Showing posts with label CEE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CEE. Show all posts

Monday, March 16, 2009

The Economist's Portrayal of CEE

(from The Economist print edition, February 12, 2009)

"A picture worth 163 words

SIR – Given your newspaper’s determination to accompany any article on social or political affairs in eastern Europe with a photograph of the apparently ubiquitous old lady with a shawl wrapped over her head, I was delighted to find that your recent piece on the gas crisis in the region (“Gasping for gas”, January 17th) carried a picture representative of another important demographic group: the dentally challenged villager. My excitement was short-lived, however, as just a week later it was back to the well-wrapped old lady (“To the barricades”, January 24th). One gets the impression from your coverage of elections that every polling station east of the Danube is populated solely by such characters.

To avoid creating any misleading stereotypes, may I suggest that you widen your range of imagery to better represent east Europeans. Roma using horse-drawn carts on main roads, elderly veterans in Soviet-style uniforms and furry hats and vodka-soaked vagrants would broaden the picture.

Daniel Tilles
Cracow, Poland"

Monday, March 9, 2009

CEE is not a Monolithic Region

Say the Czechs in The Prague Post. The article cites loan-to-deposit ratios, which are around 80% in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, but 130% in Romania and as much as 200% in Estonia. In addition, Erste group maintains that the region is less exposed to the credit crisis than the numbers of Bank for International Settlements say (BIS mentions Western exposure of $1.4 trillion).

Saturday, November 8, 2008

A Narrowing Gap in Europe

This is a re-post of my original blog at etrend.sk (in Slovak), which has been visited by more than nine thousand internet users by now. I am attaching the graph from there to CEEW as well.The chart above shows the development of GDP per head relative to the EU average in three major Eurozone economies as well as several CEE countries. The curves incorporate price levels in various countries through purchasing parity standards (PPS). Thickness of a curve represents roughly the size of a country's population.
One can observe a significant downward movement in case of Italy - by about 20 perc. points within fifteen years. "A lost decade" is currently being felt in Hungary, where GDP per person compared to the EU average is stagnating. Other countries of the region however experience a considerable convergence towards the income levels of the EU average. Slovenia, one of the most succesful countries, will most probably in the medium term overtake its neighbor Italy in GDP per person. This would be the first case of a former Eastern Bloc country to reach higher incomes than a major Western European power.