis period, due to the plunge in investment. Average real
GDP growth in 2004-08 exceeded potential growth. However, economic activity is estimated
to have contracted by close to 12% between 2009 and 2012 compared to the peak
in 2008. Real GDP is even projected to contract further in 2013, with a slight
recovery expected only in 2014. The rate of economic growth is expected to
gradually pick up in 2015 on unchanged policies. As a result of these developments,
the calculated output gap, which had been negative since 2009, is expected to gradually
narrow over the forecast period yet remain negative through 2015, confirming
the depth and the extension of the recession. Recent
structural reforms. Croatia participated in the
2013 European semester on an informal basis. To this end, in April 2013 the
country voluntarily submitted an economic programme, providing information on
the macroeconomic outlook and fiscal policy as well as on the future government
reform plans in a broader range of fields. A qualitative assessment of this programme
was provided by Commission services in a dedicated Staff Working Document.[9] However, as Croatia had not yet acceded as an EU Member State, the Commission did not formulate any
proposals for country specific recommendations. Overall, welcome
efforts to fight tax evasion, e.g. through the introduction of cash registers, seem
to constitute the most tangible progress in the fiscal domain in 2013. With
respect to structural measures aimed at addressing a wider range of challenges
(including those identified in the Commission Staff Working Document prepared
in the context of the 2013 European Semester), in June 2013 the first phase of
a new labour market reform was adopted, with measures to relax the duration of
a first fixed-term contract for an employee, to simplify the collective
redundancy procedure, to extend the range of activities of temporary employment
agencies and to abolish a monthly limit on overtime work. Further educational
reforms are under way, with a Strategy of Teaching, Education, Science and
Technology 2013-2020 presented for public consultations in September. In
addition, a National Industrial Strategy for 2013-2020 is also under
preparation, which should position 12 sectors as priority for economic growth. 4.2. Medium-term budgetary
position Fiscal
policy and structural deficit. Cyclical factors
interacting with entrenched weaknesses in economic structure account for an
important part of the adverse trends in the headline public finance ratios for Croatia. However, with respect to the fiscal stance and fiscal governance, other factors
also appear relevant. Recurrent assumptions of private debt by the government
have been an additional factor pushing up the general government deficit and
debt ratio. This suggests weaknesses in economic governance. Given the strong
interaction between cyclical and structural factors and the additional impact
of specific fiscal transactions, it is very difficult to infer the underlying
fiscal stance in recent years. Discretionary policy measures, such as the reduction
of social contributions to the health sector or changes in the system of
corporate income taxation have added to the deficit. Furthermore, the deficit
figures were impacted very heavily by assumptions of the debt of some public
and state-owned enterprises, such as (now privatised) shipyards.[10] These measures, although
exceptional, are not considered as one-off. The general
government budget balance in structural terms (cyclically-adjusted balance
corrected for the impact of one-off measures) in the period 2009-2012 was high,
above or close to 4% of GDP. However, from the changes in the structural primary
balance one can infer a loosening tendency in fiscal policy in the early years
of recession, followed by tightening in 2012 and slightly further in 2013. Thus
generally loose fiscal policies, although to some extent countercyclical,
appear to have contributed to the level and persistence of headline and
structural deficits in recent years. Regarding the
cyclically adjusted debt developments, article 2(1a) of Regulation 1467/97
stipulates that the requirement under the debt criterion shall also take in
account the influence of the cycle on the pace of debt reduction. Negative
cyclical developments in recent years do not appear to have had a significant
impact on the debt ratio. When adjusted for the cycle the 2014 general
government debt ratio remains above the 60% of GDP reference value. The
forward-looking benchmark shows that the debt ratio would remain above the
Treaty reference value in 2014 and it is projected to keep rising. Public
investment. Government investment in terms of GDP
has been continuously decreasing, from 3.6% of GDP in 2009 to 2% in 2012.
