
Source: Macrobond, ECB, Scope Ratings GmbH; *averages; euro-area (EA) CEE is Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania, Latvia; non-EA CEE is Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia.
The ECB’s decision to grant non-euro area central banks access to euro liquidity via new swap and extended repo facilities, originally established during the pandemic crisis, demonstrates wider EU readiness to offering further support, including fiscal help, tailored to abetting the most vulnerable CEE countries.
Under the new swap arrangement, Poland’s central bank can borrow up to EUR 10bn from the ECB, equivalent to around 7% of the country’s international reserves, in exchange for Polish zloty. Under a bilateral repo line, Hungary’s central bank can borrow up to EUR 4bn from the ECB, equivalent to around 11% of aggregate reserves, in exchange for adequate euro-denominated collateral. Such support has contained euro-denominated interest costs for CEE EU member states over previous crises given a sizeable share of euro borrowing in the region, of around 20% of public debt in cases of Poland and Hungary.
More EU-wide burden-sharing expected during this geopolitical crisis
We expect more EU-wide burden-sharing such as the almost EUR 17bn to help Ukrainian refugees and EU member states hosting the displaced persons. Poland has requested EUR 2.2bn from the EU budget in supporting Ukrainian refugees.
The war in Ukraine and sometimes differing approaches to it are changing intra-EU relations, notably between Brussels and its member states such as Poland and Hungary. While institutional disputes between Poland and the European Commission are unlikely to easily subside, the EU might unlock promised funding if the government in Warsaw displays greater respect for the rule of law.
Hungary, however, risks increased political isolation within the EU, increasing uncertainty over its stable inflow of EU funding over the medium run, as reflected in the EU’s upcoming initiation of a conditionality mechanism for Hungary linking EU budgetary financing to adherence to the rule of law.
CEE region holds multiple economic strengths, aiding the region’s resilience
The CEE region does hold multiple economic strengths. Foreign-exchange reserves of the central banks of Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary fully cover outstanding short-term external debt, an important shock absorber amid currency volatility. Romania’s reserves cover nearly 90% of its short-term external debt. Croatia (BBB-/Positive) and Bulgaria (BBB+/Stable), as candidates for euro adoption, benefit from membership in the EU’s Exchange Rate Mechanism II and Banking Union, ensuring their close cooperation with the ECB.
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Levon Kameryan is Senior Analyst in Sovereign and Public Sector ratings at Scope Ratings GmbH. Jakob Suwalski, Director in Sovereign and Public Sector ratings at Scope Ratings, contributed to writing this commentary.
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