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Poland's
Economy is No Joke
By
Peter Schiff Euro
Pacific Capital
January
16, 2010
Watching the world's leaders stumble their way
through the economic crisis, it often feels as if political success
and economic understanding are mutually exclusive. Even the
Chinese, who over the past generation have engineered a
dramatic turnaround from their Maoist economic nightmare, show
a remarkable willingness to pursue a monetary policy (a currency peg
to the U.S. dollar) that yields no benefit to their citizens. Amid
this morass of economic quackery, it is refreshing to see a clear
ray of sanity emanating from one country: Poland.
Last summer, I was invited to speak at the Economic Forum in Krynica,
a resort town in Southern Poland. I was amazed at the level of
economic activity and civic spirit that was on display throughout
the country. I also was fairly surprised that my economic views,
which are routinely ridiculed at home, have much wider support
among the Polish economic officials who presented at the conference.
This common sense understanding was showcased in an opinion piece
published this week in the Financial
Times by Polish Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski. Contrary
to the public flogging of the free market currently underway in
Washington, under the auspices of the Financial Crisis Inquiry
Commission, Rostowski explains how governments caused the Crash of
2008 by removing the necessary element of fear from the
markets. He states that this was symptomatic of the "deep
Keynesian project," in which governments over the last half
century have looked to smooth the economic cycle through
periodic floods of monetary expansion and government
spending. I couldn't have said it better myself.
A product of the Solidarity movement that opposed the Polish
Communist Party in the 1980's, Mr. Rostowski, like many of his
colleagues in the current Polish Administration, is intimately
familiar with the hazards of central economic planning. He has seen
this movie before, and he knows how it ends.
Instead, Poland has enacted economic policies that are informed by a
belief in Austrian School (read: free market) economics. After the
downfall of the Communists in 1989, Rostowski was part of a group
that called for "shock therapy": the rapid privatization
of state-owned enterprises and the dismantling of price and currency
controls.
In 2007, the center-libertarian Civic Platform party was put in
power, with Rostowski as Finance Minister. Along with Prime Minister
Donald Tusk, he has continued the process of transforming Poland
into a laissez-faire paradise. Not accidentally, Poland is the only
EU member state that showed positive GDP growth in 2009,
at 1.9%. Also its public debt, at roughly 55% of GDP, compares
favorably with its neighbors - and with the United States.
A top priority of their administration was reduction of the
income tax. The previous system, with three-tiers of 19%, 30%,
and 40%, has been reduced to two tiers: 18% and 32%. In
addition, the system's minimal use of deductions and credits makes
it radically simpler than the U.S. income tax.
In the meantime, Civic Platform is continuing its
move toward privatization. Recently, Poland held an IPO for its
state-owned power utility, Polska Grupa Energetyczna. According to a
news report, "The sale brought in $2.1bn, pricing at the top
end of the bankers' guidance range, and becoming Europe's largest
IPO of the year." The government has used these revenues
to fund its budget and keep taxes in check. More importantly, it has
returned capital to the marketplace to be used in the most efficient
manner.
Civic Platform also understands that regulation hurts small business disproportionately
by raising barriers of entry. Fortunately for Poland, a
multi-year program of deregulation has been a boon for small
businesses, and has given the country the most entrepreneurs of any
state in Europe. This may explain the country's resilience
in the face of the global economic crisis.
Poland's current growth is also fueled by an influx of foreign
investment. To encourage such inflows, Rostowski has laid
out a specific plan to adopt the euro as the country's
currency by 2015. While I have never been crazy about the euro
concept, as opposed to a gold standard, the effort indicates to
foreign investors a desire to control inflation. Assuming the block
is able to stick together, the European Central Bank is considered a
reliable enforcer of strict monetary policy. Poland's zloty rapidly
devalued after it was allowed to float, and though the rate of
inflation is declining, it remains high. Eurozone membership will
impose external discipline on the Polish government, even if
Civic Platform loses power.
Anecdotally, I can attest that these people are hungry for free
markets. My visit to Krynica was a breath of fresh air, and a
startling reminder of how far America has strayed. If the Polish
people can hold onto the traumatic lessons of communism, and
continue undeterred down their current path, then this battleground
of the 20th century may be the paragon of the 21st.
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