This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Document 52013SC0356
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2013 national reform programme and stability programme for ESTONIA Accompanying the document Recommendation for a Council Recommendation on Estonia’s 2013 national reform programme and delivering a Council Opinion on Estonia's stability programme for 2012-2017
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2013 national reform programme and stability programme for ESTONIA Accompanying the document Recommendation for a Council Recommendation on Estonia’s 2013 national reform programme and delivering a Council Opinion on Estonia's stability programme for 2012-2017
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2013 national reform programme and stability programme for ESTONIA Accompanying the document Recommendation for a Council Recommendation on Estonia’s 2013 national reform programme and delivering a Council Opinion on Estonia's stability programme for 2012-2017
/* SWD/2013/0356 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2013 national reform programme and stability programme for ESTONIA Accompanying the document Recommendation for a Council Recommendation on Estonia’s 2013 national reform programme and delivering a Council Opinion on Estonia's stability programme for 2012-2017 /* SWD/2013/0356 final */
Contents Executive summary. 3 1........... Introduction. 5 2........... Economic
developments and challenges. 6 2.1........ Recent economic
developments and outlook. 6 2.2........ Challenges. 7 3........... Assessment of
policy agenda. 9 3.1........ Fiscal policy and
taxation. 9 3.2........ Financial sector 13 3.3........ Labour market,
education and social policies. 14 3.4........ Structural
measures promoting growth and competitiveness. 18 3.5........ Modernisation of
public administration. 22 4........... Overview table. 24 5........... Annex. 28
Executive summary
Economic
Outlook After a
strong rebound in 2011, Estonia’s GDP growth moderated to 3.2% in 2012 and is
expected to continue growing above the EU average at 3.0 % in 2013 and 4% in
2014, according to the Commission's spring forecast. The unemployment rate continued to fall substantially to 10.2% in
2012 and is expected to fall to 9% by 2014. Export-led growth may resume soon,
supported by the relatively strong resilience of the Nordic countries to the
sovereign debt crisis. Inflation continued its slow decrease to 4.2% in 2012,
and is forecast to fall to 3.6% by 2013 and 3.1% by 2014, though wage inflation
might soon reappear. The budget is
expected to remain in deficit at -0.3 % of GDP in 2013 before reverting to a headline
surplus of 0.2 % of GDP in 2014. Estonia's medium-term objective is for a structural budget surplus (minus one-offs and
short-term measures), though, according to the Commission spring 2013 forecast,
it is expected to slightly deviate from this objective in 2013, with an
expected structural deficit of -0.2% of GDP. Government debt, which is the
lowest in the EU, is expected to decrease from 10.1% in 2012 (with a slight
increase to 10.2% in 2013) to 9.6% in 2014 due to budget surpluses. Key Issues Reflecting
the economy’s catching-up potential, real GDP is expected to continue growing
above the EU average, while public finances remain among the strongest in the
EU. However, the level of potential growth in Estonia in the years ahead is likely to stay below its pre-crisis rate. Estonia has
made some progress on addressing the 2012 CSRs, notably by limiting its budget
deficit to 0.3 % of GDP, further reducing unemployment, launching education
reforms and investing in energy efficiency. Notwithstanding
these commendable achievements, reform efforts are still ongoing, in particular
in certain areas of education (tertiary, vocational education and training, and
upper secondary), disability and incapacity for work schemes and the energy
sector. Some reform
efforts appear insufficient, in particular given the scale of the challenges on
the labour market, the fight against poverty and in the education and energy
sectors. Structural unemployment is still high and
competitiveness will soon be hindered by skills mismatches, a lack of qualified
professionals (both blue and white collar), weaknesses in local public service
provision and relatively weak innovation: ·
Public finances:
The government still needs to fully comply with the new rules in the Treaty on
Stability, Coordination and Governance. The structural budget balance rule as
set out in the Treaty, which is expected to be introduced this year, should be
complemented by more binding expenditure targets. Estonia could improve
efficiency by better targeting spending on social security. ·
Labour market: Bringing
more people – particularly skilled people, the long-term unemployed and disabled
people – into the labour force is Estonia's most pressing challenge. The
shortage of skilled labour could soon lead to higher costs for companies and
affect investment and growth potential. In this light, a better targeted
education and adult training system is necessary to ensure skills matching
labour market needs. Fine-tuning of benefit systems and workplace accessibility
could help to provide for incentives to work. A persistent shortage of
childcare services hinders an early return of parents, especially women, to the
labour market. ·
Innovation: Estonia's competitiveness could be hampered by weak public-private cooperation, overly
broad priorities for research and innovation and a mismatch between the
technical skills taught at universities and the needs of the market. Prioritisation
and internationalisation of research is a crucial challenge given the small
size of the country. ·
Energy/Transport:
Estonia’s energy and resource intensity remains amongst the highest in the
EU, while the importance of oil shale as an energy source emphasises the need
to develop more efficient and less-polluting energy sources. The transport sector
does not appear environmentally friendly enough, with an environmental tax
system providing too little incentives to change environmentally harmful
consumer patterns, insufficiently attractive public transport networks and
limited rail infrastructure. Relative isolation due to insufficient
cross-border connections limits Estonia’s security, diversity of supply and
price competition. ·
Public administration: Regional differences and inefficiencies among the local
governments are having an adverse impact on the provision of social services, especially
childcare, family support services, long-term care, primary healthcare, education
and public transport. In addition, given the significant impact of EU funds on
the economy, it is important to ensure the strategic programming of funds for
2014-20 in order to boost growth and employment. ·
Financial sector:
A potential recurrence of excessive credit growth remains a medium-term concern
as private-sector indebtedness is relatively high (around 130% of GDP in 2011
for both households and businesses) and is likely to increase again soon. Skills
shortages in the labour market may soon drive up wages and feed into this. This
risk is compounded by the partial tax deductibility of mortgage interest
payments and loan guarantees that encourage borrowing.
1.
Introduction
In May 2012, the Commission proposed a set of
country-specific recommendations (CSRs) for economic and structural reform
policies for Estonia. On the basis of these recommendations, the Council of the
European Union adopted five CSRs in the form of a Council Recommendation in
July 2012. These CSRs concerned public finances, the fiscal framework, the labour
market, education and social policies, energy and transport, research and
innovation and modernisation of public administration. This Staff Working
Document (SWD) assesses the state of implementation of these recommendations in
Estonia. The SWD assesses policy measures in light of the
findings of the Commission's Annual Growth Survey 2013 (AGS)[1] and the second
annual Alert Mechanism Report (AMR)[2],
which were published in November 2012. The AGS sets out the Commission's
proposals for building the necessary common understanding about the priorities
for action at national and EU level in 2013. It identifies five priorities to
guide Member States to renewed growth: pursuing differentiated, growth-friendly
fiscal consolidation; restoring normal lending to the economy; promoting growth
and competitiveness for today and tomorrow; tackling unemployment and the
social consequences of the crisis; and modernising public administration. The AMR
serves as an initial screening device to determine whether macroeconomic
imbalances exist or risk emerging in Member States. The AMR found positive
signs that macroeconomic imbalances in Europe are being corrected. To ensure
that a complete and sustainable rebalancing is achieved, 14 Member States were selected for a review of developments in the
accumulation and unwinding of imbalances.[3]
Estonia was not among them. Against the background of the 2012 Council
Recommendation, the AGS and the AMR, Estonia presented updates of its national
reform programme (NRP) and stability programme in April 2013. These programmes
provide detailed information on progress made since July 2012 and on the future
plans of the government. The information contained in these programmes provides
the basis for the assessment made in this Staff Working Document. The programmes submitted went through an inclusive
consultation process involving the national parliament and the main socio-economic partners, including
through a web-based open consultation process. Estonia’s stability programme was
prepared in parallel with the national reform programme and the multi-annual
state budget strategy. The stability programme is fully consistent with the
code of conduct for the Stability and Growth Pact. The national reform
programme is consistent with the guidance provided by the Commission’s Secretariat-General.
The objectives and measures of the strategy are in conformity with the
government’s Action Plan and the state budget strategy. Overall assessment The analysis in this SWD leads to the conclusion that Estonia has made some progress on measures taken to address the
CSRs in the Council Recommendation. On the positive
side, the country has managed to limit its budget deficit to 0.3% of GDP and to
further reduce its unemployment level, thanks in particular to better-than-expected
economic growth, to engage in education reforms and to invest significantly in
energy-efficiency policies. Notwithstanding these commendable achievements,
reform efforts appear insufficient, in particular given the scale of the
challenges on the labour market, in the fight against poverty, in certain areas
of education and in the energy sector. Structural unemployment is still high,
and, given the subdued global outlook, may broadly stagnate in 2013.
