FEAS Yearbook FEAS Yearbook 2006 | Page 60

FEDERATION OF EURO-ASIAN STOCK EXCHANGES SEMI ANNUAL REPORT OCTOBER 2006 BELGRADE STOCK EXCHANGE ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS Economic and Political Environment Events in the 2006 have highlighted the fragility of the ruling minority coalition in Serbia, led by the Democratic Party of Serbia DSS. The government will be confronted by a series of potentially divisive issues, and Serbia is likely to face a general election before the next scheduled poll at the end of 2007. Montenegro has declared independence following a referendum on May 21st 2006. It was a psychological blow for Serbia's ruling minority coalition and for the DSS leader and prime minister, Vojislav Kostunica, who had been a strong supporter of the state union. Serbia has accepted the referendum result, but negotiations on issues arising from the break-up could take several months. Membership of international organizations has passed automatically to Serbia under the 2003 Constitutional Charter. Economic Performance The completion of the IMF's three-year arrangement with Serbia and Montenegro in February 2006 triggered the remainder of the debt write-off agreed with the Paris Club in 2001. Strong inflows of foreign direct investment (FDI) and high levels of foreign exchange reserves in Serbia have reduced dependence on external assistance. However, multilateral lenders and foreign investors remain concerned about the level and structure of public spending, the size of public-sector wage increases, and the continued presence of large, unreformed state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Forecast is that Serbia will negotiate fresh agreements with the IMF in the near future. Fiscal and monetary policies are expected to remain tight, with the authorities coming under pressure to speed up privatization. The government faces several difficult issues: talks on Kosovo's future status and the EU's demand that it transfer the former Bosnian Serb military commander, Ratko Mladiç, to the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague. The break-up of the state union is unlikely to delay or disrupt the SAA talks significantly, since the EU had already been negotiating separately with Serbia and Montenegro. The EU called off the latest round of talks, scheduled for May 11th, after Serbia failed to hand over Mr. Mladiç by the EU's April 30th deadline, but it has left open the possibility that negotiations will be speedily resumed should Serbia be seen to be co-operating fully with the ICTY. Real GDP in Serbia grew by 6.3% year on year in the first quarter of 2006, driven by a manufacturing recovery and continued rapid expansion of trade, financial services, and transport and communications. In view of Serbia's strong first-quarter performance forecast for real GDP growth in 2006 has risen to 6% (from 5% previously). Key drivers will include continued investment in newly privatized companies; relatively robust consumer demand, driven by continued real wage growth and the expansion of commercial bank lending; and an increase in public investment. An acceleration of real GDP growth in the euro zone is expected in 2006, to 2%. Domestic demand in the euro area will continue to be weak, constraining export growth for Serbia, which conducts about half of its foreign trade with the EU. The current account deficit will remain large, Key Information Contacts Securities Commission of Montenegro www.scmn.cg.yu Central Depositary Agency www.cda.cg.yu Central Bank of Montenegro www.cb-cg.org Ministry of Finance www.ministarstvo-finansija.cg.yu Montenegro Statistical Office www.monstat.cg.yu PAGE 58 at an average of more than 9% of GDP in 2006-07. Inflation is forecast to fall to 12.5% by the end of 2006, as fiscal and monetary policies are kept tight and the public sector undergoes further restructuring, followed by a further slowdown in inflation in 2007, to about 10%. The Serbian authorities are currently aiming to limit the dinar's nominal depreciation against the euro in order to reduce inflationary pressures and contain external debt-servicing costs. This policy carries risks, since it could endanger Serbia's external competitiveness, and the IMF is urging the authorities to restructure and privatise SOEs, and to improve the investment climate. The US dollar trade gap on the balance of payments fell considerably in 2005, reflecting strong Serbian export growth–itself partly explained by underreporting in the period, before the introduction of value-added tax. The current account deficit for the common state is estimated at 8.8% of GDP in 2005, down from 12.5% in 2004. Enterprise restructuring, privatization and other supply- side reforms should make exporters more competitive, despite the expected real effective appreciation of the dinar. Strong consumer demand and high international oil prices in 2006-07 will put upward pressure on import bills. It is expected the US dollar trade gap to widen, anticipating current account deficits in Serbia of 9.5% of GDP in 2006 and 8.7% in 2007. * The Economist Intelligence Unit Ltd., July 2006.