Author(s)
World BankKeywords
MATURITYLOAN QUALITY
BANKING SECTOR ASSETS
HOUSEHOLDS
WELFARE DEPENDENCE
TRADE BALANCES
TRADING
ETHNIC MINORITIES
CREDIT SUPPORT
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
SUBSIDIARY
TAX BURDEN
SAVINGS
LABOR MOBILITY
TAX SYSTEM
MINIMUM WAGE
LENDING CONDITIONS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
CONSOLIDATION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
STATE GUARANTEES
MICRO ENTERPRISES
INTEREST RATES ON LOANS
PORTFOLIOS
CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIOS
INEQUALITY
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
INTEREST RATE
RETURN ON EQUITY
SHORT-TERM DEBT
LOCAL MARKET
REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS
FINANCIAL MARKET
CREDIT DEFAULT
PUBLIC DEBT
FISCAL DEFICIT
LABOR COSTS
URBAN AREAS
BENEFICIARIES
POLICY DESIGN
GROUP OF FIRMS
INSURANCE AGENCIES
INFORMAL WORKERS
SAFETY NET
CURRENT ACCOUNT
NATIONAL BANK
PERSONAL INCOME
FOREIGN FINANCING
ARREARS
FEDERAL RESERVE
DOMESTIC CURRENCIES
DEBT
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LAWS
EXTERNAL MIGRATION
EXTERNAL DEBT
INSTITUTIONAL BARRIERS
INDEBTEDNESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
T-BONDS
BANKING SECTOR
CENTRAL BANK BILLS
BANKING INSTITUTIONS
ENTREPRENEURS
PUBLIC DEBT INSTRUMENTS
FISCAL POLICY
GENDER GAPS
BANKING REFORM
INCOME GROWTH
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS STARTUP
MONETARY FUND
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
CENTRAL BANK
ACCESS TO JOBS
STOCKS
DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
RECESSION
JOB CREATION
INVESTMENT PLANS
SOCIAL SECURITY
LOCAL CURRENCY
EMPLOYERS
LOAN
STOCK MARKETS
BANK OF GREECE
CREDIT POLICIES
PRODUCTIVITY
LONG-TERM EXTERNAL DEBT
EXPORT GROWTH
CDS
RECAPITALIZATION
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILES
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
HOUSING
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
LABOR MARKET
PORTFOLIO
MINISTRIES OF FINANCE
NEW BUSINESSES
MARKET DATA
FOREIGN CURRENCY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ACCOUNTING
FINANCIAL CAPITAL
FINANCIAL MARKETS
PRIVATIZATION
BUSINESS ENTRY
PUBLIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
ACCOUNTABILITY
DOMESTIC CURRENCY
VULNERABLE GROUPS
CENTRAL BANKS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INFLATION RATES
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
LOCAL ECONOMY
CREDIT GROWTH
EXCHANGE RATE
GOVERNMENT DEBT
DISBURSEMENTS
CAPITAL FLOWS
HOME OWNERSHIP
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
LIMITED ACCESS
LOAN-TO-DEPOSIT RATIOS
EMPLOYEE
EXPENDITURES
DOMESTIC BANKS
MICRO-DATA
LIQUID ASSETS
MARKET CONDITIONS
INCOME TAX
BANK LENDING
CAPITAL MARKETS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
NEW ENTRANTS
EMPLOYMENT GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
INVESTOR CONFIDENCE
PURCHASING POWER
DEPOSIT
ILLITERACY
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
MATURITIES
NATIONAL BANKS
NEW MARKETS
IMPEDIMENTS TO BUSINESS
ASSET OWNERSHIP
INTERNATIONAL BONDS
TAX BURDENS
FOREIGN CURRENCY DEBT
NPL
DEBT POLICIES
FACTORING
FISCAL DEFICITS
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES
RETURN
MIGRATION
TAX CREDITS
ENTREPRENEUR
ECONOMIC CLIMATE
INFLATION
CREDIT RATINGS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MARKETS
T-BILLS
UNEMPLOYMENT
TAXATION
SAFETY NETS
PROFITABILITY
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
BANK DEPOSITS
GENDER
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
START-UPS
DEMAND-SIDE FACTORS
BANKS
RECEIPTS
REGIONAL BANKS
FINANCES
GENDER EQUALITY
EXCHANGE RATES
EMPLOYMENT
DEPOSITS
DEBT INSTRUMENTS
CLAIMANTS
HOST COUNTRY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
DOMESTIC DEBT
CREDIT DEFAULT SWAP
ISSUANCE
MONETARY POLICY
FORMAL WORKFORCE
FINANCIAL SECTOR REFORMS
DEBTS
INSURANCE PROTECTION
DISABLED
INTEREST RATES
WAGES
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
LOAN MARKETS
NONPERFORMING LOANS
COMMERCIAL BANKS
EXTREME POVERTY
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
EMERGING MARKETS
INCOME LEVELS
PRIVATE BANK
LIVING STANDARDS
BOND
SOVEREIGN DEBT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
LIQUIDITY
DEBT CRISIS
REMITTANCES
RETURNS
CORRUPTION
LEGAL SYSTEMS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
EARNINGS
PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENT
LABOR MARKETS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16559Abstract
After the double-dip recession, as a group the six South East European countries (SEE6)- Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, FYR Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia-are now making a fragile recovery. Last year the recession in the Eurozone had adverse impact on external demand and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in SEE6 and the severe winter and a summer drought crippled agriculture and affected trade, energy, and economic activity overall. However, the recovery in SEE6 is still tentative. In some countries nonperforming loans, sluggish credit recovery, continued deleveraging, and fiscal consolidation are exerting a drag and recovery in SEE6 is unlikely to accelerate as long as the Eurozone remains in recession. The SEE6 region is projected to grow 1.7 percent in 2013, signaling the end of the 2012 double-dip recession. Even though growth will in general be fragile, it will be on the upswing in all six countries. Kosovo again is expected to have the highest growth (3.1 percent), thanks to major public investments and a significant inflow of remittances. Against the backdrop of this tentative and fragile recovery, SEE6 countries should, as argued in the last report, intensify their efforts to reform structural areas. Fiscal consolidation efforts should become easier now that the output and revenue outlook is improving. The investment climate needs to be improved substantially, especially in the main areas of weaknesses: construction permits and licenses, barriers to entrepreneurship, and skills and infrastructure. One of the main worries in this nascent recovery is that SEE6 economies are plagued by high unemployment, especially youth unemployment, and they are not creating jobs fast enough to absorb new entrants into the labor force. Emigration continues as the current environment for doing business exacerbates the difficult labor market conditions.Date
2014-01-10Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/16559http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16559
Copyright/License
CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGORelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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 a relatively weak performance on reducing poverty and
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The Crisis Hits Home :
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Strengthening Recovery in Central and Eastern Europe : EU11 Regular Economic ReportWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2014-01)Economic growth is expected to almost
 double in EU11 (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the Czech
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