Competitiveness might soon be hindered by skills mismatches, a lack of
qualified professionals (both blue and white collar) and relatively weak
innovation: Estonia needs to move towards more technology-intensive sources of
growth. Also, in the light of the exceptionally high energy intensity of the
Estonian economy, further efforts will be needed to reduce the energy bill and
improve the carbon performance of the economy. Lastly, small legislative steps
have been made to foster municipality mergers, while an action plan to improve local
public administration is being prepared. Therefore, in these areas, but also in
fiscal frameworks, the challenges identified in June 2012 and reiterated in the
AGS still apply. The policy plans submitted by Estonia are generally relevant and consistent with most of the challenges identified in
last year's Staff Working Document. They thereby confirm Estonia's commitment to address shortcomings in the areas of the labour market, education and
energy. Beyond measures already scheduled in the 2012 Action Plan for 2011-15,
the new Action Plan proposes a number of new measures, in particular in the
area of promoting healthy life expectancy and behaviour. However, a number of
topics appear insufficiently targeted or less specifically targeted than
previously: business angels, professional disease, regional unemployment,
energy efficiency in transport and local administration reform.
2.
Economic developments and challenges
2.1.
Recent economic developments and outlook
Recent economic developments Estonia's GDP growth
appears broadly balanced. After a strong rebound in
2011, Estonia's real GDP growth moderated to 3.2% in 2012, supported by robust
domestic demand but held back by slower export growth. A favourable labour
market situation and strong fixed public investment sustained domestic demand. After large surpluses over the period 2009-11, the external balance reverted
to negative values, as Estonia's trade surplus deteriorated and revenue
outflows from foreign investment strengthened. Inflation continues its slow decrease, but wage
inflation might soon reappear. Average annual HICP (harmonised
index of consumer prices) inflation receded from 5.1% in 2011 to 4.2% in 2012, pulled downwards by declining international food and oil prices. As wage growth remains broadly consistent with productivity growth and
core inflation remains relatively low, there is no short-term risk of
significant wage inflation. However, with the unemployment rate already close to
the natural rate of unemployment, this might become an issue in the
coming quarters. Indeed, unemployment continued to decline rapidly to 10.2% in 2012 as output growth remained
strong. Nevertheless, long-term unemployment remains high, in particular among
the low-skilled, and with large regional differences. The labour force
participation ratio remains historically high, but inactivity for health
reasons is increasing. Indeed, in the EU context, Estonia shows relatively poor
health outcomes, especially for male (healthy) life expectancy at birth and the
prevalence of chronic conditions.[4] Deleveraging is now reversing, with private sector
indebtedness likely to be growing again soon and the indebtedness of
enterprises already increasing. At around 130% of
GDP in 2011 (consolidated figures), the stock of private debt (households and
enterprises) still reflected the rapid accumulation in the boom years. In
addition, higher interest margins and prudent supervisory policies continue helping
to maintain the stability of the banking sector. Public-sector finances remain among the strongest
in the EU, with the lowest debt level, at around
10.1% of GDP in 2012, and a budget deficit limited to 0.3% of GDP, far better than the 2.6% of GDP planned in the stability programme
update of spring 2012 and possibly partly reflecting the volatility of Estonia's economy. Economic outlook Reflecting the economy’s catching-up potential,
real GDP is expected to continue growing above the EU average over the long
term thanks to continuing capital accumulation and productivity gains. Economic growth is projected at 3.0% in 2013, with a progressive
recovery of Estonia's main trading partners from mid-2013. In 2014 growth should continue to converge towards
its long-term average of 4%, driven by exports, but
also by domestic demand mostly through stronger private investment. Export-led growth
may resume soon, supported by Russia’s relatively good
economic performance and by the relatively strong resilience of the Nordic
countries to the sovereign debt crisis. However, as
domestic demand increases, maintaining external balances will require
improvements in competitiveness to foster exports, while vigilance will still
be needed to contain risks to macro-financial stability. The government balance is expected to remain negative at 0.3% of GDP
in 2013 before reverting to a nominal surplus of 0.2%
of GDP in 2014. The general
government debt is expected to fall to 9.6% in 2014, owing to budgetary
surpluses. Both the national
reform programme and the stability programme share
the same short-term economic outlook, but neither
of them gives any figures on the impact of the planned structural reforms on
growth. For 2013 the outlook is broadly in line with
the most recent Commission forecasts. For 2014 the Estonian authorities are more
cautious and forecast real GDP growth of 3.6%. A number of factors combined could pose a risk of
inflationary pressures re-emerging once domestic demand has fully recovered. Overall, the level of potential growth in Estonia in the years ahead is likely to stay below its pre-crisis rate, when rapid capital
accumulation reflected EU accession and swift financial convergence. In
addition, the population is ageing, with the working-age population declining.
Post-crisis structural unemployment will also be higher, weighing on potential
growth. However, steady foreign direct investment inflows should still mean
that total factor productivity will make a sizeable contribution to growth,
while continuing structural reforms could boost potential growth. In parallel, investment
is likely to make a strong contribution to potential growth due to a number of
factors, such as the existence of a business and policy climate that favours
private investment, public infrastructure investment supported by EU cohesion and
structural funds, and the need for further improvements to the housing stock,
which should take place when real wage growth resumes.
2.2.
Challenges
Estonia faces considerable challenges as regards the availability of a skilled
labour and re-employment of the long-term unemployed or re-integration of the
disabled into the labour market. Overall, the main
policy challenges facing the country have not changed since the 2012 assessment
exercise, although some adjustments are needed as the government progresses
with its reform agenda. First, the government still
needs to formalise all the necessary components to comply with the new rules in
the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance. In addition, the (structural) budget balance rule, which is expected
to be introduced this year, should be complemented by strengthening the binding
nature of the multiannual expenditure targets. In parallel, given the need to
preserve a sound fiscal position in view of increasing expenditure pressures, the
efficiency of public spending could be improved, in particular through better
targeting of public spending on social security. Second, as the shrinking of the labour force is a major concern, bringing more people into the labour force is the most prominent
challenge. Limited changes to the benefit systems together
with promoting accessibility to reasonably adjusted workplaces could foster labour
market entries and prevent disability-related exits. In parallel, long-term and youth unemployment could become persistent due to
skills mismatches and the lack of jobs in certain regions, entailing a higher
risk of poverty. The range of problems faced by jobless
households puts growing pressure on the provision of (and access to) quality social services, while active labour market policies may fall short
of what is needed to prevent structural unemployment from weighing on labour
supply and from pushing up wages in growing sectors. Lastly, a persistent shortage
of childcare services and generous income support for stay-home parents discourage
an early return of parents, especially women, to the labour market, while gender
pay gap and segmentation may contribute to weaker labour market outcomes. Third, shortages of
qualified labour may soon contribute to exerting upward pressure on wages,
leading to higher costs for companies and affecting investment and growth
potential. This results from a high proportion of
people without professional education from the vocational education and
training (VET) system or from higher education, a low
employment rate of the low-skilled and a still relatively low level of participation
in lifelong learning, in particular of the low-skilled and the 50-64 age group.
In this light, a better targeted education and adult training system is necessary
to ensure an adequate supply of skilled human capital. Fourth, productivity growth, and thus medium- and
long-term competitiveness, is hampered by inefficiencies in research and innovation
(R&I). Weak public-private cooperation,
national priorities for research and innovation policy that are too broad,
including a lack of focus on shared priorities between research and business
innovation, and a relative mismatch between the technical skills produced by
universities and the needs of the market could hamper productivity growth and
thus affect the country’s medium- and long-term competitiveness. Lastly, prioritisation
and internationalisation of the R&I system is a crucial challenge for Estonia, given the small size of the country. Fifth, Estonia’s energy and resource intensity remains
amongst the highest in the EU, while the importance of oil shale as an energy
source emphasises the need to develop more efficient and less polluting energy
sources and adequately address the pressing waste
issue resulting from energy production from oil shale. Also, the transport sector does not appear environmentally friendly
enough, with insufficiently attractive public transport networks and still
limited rail infrastructure developments, while the network still lacks intermodal
connections for passengers and freight. Lastly, relative market isolation due
to insufficient cross-border connections limits Estonia’s security and
diversity of supply and, thereby, market competition. Sixth, regional
differences and inefficiencies among the local governments are having an adverse impact on the provision of public services.
This concerns in particular childcare, family support services, long-term care,
primary healthcare, education and public transport.
In addition, given the significant impact of EU funds, it is important to
create favourable conditions for effective and sustainable service provision to
ensure the strategic programming of funds for 2014-20 in order to deliver on
the Europe 2020 priorities. Lastly, a potential recurrence of excessive credit
growth remains a medium-term concern. Private-sector
indebtedness relative to GDP remains relatively high and will likely be increasing
again soon. Also, in the present context of reappearing skills shortages, wage
pressures may soon resurface and could feed into excessive credit growth
relatively soon. This risk is compounded by partial tax deductibility of
mortgage interest payments and loan guarantees that still encourage private
borrowing. Furthermore, property taxation is underdeveloped and the land tax
has been virtually abolished as from January 2013.