According to the Commission Autumn 2013 forecast, the public investment ratio
is expected to recover marginally in 2013, and increase somewhat towards the
end of the forecast period because of the expected implementation of large
infrastructure projects. However, throughout the period, the general government
deficit ratio in both headline and structural terms exceeds the government
investment-to-GDP ratio. Overall, the share of public investment in GDP is
among the lowest among EU Member States with similar levels of income. Quality of
public finances. The fiscal framework in Croatia has been significantly reformed in recent years. Three key legal acts have entered
into force: i) the Budget Act (2009), which introduces a three-year time
horizon for the general government budget planning; ii) the Fiscal
Responsibility Act (2011), which specifies numerical fiscal rules applying to general
government expenditures and deficit; and iii) the Government Decision on the
establishment of the Fiscal Policy Committee (2011). Having joined the EU, Croatia has to transpose EU Directive 2011/85 on national budgetary requirements into a
national law by the end of 2013. Currently, the draft act on the amendments to
the Fiscal Responsibility Act, aiming to transpose necessary elements and introduce
changes to the fiscal rule, has been adopted by the Government and sent to
Parliament. An assessment of the implementation of the directive will be
carried out by the Commission in 2014. 4.3. Medium-term
government debt position Long-term sustainability
of public finances. In the
absence of long-term projections of ageing related
expenditure, based on the common macroeconomic
assumptions as carried out by the Economic Policy Committee, it is not possible
to assess the impact of
population ageing in Croatia on a basis comparable with the other Member States. The country will be a part of the regular Ageing Report on
long-term economic and budgetary projections from 2015 onwards. However, taking
into account the age-structure of the population and low ratio of workers to
pensioners, it can be expected that the long-term budgetary impact of ageing
will be above the EU average. Improving the structural
budgetary position over the medium-term would thus contribute to containing
risks to the sustainability of public finances. Total stock
of the debt guaranteed by the government. The high
level of contingent liabilities, which according to the Ministry of Finance
amount to 11.7% of GDP in December 2012, represents an additional risk for Croatia's public finances. The guaranteed debt of the Croatian Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
which is a public company classified outside the general government sector, amounts
to 4.9% of GDP. In the first 6
months of 2013, the government granted additional guarantees amounting to 9% of
GDP, mostly to public infrastructure companies, such as Croatian motorways. The
total amount of guarantees called in the same period has been relatively small,
though, amounting to less than 0.1% of GDP. The successful restructuring of the
shipbuilding industry led to outright debt assumptions by the government but
helped reduce the implicit liabilities stemming from those activities. However,
given the important stake the state has in public corporations, some of which
appear to be structurally loss-making, there are non-negligible risks stemming
from possible guarantee calls. On the basis of current information the extent
of the risk is difficult to quantify. 4.4. Other factors put forward
by the Member State In a letter of
8 November 2013, the authorities of Croatia have listed what they consider
relevant factors in accordance with Article 2(3) of Council Regulation (EC) No
1467/97. The analysis presented in the other sections of this report already
covers the key factors put forward by the authorities, namely the severity and
protracted nature of the recession, the deleveraging (balance sheet
adjustments) as an impediment to growth and some fiscal costs associated with
structural reforms. In addition,
the authorities refer to a negative short-term fiscal impact of EU accession. The
costs of contribution to the EU budget are reported to add 1% of GDP to
expenditure. Moreover, the authorities also add that changes in tax collection
following Croatia's accession have caused a postponement in revenue which they
estimate at 0.5% of GDP. The fiscal impact of EU accession is reflected in the baseline
projections of the Commission used as a reference in this report.[11] 4.5. Systemic pension reforms Systemic
pension reforms. As regards “pension reforms
introducing a multi-pillar system that includes a mandatory, fully funded
pillar”, Croatia introduced significant changes to the pension system in 2001
and 2002. With the reform, a mandatory second pillar was introduced alongside
the pay-as-you go pillar. The combined contribution rate to the two mandatory
pillars is 20 % of the gross wage, of which 15 pps are attributed to the first
and 5 pps to the second pillar. A third voluntary pillar was also introduced to
