Time for Poland to pay its bill at the Paris Club

Published: 16 January 2005 y., Sunday
A cozy cushion of budget reserves and a tough currency on the table means Poland will have to settle its tab at the Paris Club early. The Paris Club is an informal group of rich countries that work together on debt-restructuring plans. Economists have called on Poland to repay some or all of its approximately zł.52.81 billion debt to the Paris Club, saying now is an ideal time for a buyback of the debt. Poland is the only EU member with outstanding Paris Club debt, and former Deputy Finance Minister, Ryszard Michalski, said recently that buyback negotiations with the Club have been ongoing for some time. "It's high time to do the transaction as our savings erode each day we get closer to the settlement date. Some of the agreements carry almost 10 percent interest, which for us is very expensive," said Michalski last week. The government said that it would ultimately finance the prepayment through foreign debt issues, adding that it already had €6 (zł.24.66) billion in bridge financing, but markets had remained unsure on the origins of that cash. However, sources indicate that this is not credit from the central bank. According to Dariusz Rosati, a former central bank rate-setter and member of the European parliament: "The conditions are beneficial-the złoty is strong, budget revenues are high and Poland's balance of payments position is good," he says. "I expect this transaction to happen in 2005, probably in the second half." Last year's strong economic performance gave the Finance Ministry a liquidity cushion of zł.22 billion at the end of November. Meanwhile, Poland's Paris Club debts amount to more than 10 percent of its overall public sector debt burden. According to Rosati, repayment could be done in several stages across two to three years. Poland will this month tap foreign markets with a €1-1.5 (zł.4.12-6.18) billion eurobond issue. Market concerns are also fading that the financing could come from the hefty budget reserves built up late last year, which would have to be exchanged into hard currencies, potentially weakening the złoty.
Šaltinis: Warsaw Business Journal
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Emerging Market Countries Partner with World Bank to Achieve Risk Management Objectives

The World Bank is seeing a surge in demand from borrowers seeking the Bank’s expertise to mitigate currency and interest rate risk. more »

State aid: Commission authorises support package for Lithuanian financial institutions

The European Commission has approved under EU state aid rules a Lithuanian package intended to stabilise the markets as a response to the global financial crisis. more »

European Commission forecasts average crop production for 2010 in the EU despite extreme weather

Total cereal production in 2010 should be close to the average from the last five years. While the yield per hectare will be 5% above average, overall cultivated areas have decreased. more »

In the first half of this year AB Bank SNORAS and its financial group worked profitably

According to the unaudited data, AB Bank SNORAS profit prior to provisions and tax exemption within the first half of this year comprised LTL 51 million, the bank formed almost LTL 48 million provisions. more »

Denmark: EU €10m to help 1,149 former Linak A/S and Danfoss Group workers find new jobs

The European Commission today approved two applications from Denmark for assistance from the EU Globalisation Adjustment Fund (EGF). more »

EIB provides EUR 150 million innovative recovery support loan to SMEs in Turkey

The European Investment Bank today signed two loans for a total amount of EUR 150 million in support of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Turkey. more »

AB Bank SNORAS will increase the authorized capital by LTL 82.3 million up to LTL 494.2 million

On 23 July 2010 the Board of the Bank of Lithuania permitted Bank SNORAS to register a change to the articles of association related to the increase of the authorized capital of the bank by LTL 82.3 million up to LTL 494,217,107. more »

Heads of State, WB President Zoellick Agree on Action Plan to Boost Integration and Development

Heads of State and top officials from the Central American Integration System and World Bank Group President, Robert B. Zoellick, agreed to join efforts towards regional cooperation and integration and adopted a comprehensive agenda that includes an action plan with more than 20 specific measures. more »

IMF Executive Board Cancels Haiti’s Debt and Approves New Three-Year Program to Support Reconstruction and Economic Growth

The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today approved the full cancellation of Haiti’s outstanding liabilities to the Fund, of about SDR 178 million (equivalent to US$268 million). more »

IMF Completes Third Review Under Stand-By Arrangement with Latvia and Approves €105.8 Million Disbursement

The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today completed the third review of Latvia's performance under an economic program supported by a Stand-By Arrangement (SBA). more »