3.
Assessment of policy agenda
3.1.
Fiscal policy and taxation
Budgetary
developments and debt dynamics The
main goal of the Estonian budgetary strategy, as expressed in the 2013 stability
programme, is to ensure a sustainable fiscal policy that supports balanced
economic growth. The medium-term objective (MTO),
unchanged compared to the previous programme, is a structural surplus. The MTO
more than adequately reflects the objectives of the Pact. According to the
programme, the MTO was achieved as of 2009. Other fiscal objectives include
ensuring sufficient fiscal buffers and reducing the tax burden to the
pre-crisis level by lowering labour taxes. During the budget year the
government intends to avoid adopting positive supplementary budgets, using
windfall revenue to accumulate reserves. Estonia achieved a headline budget
deficit of -0.3% of GDP in 2012, which was considerably better than the deficit
of -2.6% projected in the 2012 programme. This was
primarily a result of significantly stronger than expected economic and
employment growth and slower than expected expenditure growth. In addition, the
outcome was positively affected by some delays in the implementation of
investment projects financed through revenue from the sale of excess greenhouse
gas (GHG) emission certificates. The 2013 programme forecasts a deficit of
-0.5% of GDP in 2013, which is slightly smaller than projected in the 2012
stability programme. The improvement is a result of strong base effects from
2012 supported by solid tax revenue growth, which has been partially offset by
increased expenditure pressures, a 1.2 percentage point (pp) cut in the unemployment
insurance premium and delays in the implementation of one-off investments
financed through GHG sales revenue. Risks to the fiscal target for 2013 seem
balanced overall, with the authorities’ macroeconomic projections being
realistic. Local elections in October 2013 are not creating significant
implementation risks as most municipalities are bound by the net debt ceiling. The
programme targets a balanced budget for 2014. The
improvement on 2013 primarily stems from a better macroeconomic outlook. That
said, one-off expenditure related to the additional payments to the second-pillar
pension system and the postponement of investment projects financed through GHG
sales revenue add pressures to the budget balance. The authorities intend to contain
growth in government consumption expenditure, which is set to increase at a
slower rate than nominal GDP over the whole programme period, in line with the
Commission spring forecast. Compared with 2013, expenditure as a share of GDP
is expected to decline in all areas with the exception of subsidies and social
transfers in kind. The projected consolidation is also supported by the planned
revenue-increasing discretionary measures (see Box 1). For
2015-17, the programme targets a steady improvement in the nominal balance
through a gradual build-up of headline surpluses to 0.8% of GDP in 2017.
Revenue as a share of GDP is set to decline by 5.4 pps of GDP between 2012 and
2016 as a result of the phasing-out of the EU structural funds, the reversal of
temporary consolidation measures and the planned cut in the personal and
corporate income tax rate in 2015. It is outpaced by a decline in expenditure. While
this strategy is subject to risks, linked to both macroeconomic developments
and implementation of the strategy, these risks can be assessed as broadly
neutral, in particular given the solid track record of the authorities in
meeting the previous targets. After
achieving the MTO[5]
in 2012, according to the programme, the (recalculated) structural balance is
expected to temporarily deviate from the MTO in 2013, before improving and
returning to surplus of 0.3% of GDP in 2014.[6] In 2015 and 2016, the programme targets a steady improvement in the
(recalculated) structural balance, reaching a surplus of 0.8% of GDP in 2016. The
improvement in the (recalculated) structural balance by 0.7 % of GDP corresponding
to these targets complies with the requirement for an annual improvement of
0.5% of GDP in 2014 in accordance with the national projections. In parallel,
according to the Commission spring 2013 forecast, the deviation from the MTO in
2013 is not significant, with a structural deficit of -0.2% of GDP, while the
magnitude of improvement in the structural balance in 2014 and in the
(recalculated) structural balance correspond. Both estimates show an
improvement in the structural balance after 2013 and a return to the MTO from
2014 onwards. In addition, the estimates should be seen against the
uncertainties linked to determining the cyclical position in real time for
countries undergoing significant structural adjustments, the ambitious MTO set
by the Estonian authorities and the relative closeness of the structural
balance to the MTO. Based on the information provided in the programme, the growth
rate of government expenditure, net of discretionary revenue measures, in 2014
is projected to exceed the lower rate of 0.85% under the expenditure benchmark
and in 2015 the reference medium-term rate of potential GDP growth of 2.11%.
This, however, is not expected to undermine the achievement of the MTO in 2014
and is likely to maintain it thereafter, reflecting the volatility of public
investment and falling usage of EU funds after the end of the 2007-13 programming
period. According
to the programme, the general government debt, which is the lowest in the EU,
is projected to increase marginally to 10.2% of GDP in 2013, before gradually
declining to 8.3% in 2017. This profile reflects an accumulation of financial
assets due to nominal surpluses after 2014. Medium-term debt projections (see
Graph below Table V in annex) indicate that full implementation of the
programme would lead to an even lower debt-to-GDP ratio in 2020. Box 1. Main measures || Main budgetary measures || || Revenue || Expenditure || || 2012 || || · Abolishing reduced excise rates for special-purpose diesel; net effect (0.11% of GDP) · Lowering the ceiling for total personal income tax deductibility from EUR 3 960 to EUR 1 920 (0.03% of GDP, impact in 2013) · Increasing tobacco excise duty by 10% (0.05% of GDP) · Increasing alcohol excise duty by 5% (0.04% of GDP) || · Reforming special pension schemes (impact not specified) · Increasing the number of state-financed study places at higher education institutions as part of higher education reform (impact not specified) || || 2013 || || · Lowering unemployment insurance contributions from 4.2% to 3% (-0.3% of GDP) · Abolishing the land tax on residential land for plots up to 1 500 m² in densely populated areas and up to 2 ha in rural areas (-0.1% of GDP) · Increasing tobacco excise duty by 6% (0.04% of GDP) · Increasing alcohol excise duty by 5% (0.05% of GDP) || · n.a. || || 2014 || || · Increasing tobacco excise duty by 6% (0.03% of GDP) · Increasing alcohol excise duty by 5% (0.07% of GDP) || · n.a. || || 2015 || || · Lowering the personal and corporate income tax rate from 21% to 20% (impact not specified) || · n.a. || || 2016 || || · n.a. || · n.a. || || Note: The budgetary impact in the table is the impact reported in the programme, i.e. by the national authorities. A plus sign indicates that revenue/expenditure increases as a consequence of the measure. || · Long-term
sustainability Estonia does not appear to face
short-term, medium-term or long-term sustainability challenges. In addition, government debt (10.1% of GDP in 2012) is
significantly below the Treaty threshold of 60% of GDP. Estonia's very low level of government debt would increase to 13.7% of GDP by 2030,
assuming no further policy changes are made. The long-term increase in
age-related expenditure is below the EU average, and recent reform measures
undertaken in the field of pensions have further reduced sustainability risks.
However, as a result, the projected decline in the benefit ratio could pose a
risk to the adequacy of pension entitlements. Fiscal framework The strength of the current fiscal framework lies
in the long-standing commitment to keeping the general government budget in balance.[7] The fiscal framework needs to be further strengthened to comply
with the new rules set in the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance.