channel additional pensions savings. According to the data delivered by
authorities to Eurostat, the cost of the fully funded pillar is on average close
to 1.4% of GDP in the period 2009-2012, and can be expected to remain at around
that level in the coming years. However, the planned budget deficit in Croatia significantly exceeds a level that can be considered close to the reference value
and the budgetary implications of the pension reform cannot be taken into
account in the assessment of the breach of the deficit criterion. 5. Conclusions The planned and
forecast general government deficit in Croatia is above 3% of GDP in 2013,
after 5% of GDP in 2012. The excess over the reference value can be qualified partly
as exceptional within the meaning of the SGP. However, it cannot be considered
temporary, according to both the projections by the authorities in the Economic
and Fiscal Policy Guidelines of 26 September and the Commission Autumn 2013
forecast. This suggests that the deficit criterion in the Treaty is not fulfilled. The general
government gross debt ratio is expected to remain below the 60% of GDP
reference value in 2013. However, it is on a rising trend and is projected to
exceed the reference value at the end of 2014, and continue rising thereafter according
to both the projections presented by the authorities in the 2013 Economic and
Fiscal Policy Guidelines and the Commission Autumn 2013 forecast. Furthermore,
once corrected for negative cyclical developments the debt ratio in 2014 would
remain above the Treaty reference value. This analysis
suggests that the debt criterion in the Treaty is also not fulfilled. In line with
the Treaty, this report has also examined “relevant factors”. As specified in
the SGP, for the deficit these factors can only be taken into account in the
steps leading to the decision on the existence of an excessive deficit
procedure if the general government deficit remains close to the reference
value and its excess over the reference value is temporary, which is not the
case for Croatia. The relevant factors, in particular the deep and protracted
recession, against the backdrop of unsupportive external conditions, have been
taken into account in the assessment of compliance with the debt criterion. They
do not modify the conclusion that the debt criterion in the Treaty is not fulfilled. [1] OJ L 209, 2.8.1997, p. 6. The report also takes into account the “Specifications on the
implementation of the Stability and Growth Pact and guidelines on the format
and content of stability and convergence programmes”, endorsed by the ECOFIN
Council of 3 September 2012, available at:
http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/economic_governance/sgp/legal_texts/index_en.htm . [2] According to Council Regulation (EC) No 479/2009,
Member States have to report to the Commission, twice a year, their planned and
actual government deficit and debt levels. The most recent notification of Croatia can be found at:
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/government_finance_statistics/excessive_deficit/edp_notification_tables. [3] Eurostat news release No 152/2013 of 21 October 2013. [4] The ‘Economic and fiscal policy guidelines for 2013’
can be accessed at
http://www.mfin.hr/hr/smjernice-ekonomske-ifiskalne-politike.
[5] Deficit estimates for 2009-2012 based on ESA95 are
between 1.5 and 3.3 percentage points higher than those reported according to
the national methodology. Differences stem mainly from the fact that deficit
figures according to ESA95 include certain guarantees payments, debt
assumptions and the repayment of the debt to pensioners. Note also that the
Guidelines were published on 26 September 2013 and therefore do not take into
account the higher deficit and debt figures for 2012 notified by the
statistical office. [6] The cyclically-adjusted debt is computed as: where Bt
stands for debt, Yt for GDP at current price, ypot for potential growth, pt for
the price deflator of GDP, Ct for the cyclical part of the budget balance. The
cyclical components and potential growth are calculated according to commonly
agreed methodologies. [7] See also the Commission services' Staff Working
Document, assessing the Economic Programme of Croatia, in the context of the
country's voluntary participation in the 2013 European semester: http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/pdf/nd/swd2013_croatia_en.pdf. [8] The Commission services' Staff Working Document on
the 2013 Economic Programme of Croatia noted that the changes introduced in
corporate taxation "can decrease the effective corporate income tax but
also narrow the tax base". [9] Available at
http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/pdf/nd/swd2013_croatia_en.pdf. [10] In 2011 the debt assumptions alone increased the
deficit by around 2% of GDP. [11] The Commission 2013 Autumn Forecast of the general
government deficit also corrects for the time shift in VAT collection, which it
assumes to entail a one-off revenue shortfall of around 0.5% of GDP in 2013.