Stagflation in Latvia:how long, how far, how deep?

Alf Vanags and Morten Hansen (Baltic International Centre for Economic Policy Studies (BICEPS) and SSE Riga)

Abstract: This policy paper assesses Latvian infl ation performance in an EU and Baltic states context and speculates on the overall prospects for the Latvian economy in the light of the emerging slowdown both in Latvia and elsewhere. On infl ation it is likely that, in the absence of new major price shocks, the May 2008 fi gure represents the peak of the current infl ation episode – the slowdown of the economy and thus the unwinding of the overheated labour market should ensure this. On the pace of disinfl ation, evidence from a simple Phillips curve analysis, together with the fl exibility of the Latvian labour market, points in the direction of a fast disinfl ation, while evidence from other countries emphasises the persistence of infl ation. However, the Phillips curve analysis also predicts that lower infl ation will come at the cost of higher unemployment. Using two alternative decompositions of infl ation the paper examines the balance between a common inflation component and country specifi c infl ation for Latvia and the Baltic states as against the EU-27 and the EU new member states. We fi nd that, irrespective of method used, Latvia has much the biggest domestic infl ation component of the three Baltic states. A much more overheated labour market in Latvia and perhaps belated policy response are to blame for the worse performance in Latvia. On duration and depth of a recession in Latvia we use evidence from international experience which suggests that the cumulative loss from a recession might be the equivalent of up to two years of double digit GDP growth relative to trend. Instead of growing 10-11% as was the norm until 2008 Latvia may experience negative growth of perhaps minus 1% for up to two years. This loss of potential GDP is a major setback for the prospects of Latvian convergence.

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