Although the balanced-budget rule has not been formalised in law, all Estonian
governments have adhered to it, except in 2008-09. As the rule was adapted only
recently to take account of cyclical factors, there are no mechanisms in place
that would limit expenditure growth when economic growth is above potential. The
balanced-budget rule is complemented by a debt rule applicable at the level of
local government. There is a net debt ceiling of 60%[8] of revenue
from the main activities in the current fiscal year[9] on borrowing
by local governments and dependent units, with no escape clauses. The
government still needs to formalise the structural budget balance (or surplus)
rule in the State Budget Law to comply with the new rules in the Treaty on
Stability, Coordination and Governance. The process of preparing the structural
budget balance rule started already in 2011 and the authorities are expected to
meet the deadlines set in the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance. Lastly, the medium-term budgetary framework in place
provides a basis for planning beyond the next year’s budget. However, the
expenditure limits set in the framework are indicative and can be revised in
the following year’s update. In order to prevent pro-cyclical fiscal loosening
in years of high economic growth, the expenditure ceilings could be made more
binding and accompanied with multi-annual expenditure rules. The same applies
to the system for monitoring and reporting on the strategic targets, including issues
of public accountability. Tax system Estonia’s tax-to-GDP
ratio, which stood at 32.8% in 2011, remains low compared to other EU countries (EU27 GDP-weighted average at 38.8%). The tax structure is
generally considered favourable to growth and the taxation policy framed in
terms of a tax system with low tax rates and broad tax bases. With the general
government budget close to balance, fiscal consolidation does not appear to be
a major challenge in Estonia. The tax burden on consumption, as measured by its
implicit tax rate, was 26.1% in 2011, the seventh highest in the EU. The tax
wedge on labour at average wages (single, no children), was 40.4% in 2012. By
contrast, the implicit tax rate on capital was at 7.9% the second lowest of the
19 Member States for which it is available and taxes on capital represented
only 2.2% of GDP in 2011, the second lowest value in the EU, mainly reflecting
the design of corporate income tax that is levied on distributed profits only. In 2011, Estonia adopted a legislative package aimed
at further improving the growth-friendliness of taxation by reducing the tax
burden on labour, providing incentives to increase participation in lifelong
learning and reducing incentives to borrow. They include reducing personal and
corporate income tax rates by one percentage point (to 20%) as of 2015, abolishing
the fringe-benefit tax on work-related studies and lowering the ceiling for
total personal income tax deductibility (linked in particular to mortgage
interest payments) by about 40% as of 2012. In addition, the government decided
in late 2012 to lower unemployment insurance contributions from 4.2% to 3.0% (‑0.3%
of GDP), as of 2013. From 2013, Estonia has abolished the land tax on small
and medium-sized residential plots, if the primary residence of the taxpayer is
located on that land. The share of property taxes in Estonia was already the
lowest in the EU (0.3% of GDP in 2011) and was levied only on land, based on
outdated land registry values. While the fiscal effect of abolishing the land
tax is rather small (-0.1% of GDP), it could weaken the counter-cyclical policy
instruments available to influence housing sector developments. It also reduces
the policy potential to strengthen and diversify budgetary revenue without
harming growth.[10] Environmental taxation in Estonia (2.8% of GDP) was
above the EU-27 average in 2011
(2.4% of GDP), reflecting high revenue from transport fuel taxes. Transport
taxation, excluding fuel taxes, was the second lowest in the EU, at 0.1% of
GDP. There is no vehicle taxation, except for heavy-goods vehicles, and no measures
have been taken so far to increase transport taxation. New cars in Estonia had the highest average emissions per km in the EU in 2011 (156.9 g CO2/km,
16% above the EU average). The price effect of motor fuels due to increased
fuel excise duties and high world oil prices has not had any strong effect so
far on car purchase decisions. Despite the increase, diesel excise duty is
still slightly below the EU average and excise duty on petrol is well below. Introducing
or raising taxes on sources of energy and also on transport and waste (e.g.
road tax, energy consumption-linked tax on motor vehicle use or ownership, in
line with the Commission communication,[11]
or landfill taxes) could help to achieve environmental goals and further
diversify budgetary revenues. Thanks to the simple tax system and widespread use
of e-government, Estonia has relatively low tax compliance costs. The relative share of informal work is about 10% of employment,
which is below the EU average.[12]
To improve tax compliance, Estonia has recently taken relevant measures to gain
better control over low enforcement areas by amending the VAT law to prevent
tax fraud in gold-related transactions and by limiting access to the zero VAT
rate for excise goods in excise warehouses. The Tax and Customs Board
systematically works on tax compliance issues, focusing on improving tax
collection in construction, catering and accommodation. In parallel, the government
is planning further measures: (i) for all excise goods, limiting imports from
third countries by private persons, starting from late 2013; (ii) reinforcing the
rules on registering employees to reduce undeclared work; and (iii) introducing
an electronic receipts system to improve VAT collection and limit scope for VAT
fraud.
3.2.
Financial sector
Estonia’s
banking sector remains sound, with strong capital buffers, satisfactory asset
quality and high provision coverage, but a medium-term financial stability risk
persists. The total loan portfolio of the banking
sector is growing again, with enterprises' indebtedness relative to GDP increasing
anew. Credit growth could accelerate as the reserve requirement for banks is
low, there is no rule setting a maximum loan-to-value ratio for mortgages, and
real wage growth is increasingly positive. Further incentives
to borrow still exist, including the partial deductibility of mortgage interest
payments and loan guarantees, thereby also contributing to maintaining a
medium-term macro-financial stability risk. The total value and the number of real estate transactions increased
by 13% and 12% respectively in 2012, while the housing affordability index is
high and a growing number of people (11%) intend to buy real estate in the next
2-3 years, opening the possibility of a new property bubble.[13] Overall, promoting savings remains desirable as the
loan-to-deposit ratio still exceeds 100%.[14]
The reduction in the land tax base that entered into force in January
2013 (see section 3.1) could have a - probably only
limited - effect in the opposite direction. Furthermore, there is no longer any
talk of updating the land registry values used as a basis for the existing land
tax, which date back to 2001. Access
to finance Access
to finance for small and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs) - despite improving over
the previous year - remains difficult. Since the onset of the crisis,
sources of financing such as the stock and bond market have been virtually
frozen. In addition, relatively few Estonian companies have access to bond
financing or international markets anyway. However, banks report a rise in the
number of clients, deposits, foreign transactions, leasing contracts and card
usage. Also, their loan portfolio is composed less of real estate projects than
during the previous boom period, which gives greater access for companies
active in other sectors. Nevertheless, this has so far mostly benefited larger
companies or projects and utilities. For SMEs, lending conditions remain very
strict: limited liability is largely
a fiction, as very often entrepreneurs have to collateralise their own assets. This
reduces the availability of credit to further invest and grow. In
parallel with the planned use of financial engineering instruments from EU
funds to improve the access of SMEs to finance, the government is continuing to
support companies through the institutions created for this purpose in previous
years: KredEx, Enterprise Estonia and the Estonian Development Fund. The latter
is being made more project-based. Enterprise Estonia is focusing on the market
segments that appear more promising (ICT, medicine and medical technologies, wood
and food) and on key clients. Two important new organisations or bodies were created
in 2012 in order to facilitate access to seed and equity capital: the Estonian Business
Angels Network and the Baltic Innovation Fund, which will invest in private
equity and venture capital funds in the Baltic countries, focusing on metal/machinery,
electronics, ICT, shared services and logistics.
3.3.
Labour market, education and social policies
In 2012,
as economic growth continued, more unemployed people found a job and real wages
increased. As employment continues to grow, the national target in this respect
appears achievable, partly facilitated by the shrinking working-age population
(denominator effect). However, persistent youth and
long-term unemployment, skills mismatches, and labour force losses due to chronic
conditions[15] or health problems resulting in growing workforce shortages remain the main source of
concern and a potential bottleneck to sustainable growth. Lastly, a persistent lack of childcare facilities and/or possibilities
delays the return of parents, especially women, to the labour market, while the
gender pay gap and segmentation might prevent higher qualified women from fully
contributing to labour market outcomes. In 2012,
the Council recommended that Estonia improve incentives to work by streamlining
the social benefits system and increase flexibility in the allocation of
benefits, while ensuring adequate social protection. In response, several measures have been introduced. Others are only
in their development phase, will need implementation or are double-edged, while
further measures could have been considered. Progress has been limited on the
Council recommendation. In line with the commitments, the rate of the unemployment
insurance premium has been reduced for employers and employees from January 2013,
along with the personal and corporate income tax rates
as of 2015 (see under section 3.1 'Tax system'). However, an envisaged increase in the basic exemption from personal income
tax has been postponed. To alleviate the high poverty risk of the unemployed,
the unemployment allowance has been increased substantially from EUR 65 to EUR 101.50
(around 35% of the national minimum wage) per month from 2013. Discussions on the revision of the incapacity for work
schemes have started, while plans for establishing the long awaited insurance
scheme against accidents at work have been deferred by several months:[16] submission of
the scheme to parliament is now announced for winter 2013-14 and it is unlikely
to enter into force before mid-2015. In spite of the growing poverty, Estonia has not sufficiently ensured better accessibility to efficient and quality services
(see also under section 3.5 'Modernisation of public administration'). Also, the
social contribution ‘minimum’ and the absence of unemployment benefits for
part-time workers[17]
do not facilitate a smooth transition from unemployment/inactivity to work via
part-time jobs.[18],
[19] An
increase in the minimum wage to EUR 320, i.e. 35% of the average wage, has
strengthened work incentives for low-wage earners, but has contributed to
raising labour costs. It is important that minimum wage increases remain fully
consistent with productivity growth in the economy as a whole, especially as
the share of the low-skilled in the total labour force is relatively large. Lastly, the data-management interoperability of the social benefit system in general remains
insufficient,[20]
thereby limiting evidence-based policy response in terms of higher flexibility
and better targeting in benefit allocation, leading to possible
overlaps/inefficiency and unemployment/inactivity traps. To address the recommendation on better targeting
family and parental benefits and removing distortionary income tax exemptions
related to children, some steps in the right direction have been made, but further
progress is needed, not least in the area of childcare possibilities. The government has addressed the need for better targeting family
benefits by approving an additional child benefit as from July 2013 for
families living in relative poverty, and by raising the child allowance for the
third and subsequent child to EUR 76.72 per month. Also, these additional
benefits are not included in the calculation of the subsistence benefit. Furthermore,
Estonia plans to modify the parental benefits formula during 2013 to ensure
that the time profile of benefits encourages parents to go back to work.
