Darkest before the dawn?
By: Astrov, Vasily.
Contributor(s): Bykova, Alexandra | Dobrinsky, Rumen | Grieveson, Richard | Hanzl-Weiss, Doris | Hunya, Gabor | Jovanović, Branimir | Korpar, Niko | Leitner, Sebastian | Mara, Isilda | Pindyuk, Olga | Podkaminer, Leon | Richter, Sandor | Ströhm, Bernd Christoph | Tverdostup, Maryna | Duraković, Selena.
Material type: BookSeries: wiiw Forecast Reports: Spring 2021Publisher: Wien : Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw), 2021Description: 157 S., 29 Tables, 62 Figures and 2 Boxes, 30cm.ISBN: 9783852090733.Subject(s): CESEE | economic forecast | Central and Eastern Europe | Southeast Europe | Western Balkans | EU | euro area | CIS | China | Japan | US | convergence | business cycle | coronavirus | Next Generation EU funds | private consumption | credit | investment | digitalisation | exports | FDI | labour markets | unemployment | short-time work schemes | exchange rates | monetary policy | fiscal policyCountries covered: Albania | Belarus | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Bulgaria | Central and East Europe | CESEE | China | CIS | Croatia | Czechia | Estonia | Euro Area | European Union | Hungary | Japan | Kazakhstan | Kosovo | Latvia | Lithuania | Moldova | Montenegro | New EU Member States | North Macedonia | Poland | Romania | Russia | Serbia | Slovakia | Slovenia | Southeast Europe | Turkey | Ukraine | US | Western Balkans | Israelwiiw Research Areas: Macroeconomic Analysis and Policy | International Trade, Competitiveness and FDIClassification: E20 | E21 | E22 | E24 | E32 | E5 | E62 | F21 | F31 | H60 | I18 | J20 | J30 | O47 | O52 | O57 | P24 | P27 | P33 | P52 Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: Currently, CESEE is in the grip of a strong wave of the pandemic, which has pushed health systems to breaking point and necessitated a new series of economically damaging lockdowns. However, the public health backdrop should improve by late Spring, as stringency measures and increased vaccine rollout allow economies to gradually re-open. CESEE should grow by 3.8% on aggregate in 2021, with most countries regaining their pre-pandemic output levels by the end of the year. Once the acute phase of the crisis passes, attention will return to existing challenges, including demographic decline, automation, digitalisation, institutional independence and the fallout from geopolitical tensions.Item type | Current library | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Paper | WIIW Library | 7.715/Spring 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Spring 2021 | Available | 1000010005752 |
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7.715/Spring 2018 Riding the Global Growth Wave | 7.715/Spring 2019 Moving Into the Slow Lane | 7.715/Spring 2020 Uncertainty in Turbulent Times | 7.715/Spring 2021 Darkest before the dawn? | 7.715/Spring 2022 Overshadowed by War and Sanctions | 7.715/Spring 2023 Sailing Through Rough Waters | 7.715/Spring 2024 The Crisis is Over, but its Scarring Effects are Hindering Recovery |
Currently, CESEE is in the grip of a strong wave of the pandemic, which has pushed health systems to breaking point and necessitated a new series of economically damaging lockdowns. However, the public health backdrop should improve by late Spring, as stringency measures and increased vaccine rollout allow economies to gradually re-open. CESEE should grow by 3.8% on aggregate in 2021, with most countries regaining their pre-pandemic output levels by the end of the year. Once the acute phase of the crisis passes, attention will return to existing challenges, including demographic decline, automation, digitalisation, institutional independence and the fallout from geopolitical tensions.