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Slide 1 of 24. Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast. presentation by. Evgeny Vinokurov IMEMO RAS, Moscow, UPMF, Grenoble. Slide 3 of 24. Kaliningrad: general information. territory – 15 100 sq. km (0,1% of the Russian Federation)
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Slide 1 of 24 Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast presentation by Evgeny Vinokurov IMEMO RAS, Moscow, UPMF, Grenoble E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 3 of 24 Kaliningrad:general information • territory – 15 100 sq. km (0,1% of the Russian Federation) • population – 943 500 (0,6% of the Russian Federation) • Exclave of Russia / semi-enclave of the EU • part of North West Federal District (total 11 regions in it) • nominal GRP in 2002 – appr. USD 1100 mln. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 4 of 24 Kaliningrad: general information • History (the 750th anniversary of Königsberg in 2005) • Special Economic Zone (SEZ) regime • Federal Task Programme for Kaliningrad Oblast development up to 2010 E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 5 of 24 SEZ regulations • Free custom zone – no import taxes • no taxes for outflows into Russia, if: • - for electronics and household appliances - 15% VA + changing TN code’s 5th digit; • - for other goods - 30% VA + changing TN code’s 4th digit (+ extra criteria for automobiles, tractors, etc.) • import quotes in 35 groups - meat imports most sensible. Attempt to defend local producer. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 6 of 24 Shadow economy • Input-output matrix (Tatarinov) – 55% from the official economy • Household income survey (Fedorov) – real incomes 47% in excess of officials ones • Delphi method (Samson, Elisseeva) – 60-95% from the official economy • 70% of SE are non-illegal activities E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 7 of 24 Main economic sectors • fuel industry • machine building • food industry • agriculture • trade and catering E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 8 of 24 Kaliningrad GRP E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 9 of 24 Most dynamic sectors • food industry (Russian markets) • trade and catering • communication • transport (European-Russian trade) • light industry • furniture (SEZ success story) • machine building E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 10 of 24 GRP (PPP) • PPP comparison Lithuania-Kaliningrad made by I.Samson group (based on 2001 data) • PP 95% from Lithuania (not taking into account investments and state budgets) • Final estimation – 90% from Lithuania, close to Warminsko-Mazurskie Voevodsvo, 75% from Poland • further research needed E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 11 of 24 GRP by sector in 2000 E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 12 of 24 Employment structure in 2000 E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 13 of 24 Industrial production growth E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 14 of 24 Consumer price indices E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 15 of 24 Investment dynamics E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 16 of 24 Foreign investments, tnd. USD • Investment boom in Kaliningrad in 1999-2001 was generated by investments from mainland Russia (estimations 5-10 times more than FI). • FDI comparisons with neighboring countries are thus incorrect. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 17 of 24 Trade flows, 2000, mln.USD E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 18 of 24 Foreign exports and imports E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 19 of 24 Exports and imports per sector 1. Return to highest levels reached in 1995-97, 2. Exports of raw and semi-finished goods. 3. Imports of food products (consumption and food processing) as well as machinery for modernizing industries. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 20 of 24 Main trade partners • Export: led by Poland – 27,5% (mainly raw oil), then Germany and Lithuania • Import: led by Germany – 25%, then Poland and Lithuania • 70-75% of foreign trade is realized the EU and accession countries. • 5,8% fall on CIS countries except Russia. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 21 of 24 Trade with mainland Russia • In 2001 outflows grew up to 619 mln. USD (min. estimation) and outweighed exports. • Trade flows with mainland Russia grew rapidly and constantly since 1999. E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 23 of 24 EU enlargement and Kaliningrad economy • “EU and Kaliningrad” Communication of the Commission (2001): Enlargement will be favourable for Kaliningrad because accession countries will apply Common external tariff • Lower import tariffs of new EU members (most important Poland and Lithuania) – present export structure does not let use this advantage; non-tariff barriers remain/increase • Little changes on local markets • Lower Russian import tariffs may lead to lower price competitiveness of Kaliningrad goods on the Russian markets ( due to lower barriers for CEEC goods and lower costs of production for Russian enterprises) + СAP for accession countries • Visa problem • Energy problem • Cargo transit problem • Lower volumes of shuttle trade – especially important for small border towns E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 24 of 24 WTO accession and Kaliningrad economy • Specifics: • Compatibility of Kaliningrad SEZ regime and WTO regulations in question • May lead to abolition of regional quotes on imports • No anti-dumping measures against Kaliningrad producers yet – less relevant than for other Russian regions • Possible increase in European-Russian trade would render positive effects on the region E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast
Slide 24 of 24 People’s perceptions and desires for the future • What option suits you the best? • 21% - Oblast will have with equal rights with other Russian regions • 38% - Oblast will remain Russian region, but it will have a special status • 19% - Oblast will remain Russian region, but it will act under its own laws (China – Hongkong model) • 5% - Oblast will become independent state • 3% - Oblast will be returned to Germany • 14% - found it difficult to choose • Practically no separatism • Wide support for special rights and status E.Vinokurov Economic Development of Kaliningrad Oblast