However, the focus in Estonia on income support measures in the event of
childbirth[21]
may be comparatively cost effective than childcare services in increasing fertility
rates, while having a negative impact on women’s employment.[22] At the same
time, measures which have proven to have a stronger positive impact on birth
rates and female employment, such as the provision of childcare services,
remain underfinanced[23]
(see under section 3.5 'Modernisation of public administration'). In particular,
the draft reform of the Pre-School Act is still under discussion in the Ministry
of Education and Research, as it was already in spring last year.[24] The recommendation on increasing the return of the
long-term unemployed to the labour market has only been partly implemented, with
limited progress so far. Despite a continued
improvement in bringing the unemployed back into work, the proportion of
long-term and very long-term unemployed in the total workforce remains high. The
government is responding with some tailor-made and complex activation measures,
although their intensity and coverage are still low. However,
active labour market policy measures (ALMPs) are only partly
effective in addressing this challenge as problems affecting the long-term
unemployed are many-sided (e.g. indebtedness, addiction, health problems,
caring obligations), requiring additional services by other institutions and
administrative levels (see also under section 3.5 'Modernisation of public
administration'). This is further exacerbated by the high level of low-skilled unemployed
and high regional disparities. In this respect, there is no coordinated response
for developing basic economic activities and encouraging job creation in
regions affected by high unemployment.[25] In response to the recommendation on increasing the
employment of young people, the progress in
addressing youth unemployment has been limited so far and therefore this part
of the CSR has been partly implemented. The
government has increased the provision of career counselling,
work-related training and job-search workshops. However, overall, although the youth unemployment rate has dropped substantially, from 32.9% in
2010 to 20.9% in 2012, it has remained high and the youth employment rate is
still below the pre-crisis level due to difficulties in reaching young people with
existing measures. Indeed, only around a third of the young
jobless were registered as unemployed in 2012 and benefited from ALMPs. Education policies Estonia is confronted with
relatively significant skills mismatches resulting in particular from a
major structural shift from non-tradable to tradable sectors in recent years. Despite public spending on education above the EU average, Estonia is also faced with a high proportion of
people without any professional qualifications, since about 32% of
Estonians aged 25-64 years have not graduated either from VET or from higher
education. A persistent lack of graduates in science,
technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) is also an issue. In response to the
recommendation on linking training and education more effectively to the needs
of the labour market, ambitious reforms of the
tertiary, VET and upper secondary education systems are in progress, with more results
still expected. Overall, some progress has been made on addressing this part of
the CSR. At tertiary education level, performance agreements
have been signed between the Ministry of Education (MoE) and higher education
institutions under the new Higher Education Act, and will be implemented as of
September 2013. This reform could help steer
study outcomes towards fields required by the economy (e.g. STEM). In parallel,
new scholarships have been set up for students in the STEM fields that present
the greatest demand, in order to boost the number of graduates. It is important
that this reform is fully implemented by Estonia in the future, including
through ensuring adequate funding and, in parallel, that the high degree of autonomy
of tertiary education institutions is maintained. A draft new VET Institutions Act is in parliament. An ambitious modernisation of vocational education curricula is planned,
with the aim of increasing the share of apprenticeship in the curricula and better
matching study outcomes with the skills required by the labour market. Accreditation experts coming from enterprises have already delivered
positive assessments of seven out of 40 sectors of teaching in VET, as part of
a regular review process. Preliminary plans include
establishing a managing centre for apprenticeship training, with the aim of
creating 2 000 apprenticeship places in cooperation with VET institutions and
employers. This will, however, require a high degree of cooperation with social
partners, in particular - but not exclusively - the enterprise sector, and
appropriate financing. Both aspects currently appear to be partly missing. The government has recently updated its general
education development plan (2007-13) with a view to improving the quality and
efficiency of the education system and reducing the number of early school
leavers. The national mechanism for tracking early
school leaving is being implemented. In parallel, the government
has launched a long-awaited and ambitious reform of the upper secondary general
education school network, whose objective is to raise
the quality of education and bring it more into line with the needs of the job
market, and to align the network of upper secondary schools with Estonia’s demographic situation. In this context, a draft new Basic
and Upper Secondary Schools Act is currently in parliament with a view to
establishing a clearer separation of basic schools and upper secondary schools,
with the possible longer term objective of moving towards state-owned
upper-secondary schools, which is a lengthy process. Lastly, it remains to be
seen whether this long-term rationalisation of the upper secondary schools
network can be implemented independently of a more ambitious reform of local
authorities (see under section 3.5 'Modernisation of public administration'). Estonia is also investing heavily in the use of new
technologies and digital skills, by e.g. updating
the ICT skills of students, teachers and teachers of educators in general and
vocational education and in higher education. Also, the Estonian government has
very recently launched a pilot project for computer-based statistics education
in lower and upper secondary schools. An inter-ministerial
skills task force was set up in 2012 to find solutions for better matching
people’s skills to labour market needs. Work has started and an inventory of
competencies has been created in a State Register of Occupational
Qualifications and a cross-link between online registers has been established.[26] Entrepreneurship skills are included in the
university curricula and on a voluntary basis in secondary education. Still,
one of the main bottlenecks in the Estonian
economy remains the lack of skilled workforce at both high and low ends,
including of highly qualified managers. In response to the recommendation on increasing
opportunities for low-skilled workers to improve their access to lifelong
learning, limited progress has been registered concerning this part of the CSR.
As regards low-skilled workers, relevant existing
programmes are continuing for unemployed 16-29 year-olds with or without basic
education, while the 'back to school' vocational education programme is also ongoing.
In parallel, an inter-ministerial task force set up in 2012 is in charge of drafting
the future national lifelong learning strategy for 2014-20. However, the
currently insufficient inclusion of the low-skilled and older workers in
lifelong learning is still not sufficiently addressed and the training
activities do not always credibly meet labour market needs in terms of
relevance and quality. Limited
progress has been made on the draft adjustments to the Adult Training Act since
spring 2012, with the revision of the training licences system for training
providers and changes to the financing system of adult training still in the
hands of the MoE. Lastly, adult
and unemployed training could benefit more from the modernised VET Centres and
the modernised vocational curricula.
3.4.
