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Monday, September 8, 2008

Estonia GDP Q2 2008 Details

According to revised details released this week by the Estonian Statistics Office, gross domestic product (GDP) decreased by 1% in the 2nd quarter of 2008 when compared with the same period in the previous year. Statistics Estonia changed over to a chain-linking method for calculating real (constant price) economic growth in this quarter, so there have been some changes to the earlier time series data.



Compared to the 1st quarter, the GDP, chain-linked by the reference year 2000 and seasonally and working-day corrected, decreased by 0.8 %.



The decrease in the GDP was mostly influenced by the weak domestic demand and at the same time by the decrease in exports of goods and services. Compared to the same quarter of the previous year, total domestic demand was down by 2.8% primarily due to the decrease in private consumption and capital investments (-2.0% and -2.5%, respectively).



Private consumption decreased mainly due to the decrease in expenditures on transport and clothing and footwear. The growth of expenditures on food and non-alcoholic beverages decelerated. Capital investments decreased in both the financial and the household sector. Investments by manufacturing were almost stationary year on year. At the same time public sector construction investments accelerated.



The decrease in exports and imports since the second half of the previous year deepened in the 2nd quarter this year even more. Compared to the 2nd quarter of the previous year, exports of goods and services decreased by 4.9% and imports by 8.2% by chain-linking method.




Goods exports were down by 3.2% primarily due to the decrease in exports of refined petroleum products. At the same time, exports of basic metals and electrical machinery (electrical motors and appliances), which significantly influence export movements, increased. Exports of services decreased by 8.9% primarily due to the decrease in exports of services for railway cargo, airway passengers and cargo transport and trade related exports services. The decrease in imports of goods was influenced mainly by the decrease in imports of refined petroleum products and motor vehicles. While imports decreased faster than exports, the deficit of net exports in GDP has increased since the second half of 2007 and amounted to -4.6% of GDP in the 2nd quarter. In the 1st quarter the impact of net exports was -7.1% (so the negative impact slowed vis a vis Q1).

On the supply side the deceleration of the GDP was influenced mainly by the decrease in the value added in wholesale and retail trade, transport and storage, manufacturing and electricity, gas and water supply activities. The value added in financial intermediation activities also decreased.

The decrease in the value added in manufacturing was mainly caused by weak domestic demand and the resulting decrease in orders. A significant impact was the decrease in the value added in the manufacture of wood, furniture, building materials and food.

Estonian Inflation Holds On The 11% Mark In August

Inflation slowed a little in Estonia in August, but only very slightly. During the whole of 2008 the rate of change of the consumer price index when compared with the respective month of the previous year has hovered around the 11% mark, with the lowest reading being in March (10.9%) and the highest in April and June (11.4%). August was in fact no exception.




In fact, in August 2008 when compared to August of the previous year, Estonian consumer prices were up by exactly 11.0%. Food prices increased by 17.1% and the prices of manufactured goods by 6.2%. The prices of services increased by 11.2%. Regulated prices of goods and services were up by 23.5% and non-regulated prices by 7.6%. The index was mainly influenced by the price increase of food, higher prices of motor fuel accompanied by the increase in the prices of transport services, increase in the expenditures on housing, as well as by the increase in the prices of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. The annual price increase of food and transport accounted for half the increase, housing — for a sixth.

Month on month, prices in August were 0.1% higher than in July. The monthly change was mainly influenced by the decrease in the price of motor fuel, by the seasonal price decrease of vegetables, by the increase in the prices of tobacco products proceeding from the change in the rates of excise duties, and the end of special sales of clothing and footwear.

Latvia's Economy Has Now Been Shrinking For At Least Two Quarters

Well I think it's now official, or at least as official as its going to get: the Latvian economy is now in recession, as defined by two successive quarters of contraction (quarter on quarter, on a seasonally adjusted basis). The Latvian economy contracted by 0.2% in the second quarter from the first, and by 0.3% in the first quarter from the last quarter of 2007. Not that you would be able to read this information on the data release from Latvijas Statistika, nor would you find any great enthusiasm anywhere for having a technical "linejudge" (like the US NBER recession dating commission) to present this datapoint in a semi official way it seems to me. Indeed Bloomberg seems to have needed to take the bull by the horns and phone the statistics office direct in order to have a conversation with Alla Vanaga, the central statistics office's deputy head of national accounts, and thus extract this otherwise well-guarded piece of information.

The root of the problem is that the statistics office do not publish seasonally adjusted quarterly data, and there may well be very good explanations for this, since, apart from any other reason, with the very violent recent movements in output, they may have difficulty in establishing weights to use in the seasonal adjustment in which they have any great degree of confidence (another example of this type of problem could be found in the seasonally "adjustments" applied to the data we got for retail sales and industrial output - which was often scarcely credible - from statistics offices all across the globe in April, simply because Easter this year was in March). So they have my sympathy, and I'm sure the data Alla Vanga has provided needs to be treated as only a first approximation, which is why I still am reluctant to give up completely my initial feeling that the recession may even go back to Q4 2007. Certainly GDP contracted in Q4 last year, and the only real issue is the seasonal correction to be applied. My gut feeling is we may see some later revisions which will change things slightly, in the meantime, Latvia officially entered recession on 1 January 2008.

