The Baltic states have announced record high unemployment rates this week, but said they expect the figures to improve during 2000.
Published:
1 February 2000 y., Tuesday
Lithuania reported a 10% unemployment rate, its highest figure since independence in 1991. Unemployment in Latvia now stands at around 9%, and 5% in Estonia. Before the collapse of the Russian market, unemployment hovered around 6% in Lithuania and Latvia, and around 2% in Estonia.
Unemployment in the countryside and in industrial areas is especially severe. In the rural Akmene district, in northern Lithuania, unemployment has hit 20%, compared to a 7% jobless rate in the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius. The pro-West, open-market Baltic states are considered the most economically advanced nations of the former Soviet Union. After implementing tough market reforms in the early _90s, they experienced strong growth until early 1998.
But regional farmers and producers were hit hard later that year by the deepening economic crisis in neighboring Russia, which had been one of their main export markets. With falling orders, many industries laid off workers. Analysts say higher growth this year, spurred on partly by the successful reorientation of many exporters to new Western markets, should help bring jobless rates back down. Officials in all three Baltic states forecast that their economies will expand by at least 3-4 percent in 2000.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Parliament's proposal for its own operational budget for 2011 includes the financing of measures in preparation for enlargement with Croatia.
more »
Links between business and the academic world need to be strengthened but higher education institutions must retain their autonomy and public support, says a resolution adopted on Thursday by the European Parliament.
more »
The Spanish Minister of Economy and Finance, Elena Salgado, will present the additional fiscal tightening measures set out by the Spanish Government to her eurozone (Eurogroup) counterparts on Monday; the measures were required by Spain’s European partners as a condition of approving the plan to bolster the euro on 9 May.
more »
The European Commission has opened an in-depth investigation under EU State aid rules into capital injections destined to two subsidiaries of state owned company Elan Skupina in Slovenia.
more »
GDP growth in the EU expected to gradually pick up, though recovery less robust than past upturns.
more »
The EESC tabled its opinion on the regulation of alternative investment funds, such as hedge funds and private funds. Although endorsing the much debated proposal of the European Commission, the EESC calls for uniform risk data provision for all such funds and emphasizes their responsibility in triggering the crisis.
more »
Concluding the process and deciding on the schedule for releasing the funds agreed on for Greece, as well as examining and learning lessons from the crisis for the governance of the eurozone, will be the focus of the discussions of the heads of state and government at the meeting in Brussels this Friday.
more »
The EU pavilion at the world expo in Shanghai marks the first time the EU has presented itself to a large Chinese audience.
more »
Shanghai's World Expo offers visitors plenty of fun offering bizarre things to do at over 200 pavillions competing for attention.
more »
The European Investment Bank (EIB) is providing a loan of EUR 150 million to MVM Zrt. for the capacity increase and the extension of a high-voltage transmission network, partly constituting priority axes of the Trans-European Energy Network (TEN-E) in Hungary.
more »