Structural measures promoting
growth and competitiveness
Energy, transport, infrastructure, climate
change and the environment Estonia’s
energy and carbon intensity are still among the highest in the EU, in particular
in transport, where the new car fleet is the most energy-intensive in the EU.[27] The
importance of oil shale as an energy source emphasises the need to develop more
efficient and less polluting energy sources and adequately address a pressing
waste issue. Also, there is a need to improve knowledge of the true cost of the
water resource as an economic factor in a context of water abundance. The
transposition of several EU Directives in the energy sector has not yet been
fully completed. Lastly, Estonia needs to connect its energy markets to other
EU electricity and gas networks in order to increase security of supply and
diversify energy sources, develop cross-border trading and avoid congestion. In 2012, the Council recommendation mentioned the
need to improve energy efficiency, in particular in buildings and transport,
and environmental incentives concerning vehicles. Given
the scope of the challenges, and despite some clear progress in insulating public
buildings, the measures undertaken so far have had a limited impact, not least those
designed to increase energy efficiency in the transport sector. Therefore, some
progress has been made on this part of the recommendation. Estonia is proceeding with its
investment programmes in the building and transport sectors. In the
building sector, this continued up to the end of 2012, when most CO2 projects in the government buildings
sector were almost finished and the EU funding-related projects had largely been
completed. The government is waiting for the new financial programming of EU
funds (2014-20) to continue with the insulation of apartment blocks and individual
houses. Additionally, Estonia introduced measures to improve energy efficiency
in power generation and in district heating and has planned measures to promote
high-efficiency cogeneration, in particular in the use of biomass. However, considerable
amounts of money could still be invested to improve energy efficiency and
reduce carbon intensity of buildings, both residential and industrial. Measures
targeted at the industrial sector are planned. With respect to transport, Estonia does not use tax incentives to improve the energy efficiency of its car fleet. Its
action remains limited to the use of public funds to support environmental
projects. The 2012-14 Electro-Mobility Programme continues to provide public
support for the acquisition of electric cars and for establishing a quick
charging infrastructure covering the whole country. Estonia has also undertaken
a financing programme (EUR 86 million) focused on energy efficiency in public
transport. In this context, pilot projects for LPG buses are being initiated. To promote public transport, Tallinn city has introduced free public transport for its residents as from
2013, with a decrease in private traffic intensity of some 10% so far. However, if this initiative is to be a complete success, it will have
to be ensured that the loss of ticket revenue does not compromise service
quality, investment in new vehicles and in transport infrastructure. The new Transport Development
Plan 2014-20 (currently in preparation) is expected to put forward a
comprehensive strategy for a more environmentally friendly and innovative transport
sector, including enhancing public transport networks, continuing rail
infrastructure developments, creating car-pooling stations and improving
intermodal connections for passengers and freight. In parallel, the draft 'Estonian Business Growth Strategy 2020' has proposed
logistics and transport engineering among the top development priorities. Innovative approaches will be even more important to fully exploit
the economic potential of the Rail Baltic project, whose building works have
been planned for 2018-23, and which aims to improve Estonia's connectivity with
western Europe.[28] In this context, the decision made by the Estonian authorities to
significantly reduce the amount of EU structural funds investment in transport
infrastructure during the next programming period (2014-20) is a source of
concern. Overall, it is unlikely that these measures will be
sufficient to contain the modal shift away from public transport towards
private cars and, more generally, to contain the ongoing increase in non-ETS
GHG emissions. Most recent data point to Estonia's non-ETS emissions increasing more than expected in the 2011 projections and being
already above the Effort Sharing Decision target for 2013 (see in the Overview table, p. 23). It can even be expected that Estonia will fail to meet its GHG emission target for 2020 in the absence of additional measures
to improve energy efficiency, in particular in the field of transport and
housing, and to reduce the energy intensity of its car fleet. In response to the recommendation on strengthening
environmental incentives related to waste, some progress has been made with the
increase in royalties on oil shale production, and more results are expected in
2013. However, given the need and scope for further measures in the areas of oil
shale, municipal waste and waste water, this part of the Council recommendation
has been only partly implemented. The importance of
oil shale as an energy source adds to the need to reduce the waste it generates
and to develop sustainable options and economic incentives to use the waste
accumulated from the oil shale already mined. The increase in royalties on the
production of oil shale from 2013 is a step in the right direction. With
respect to incineration, 50% of municipal waste will be used in a cogeneration
plant being built close to Tallinn and to be completed in June 2013. However, a
number of barriers to reaching the 2020 recycling targets for municipal waste remain
as the producer responsibility in place appears insufficient to cover the full
costs of separate collection, sorting and recycling of the waste streams, while
the pay-as-you-throw scheme has limited coverage. Regarding waste water,
Estonia is implementing the EU Directive relatively slowly, and additional
efforts will be needed to reach full compliance. In terms of efficiency of the
water utility companies, there is a lack of emphasis on setting standards,
limits or requirements for processes in the water industry in order to ensure
that technological changes actually take place. As regards the recommendation on fostering
renewable energy use, including through upgraded infrastructure and legislation,
the progress made can be considered to have been substantial and the challenge
temporarily addressed. However, attention could be paid to avoiding changes
affecting the legitimate expectations of investors in the formal agreements
reached with private actors. Estonia has reached its 2011-12 interim target for renewable energy
production, distribution and use. Moreover, the country is preparing new
development plans extending to the horizon of 2050. The overall objective is to
further diversify the portfolio of energy sources, i.e. relying even less on
fossil fuels and increasing still further the share of renewable energy in
primary sources. In January 2013, Estonia fully opened its electricity market
to competition. An amendment to the Electricity Market Act is under discussion in
parliament, but may end up retroactively introducing unfavourable changes to
the support conditions for wind generators, reneging on previous agreements
with industry. Transposition of the third internal energy market package of energy-related
EU Directives needs to be completed, especially as Estonia is close to full
compliance.[29]
With respect to transmitting the wind energy produced on the west coast to eastern
Estonia, expropriation measures for extending the infrastructure are nearly
in place. Regarding the transport sector, the share of renewable energy in all
modes has stayed very low, far behind the target of 10%. As a result, the
government is planning to introduce an obligation to incorporate 5-7% of biofuel
in motor fuel and to thereby increase the use of renewable energy in public
transport. With respect to the recommendation on continuing
the development of cross-border connections to end relative energy market
isolation, some progress has been registered so far. Further progress depends
partly on factors outside Estonia's control. Given the scale of the existing
challenges, this part of the CSR can be considered to have been only partly
implemented. Cross-border electricity connections with
Latvia (third cable) and Finland (second cable) are being strengthened, and
power grid systems synchronised: Estonia has recently joined the Nord Pool Spot
market by creating the Estlink price area for day-ahead market trading in the
power exchange. It is continuing its efforts to unbundle its gas sector and
address its dependence on long-term oil-indexed contracts with Russia. Progress is being registered with respect to the country’s first liquefied natural
gas (LNG) terminal: decisions are expected to be made relatively soon, as the
conclusions of a study on the best place to establish the necessary terminal have
been unveiled. Research and innovation All actors in the research and innovation sector in Estonia are highly dynamic: government, universities and the business sector. However, a weak
link between the public research sector and the economy at large translates into
weak public-private cooperation,[30]
too broad national priorities for
limited resources and a relative mismatch between the technical skills produced
by universities and the needs of the market. In practice, the challenge for Estonia is to boost innovation in traditional industries, while at the same time focusing its
limited resources and supporting growth of knowledge-intensive companies,
mostly in sectors where Estonia already has or can easily develop a competitive
advantage. Also, the governance of the R&I system could take more account of
the needs of both universities and businesses when designing policy measures. In
addition, internationalisation of the R&I system is a crucial challenge for
Estonia, given the small size of the country. Overall, progress has been
limited and the part of the CSR related to the R&I system is considered as
only partly implemented. With respect to the recommendation on enhancing cooperation between businesses and academia, the challenge
of weak public-private cooperation in the field of R&I persists, despite a few measures in place such as the existence of technology
transfer offices in universities, R&D grant schemes for collaboration
between companies and universities, Competence Centres, and Innovation
Vouchers. The government approach in supporting start-ups and fast-growing
enterprises is highly appreciated by the business community and the new Baltic Innovation
Fund will be beneficial in further providing the necessary financial support
for these types of companies. However, further development of instruments such
as public procurement for innovation would be helpful for better determining
the governmental demand for R&I, with a view to increasing competitiveness
and addressing societal challenges. Part of the solution can also be
found through university-industry research mobility and exchange schemes. In response to the part of the recommendation on fostering prioritisation of the research and innovation systems, Estonia is currently preparing both a national
research and innovation strategy and a national innovation and entrepreneurship
strategy. These strategies are at present undergoing public consultation and are
due to be adopted by the end of June 2013. They are expected to identify
knowledge-intensive sectors that could push the country up on the international
value chain and give access to wider markets, as well as concentrate public
resources on a more limited number of fields of science and technology that
reflect Estonia’s strengths, as identified by international benchmarking. However,
there are two separate strategies and these did not benefit from a broad
consultation exercise involving the private sector and universities during
their early development, which may affect the final results. Furthermore, there
is a concern that research and business innovation will not be brought into a single
or at least strategically coordinated and politically endorsed framework. Regarding the part of the recommendation on
fostering the internationalisation of the research and innovation systems, the Estonian authorities acknowledge a need for special attention. However,
while the measures in place regarding highly skilled professionals are going in
the right direction, as a small country it is unlikely that Estonia will solve the talent challenge alone. In addition, where Estonian top scientists
are well integrated internationally, this is not the case for the overall
research community in Estonia. Evident channels are via the European Framework
Programmes and European Research Area initiatives alongside various
collaborations with the Baltic-Nordic countries. Internal market and competition Estonia generally
enjoys a business-friendly regulatory environment, and the availability of
e-government tools is exceptionally high. The
administrative burden imposed on businesses appears reasonable, and the state also
scores well in terms of its own efficiency (for instance, the state spends a
much smaller share of revenues to collect taxes than in other EU countries,
including quite efficient ones). On the other hand, the impact assessment of
regulations could be improved, in terms of both content and the time available
to stakeholders to provide feedback. The government is taking action to improve the
insolvency procedure, one of the few areas where Estonia lags behind her EU
peers. A review of the situation is ongoing with a
view to facilitating agreed debt restructuring and finding alternative ways of
dealing with insolvencies.
3.5.