Anyway, on to the data, which really is pretty horrible. First off the quarterly evolution of GDP as we now have it.



Now looking at this chart, is there still anyone around out there who is willing to own up to having imagined Latvia was going to have a "soft" landing - and unfortunately, we need to bear in mind that the worst isn't over yet, this is only just starting.

If we look at the annual growth rate - given as 0.1%, but even this number is the effect of a decimal rounding operation, and the accurate number is a miniscule 0.05% - or put another way, the Latvian economy only grew by a bare, inflation corrected, 1.1 million Lats between July 1 2007 and June 30 2008.



And the situation is almost guaranteed to get worse, since we are more than likely about to see some more quarter on quarter contraction, and hence the annual number is also going to head into negative territory. Final private consumption was down 5.02% year on year. As we can see in the chart below, there is no mistaking the boom-bust. The question is really what is likely to happen now to private consumption. I will try and go more into this in the coming months, but there is just no way we are going to see a sudden leap back in consumption. Obviously it won't simply continue shrinking (or at least I hope it won't), but the kind of positive growth we see may be more like what we are seeing in Hungary now, something in the 1% to 2% y-o-y growth range (and this is when the situation "normalises", which is still some distance ahead, and with some hard bridges to cross in between).



And Gross Fixed Capital Formation was down 6.77% on the year. As can be seen in the chart (again below), the slope is rather smoother than in the case of consumption, which is not surprising, since investment obviously comes to a halt some time before consumption does. Equally, we could expect this part to pick up more quickly, and pull consumption along behind it, but for that Latvia has to become an attractive destination for export activity, and this involves putting all the distortions in relative prices straight. Its like you just crashed a bike at the moment, the frame is intact, but all the wheels are bent and buckled, and the chain has snapped.



Finally, if we come to look at foreign trade, we find that imports were down 8.16% on the year, while exports were up 2.49%. This position is more complicated than it seems, since the rate of increase in exports is falling, not rising, and this does not bode well for a sector that now needs to pull the economy, while imports are down strongly on the back of falling domestic demand. But this decline in imports produces a statistical effect whereby the NET trade balance in Latvia improved in Q2, which actually helped GDP growth, that is if imports had held up better, the contraction in the domestic economy would have been worse (i know this must seem a strange result, but GDP accounting is like that). But the rate of import decline cannot be expected to continue indefinitely at the current strong rate, and with the Lat pegged to the euro, and continuing inflation well above the eurozone average, then Latvian products will only become less competitive (oh, I know, people will increase productivity, but everyone else will be trying to do that too), so my feeling is that what we will now see is a slowdown in the rate of contraction in consumer demand, but an increase in the negative component in the trade balance (due to the bottoming out of the import decline, in part supported by the internal demand for imports as internal demand itself bottoms, and remember, with the high Lat, Chinese - eg - imports are quite cheap) and hence we should envisage GDP lingering in contraction territory for some time to come.

Well, that is a brief resumé of where we are at this point. Clearly there are huge downside risks out there, in particular associated with the slowdown in the eurozone, and the future of the Lat peg. There is also a demographic risk associated with the possibility that more people may leave looking for work abroad. But I think we can safely cross all these issues as and when we get to them. For the time being there is enough to digest in what we already have, I think.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

The Decline In Latvian Industry Accelerates Again in July

Latvian industrial output contracted again in July 2008, indicating that GDP contraction will almost certainly continue into at least Q3 2008.

Industrial production at constant prices decreased in July 2008 by 0.7%, according to seasonal and working day adjusted data released today by the Latvia statistics office. Manufacturing was down by 1%, electricity, gas and water supply by 0.5%, while in mining and quarrying there was a monthly increase of 7.7%. The drop in industrial output was largely due to adecrease in the manufacturing of other transport equipment (repairing and construction of ships and boats) which was down by 34.7%, the manufacturing of chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres, which was down by 8.7%, and in the manufacture of wood, wood products and cork, down by 3.7%.




Compared to July 2007 industrial output dropped by 6.9%, according to working day adjusted data. Manufacturing was down by 9.1%, electricity, gas and water supply by 1.6%, and mining and quarrying increased by 20.9%. The decrease was mainly influenced by the volume reduction in the manufacturing of furniture – down by 44.7% - the manufacture of wood, wood products and cork – down by 15.5% - and the manufacture of food products and beverages – down by 9.5%.



As we can see in the chart above, output peaked in August 2007 and has been declining steadily since.