Modernisation of public administration
At local level, the mismatch between fiscal
capacity and devolved responsibilities places great pressure on public service
provision by local governments. This situation is aggravated by the small size
of many municipalities and the low population density in most counties, leading to generally low local administrative
capacity. In August 2011, at Estonia's request, the OECD produced a review[31] that highlighted
inadequate efficiency, weak interoperability in terms of data and systems and
fragmented tools and processes. Also, strengthening of the central/local
relationship was advocated, through greater institutional coordination and
collaboration (see also under section 3.3 'Labour market, education and social
policies'), including the data-management interoperability of the social
benefit system. Lastly, the financing system of municipalities does not currently
include incentives for local governments to support entrepreneurship and job
creation and thereby to increase their revenue, while the equalisation fund in
favour of weaker municipalities in its current form might reduce municipalities'
motivation to make extra efforts to increase revenues. The quality service provision required from local
governments by law appears ineffective in most sectors - transport, education, social
services, including childcare, long-term care and primary healthcare. Due to the small size of most municipalities, their capacity to
recruit competent professionals who would be sufficiently occupied is limited. In
particular, the integration of the long-term unemployed into the labour market is
made more challenging by the ineffectiveness of local governments in providing
support services, since this target group usually requires the provision of a
range of local social services as a precondition for re-employment or
activation. Without first improving the provision of social and other support
services at the level of local governments, ALMPs are expected to remain partly
ineffective.[32]
A sound framework for effective delivery of public services at local level is also
required for the implementation of EU funds. In response to the Council recommendation on
improving the efficiency of local governments and ensuring effective service
provision, limited progress has been registered so far, since the measures already
introduced or currently under consideration do not appear sufficiently advanced
or comprehensive at this stage to be totally credible, while further measures
could be considered. Amendments to the Act on the
Administrative Division of the Territory and to the Promotion of Local
Government Merger Act entered into force in March 2013, with the aim of facilitating
voluntary mergers of municipalities, by increasing the financial support for
mergers and by allowing mergers between municipalities without common border.
In parallel, the Ministry for Regional Affairs has published a draft proposal
for local government reform based on an 'attraction centre' model that could
result in Estonia having no more than 30-50 local governments by the year 2017.
However, the reform proposal has not received full government support yet. On
the ground, while since 1996 voluntary mergers have reduced the number of
municipalities only from 254 to 226, seven mergers of a
total of 18 local administrations are planned in 2013. No revision of the
financing system for municipalities is being considered so far. With respect to services, an action plan to improve
public administration is being prepared, and a pilot project in the areas of care
for the elderly and waste management has been undertaken. The results of this
project will be used as examples for joint service provision and joint procurements,
while the optimal size of cooperation area has been defined. In parallel, the current
draft of the new Basic Schools and Upper Secondary Schools Act brings more clarity
to the respective responsibilities of the state and local municipalities in the
education sector (see under section 3.3 'Education policies'). However, data
and systems interoperability in the central/local relationship remains insufficient,
in particular in the social benefits area. The new Civil Service Act modernising public
administration entered into force on 1 April 2013. In parallel, the
implementation of a new national reform programme for raising the quality of
financial reporting by the state, and of another aimed at improving the systems
for managing and implementing EU structural funds, is currently in progress. In
June 2012, parliament also adopted a new Anti-corruption Act. These
developments are expected to reinforce the already good credentials of Estonia in these essential and sensitive areas.
4.
Overview table
2012 commitments || Summary assessment Country-specific recommendations (CSRs) CSR 1: Preserve a sound fiscal position by implementing budgetary plans as envisaged, ensuring achievement of the MTO by 2013 at the latest, and compliance with the expenditure benchmark. Complement the planned budget rule with more binding multi-annual expenditure rules within the medium-term budgetary framework, continue enhancing the efficiency of public spending and implementing measures to improve tax compliance. || Estonia has made substantial progress in implementing the budgetary plans mentioned in the CSR. However, no progress has been registered so far on the fiscal framework issue. The medium-term objective was achieved in 2012, one year before the deadline. The temporary deviation from the MTO in 2013 is not significant and a structural surplus is forecast to be reached from 2014 onwards. The government is expected to fulfil its commitment under the Treaty on Stability Coordination and Governance and to adopt the structural budget balance rule in time. However, the authorities are not planning to introduce an expenditure rule. The government has taken steps to improve tax compliance. CSR 2: Improve incentives to work by streamlining the social benefits system and increasing flexibility in the allocation of disability, unemployment and parental benefits, while ensuring adequate social protection. Improve delivery of social services, while better targeting family and parental benefits and removing distortionary income tax exemptions related to children. Increase the participation of the young and the long-term unemployed in the labour market. || Estonia has made limited progress in implementing the CSR. With the aim of increasing labour supply, it has reduced the unemployment insurance premium for both employers and employees from January 2013 and the personal and corporate income tax rates as of 2015. Little progress has been made so far on the overhaul of the incapacity for work schemes and on the long awaited insurance scheme against accidents at work. The government has also improved the targeting of family benefits in favour of families living in relative poverty. As current activation measures can only partly address the complex problems faced by the long-term and young unemployed, the activation level is still insufficient. CSR 3: Link training and education more effectively to the needs of the labour market, and enhance cooperation between businesses and academia. Increase opportunities for low-skilled workers to improve their access to lifelong learning. Foster prioritisation and internationalisation of the research and innovation systems. || Estonia has made some progress in implementing the CSR. The government has initiated a process of addressing skills mismatches by setting up a skills taskforce and has started preparing the 2014-20 Lifelong Learning Strategy. There has been a noticeable increase in the participation of adults in lifelong learning but the level of participation by the low-skilled and older workers in 2010-11 was still very low. Performance agreements have been signed between the MoE and tertiary education institutions. A new major VET modernisation reform is under way. Weak cooperation between business and universities remains the main issue in R&D, together with the internationalisation of the R&I system. Prioritisation is expected to be addressed in two new strategies which are due to be adopted in late spring 2013. It remains to be seen to what extent the two strategies will be brought into a strategically coherent framework. CSR 4: Improve energy efficiency, in particular in buildings and transport, and strengthen environmental incentives concerning vehicles and waste, including by considering incentives such as the taxation of vehicles. Foster renewable energy use, including through upgraded infrastructure and legislation. Continue the development of cross-border connections to end relative market isolation. || Estonia has made limited progress in implementing the CSR. The government has taken action to improve the energy efficiency and reduce the carbon intensity of government buildings. Limited action has been undertaken for non-government buildings despite the huge potential. In transport, measures undertaken so far (electro-mobility programme, energy-efficient public transport fleet) are relevant, but insufficient given their overall very limited impact. There is no vehicle taxation except on heavy-goods vehicles. So far consumer patterns have been slow to change. Some progress has been made in energy efficiency but it is difficult to evaluate whether the support instruments will be sufficient to foster energy efficiency in the short and medium term. Steps have been taken in the right direction for strengthening environmental incentives in the area of waste, although it is still unlikely that the 2020 recycling target for municipal waste will be reached and further effective measures for improving waste management, especially in relation to waste generated from oil shale, would be required. Estonia has reached its interim target for 2011-12 for renewable energy consumption. Estonia would need to complete the second electricity interconnection with Finland, and diversify its natural gas supply with a regional LNG terminal in the Baltic States and a possible interconnection with Poland. The internal Baltic transmission grid should be strengthened for both electricity and gas to contribute to the security of supply and regional trade. CSR 5: Enhance fiscal sustainability of municipalities while improving efficiency of local governments and ensure effective service provision, notably through stronger incentives for the merger of or increased cooperation between municipalities. Relevant reform proposals should be put in place within a reasonable timeframe. || Estonia has made limited progress in implementing the CSR. Limited adjustments have been made to two Acts to facilitate voluntary mergers of municipalities, but cover neither local government revenue nor services, and their possible impact is likely to be small. With respect to services, an action plan is being prepared and pilot projects are ongoing, while some clarity may soon be brought to respective responsibilities in the upper secondary education sector. Nevertheless, low accessibility and quality of services provided at local level remain a hindrance to the re-employment of the long-term unemployed. Europe 2020 (national targets and progress) Employment rate target set in the 2011 NRP 76% || Employment rate (%) 66.7% in 2010 70.4% in 2011 71.7% in 2012. Around 43 000 people must be brought into the labour market in absolute terms to achieve the target of 76%. The employment rate continues to grow due to more previously unemployed people being re-employed and more inactive people joining the labour force. R&D target set in the 2011 NRP: 3% by 2020 || 2.36% in 2011, already surpassing the intermediate target of 2% set for 2015. However the steep increase from 2010 (1.63%) was due mainly to one investment in a shale-oil testing facility that was recorded as a private investment, resulting in private R&D expenditure in 2011 doubling in absolute terms compared to 2010. This one-off investment is not expected to be reproduced next year. Without this investment, the Estonian authorities estimate that the increase in private R&D expenditures would have been 20 % instead of 100% between 2010 and 2011. The investment was made by Energy Estonia, which is a public enterprise, but it was registered as a private R&D investment due to statistical procedures. It is therefore expected that next year Estonia's R&D intensity will decrease to some extent, but will still be well on track to meet the 2020 target. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions target: limit the increase in non-ETS emissions to no more than +11% compared to 2005 || According to the national projections submitted to the Commission lately and when existing measures are taken into account, the target is expected to be missed: +12% in 2020 compared to 2005 (representing a projected gap of (only) 1 percentage point compared to the target). However, according to the most recent inventory data non-ETS greenhouse gas emissions increased by 9% between 2005 and 2011 and are already above the target for 2013 set by the Effort Sharing Decision. It can therefore be expected that the GHG emission target will not be reached. Renewable energy target: 25% by 2020 Share of renewable energy in all modes of transport: 10% || The share of renewable energy in gross final energy consumption was 25.9% in 2011 and 0.2% in transport (Source: Eurostat April 2013. Only formally reported biofuels compliant with Articles 17 and 18 of Directive 2009/28/EC are included). Indicative national energy efficiency target for 2020: stabilisation of final energy consumption in 2020 at the level of 2010. This means reaching a 2020 level of 6.5 Mtoe primary consumption and 2.84 Mtoe final energy consumption. || Estonia has set an indicative national energy efficiency target in accordance with Articles 3 and 24 of the Energy Efficiency Directive (2012/27/EU). It has also expressed it, as required, in terms of an absolute level of primary and final energy consumption in 2020 and has provided information on the basis on which this has been calculated. Early school leaving target: 9.5% || Early school leaving: 10.9% in 2011 and 10.5% in 2012. Estonia performs slightly better than the EU average for the early school leaving rate (10.5% vs 12.9% in 2012). It is getting close to both the EU headline target for 2020 (10%) and its national target (9.5%). It is also worth noting that a significant reduction in the early school leaving rate for males has taken place in recent years. As regards the period 2010-11 the early school leaving rate has decreased by 0.7 pps. Early leavers from education and training (percentage of the population aged 18-24 with at most lower secondary education and not in further education or training): 2010: 11.6% 2011: 10.9% 2012: . Tertiary education target: 40% || Tertiary education attainment: 40.3% in 2011 and 39.1% in 2012. Estonia performs also better than the EU average for the tertiary attainment rate (39.1% as against 35.8% in 2012). It has in this area almost reached both its national target and the EU target for 2020. In addition, a strong increase in tertiary attainment of females was noted for Estonia. In the period 2011-12 the tertiary attainment rate decreased by 1.2 pps, however: 2010: 40.0% 2011: 40.3% 2012: 39.1%. Target for the reduction of population at risk of poverty: 15% in 2020 || 2010: 15.8% 2011: 17.5%. A reduction in the at-risk-of-poverty rate from 17.5% in 2010 (income year) to 15% in 2020 (income year) means that the number of people who are at risk of poverty will be reduced by 36 248. With the increase in 2011 and given the previously stable level of around 18-19%, the task of meeting the target is very challenging.
5.
Annex
Table I. Macroeconomic indicators
Table II. Comparison of macroeconomic developments and forecasts Table III. Composition
of the budgetary adjustment Table IV. Debt
dynamics Table V. Sustainability
indicators Table VI. Taxation indicators Table VII. Financial market indicators Table VIII. Labour market and social
indicators Table IX. Product market performance and
policy indicators Table X. Green Growth [1] COM(2012) 750 final. [2] COM(2012) 751 final. [3] A total of 13 in-depth reviews were published on 10 April 2013.
While selected for an in-depth review in the AMR, Cyprus was ultimately not
reviewed under the Macroeconomic Imbalance Procedure in view of the advanced
preparations for a financial assistance programme. [4] Public priorities have been set in a 2009-20 plan designed to
address concerns about health outcomes. [5] Cyclically adjusted balance net of one-off and temporary
measures, recalculated by the Commission on the basis of the information
provided in the programme using the commonly agreed methodology. The
Commission's spring forecast estimates have been used for the NAWRU estimates
for Estonia. [6] Compared with the (recalculated) structural balance, the
programme forecasts a higher structural budgetary position and uninterrupted
attainment of the MTO from 2009 onwards without deviation from the MTO in 2013.
The discrepancy is mainly due to a difference in assessment of the cyclical
position of the economy between the common methodology and the approach taken
in the programme. [7] The objective of keeping the nominal general government budget
in balance (or in surplus since 2007) has been the cornerstone of this budget
rule. [8] The net debt
ceiling (debt stock) can be expanded up to 100% of revenue for municipalities
with high self-financing capability. [9] Revenue including transfers but excluding net revenue from
sales of fixed assets, financial revenue and earmarked grants for acquisition
of fixed assets. [10] See, for example, European Commission (2012), Tax reforms in EU
Member States 2012, European Economy No 6/2012. See also OECD (2012), OECD
Economic Surveys: Estonia 2012, OECD Publishing. [11] Commission Communication COM(2012) 756, 14.12.2012. [12] See Hazans, M. (2011). Informal Workers across Europe. Evidence
from 30 European Countries. The World Bank, Policy Research Working Paper.
December 2011. Alternatively, it has been assessed that the prevalence of
undeclared work in Estonia amounted to around 7-8% of GDP in 2005-06, being
more or less in line with the weighted EU-27 average (European Employment
Observatory Review: Spring 2007; European Commission (2012). Tax reforms in EU
Member States 2012). [13] Study commissioned by the Estonian Association of Real Estate
Companies. [14] About 110% in early 2013. [15] At the level of local governments, which were hit harder by the
economic crisis, the general reduction in social protection costs was more than
8% in 2010 compared with 2009, even though the number of disabled persons has
increased each year over the last five years. The total increase has been more
than 11%. [16] Reform plans no longer involve the occupational disease part of
the insurance scheme under consideration. [17] Unemployment benefits for part-time workers, but within limits
to prevent abuses. [18] R. Leetmaa, K. Nurmela and PRAXIS (July 2012), 'European
Employment Observatory' – Long-term unemployment in Estonia', A. Vork (2009),
'Labour supply incentives and income support systems in Estonia', OECD (2012), 'Country Economic Survey – Estonia', European Employment Observatory (April
2013), 'Template for Post-Assessment of National Reform Programmes – national
SYSDEM experts (EU-27)'. [19] Estonia has one of the lowest rates of part-time work in the EU. [20] i.e. the lack of one central system linking both national and
local levels (see also under section 3.5). [21] At 1.5% of GDP in 2010, the share of income support measures,
including parental benefits was the highest among EU-27 Member States. [22] In 2011, the employment rate of women with children in the 20-49
age group was more than 20 pps lower than that of childless women, one of the
highest differentials in the EU. [23] Overall, according to surveys of child day-care services in
municipalities, commissioned by the Ministry of Social Affairs, the waiting
list for childcare places grew from 4 830 in January 2009 to 5 890 in January
2012 (Ainsaar, M., Soo, K. Kohalikud omavalitsused ja
lastega pered 2011; Ainsaar, M., Soo, K. Kohalike omavalitsuste toetus lastega
peredele 2008 ja laste päevahoid 2008-2009 Eestis).
In particular, the low availability of quality childcare possibilities for
children under three remains a factor that hinders parents' return to work. [24] Last year's draft adjustments considered establishing day-care
facilities at public primary schools throughout the country, making them more
accessible for families and giving local authorities additional financial means
for creating new places and new facilities. [25] The long-term unemployment in North-Eastern Estonia is a
particular source of concern, combining causes such as an unfavourable place of
residence, where industrial activities are partly obsolete, a lesser knowledge
of the Estonian language and an insufficient education background for at least
half thereof. Not surprisingly, the group of those living in North-Eastern
Estonia had the highest regional unemployment rate in Estonia as well as the highest persistence of unemployment. [26] Also the hiring of high-skilled foreign
workers has been facilitated by establishing a fast-track procedure for
obtaining the work permit. [27] While the
overall share of public transport in Estonia is still slightly above the EU
average, the number of trips made with public transport has been in steady
decline and the use of passenger rail transport remains one of the lowest in
the EU. [28] Also, ensuring adequate air connectivity appears essential to Estonia's economic development. [29] A limited number of articles have not been fully transposed. [30] The Community Innovation Survey shows that whereas there are
numerous innovative SMEs in Estonia, universities are generally not among the
first three preferred collaboration partners. [31] OECD Public Governance Reviews, 'Estonia: Towards a Single
Government Approach', OECD, Paris, August 2011. [32] e.g. unemployed people who want to be registered, a prior
condition to benefit from various ALMP measures and health coverage, are not
systematically granted transport benefits by local governments, but the
Unemployment Insurance Fund seeks to remedy local governments' possible
failures.