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Wage and Pension Pressure on the Polish Budget

June 1997 Poland's current economic recovery should create jobs, not raise wages. Ensuring equitable opportunities for all requires moderating the income claims of the best-protected groups- reforming the pension system. After Poland's remarkable stabilization and liberalization in 1990, the economy faced three related problems: high wage and pension claims, a rising number of pensioners and unemployed workers, and a budget crisis, especially in 1991 and 1992. De Crombrugghe studies the role that wage and pension pressures played in this crisis. He also explains the persistence of the high tax wedge that later helped overcome the budget crisis. The positive effect on revenues of higher wages and higher tax rates could not compensate for both the inevitable loss in profit taxes and the excessive growth of spending on replacement income. Counterfactuals constructed for revenue and spending show the rising number of social benefit earners (pensions, unemployment) to be responsible for much of the budgetary burden. But they also show that the better protection of social income (over other income) explains part of the burden. Part of the employment loss and social spending can be ascribed to the excessive wage recovery of late 1990 and 1991. Insiders set wages ignoring the unemployed and exploiting the pension system in a context of uncertainty about profits and productivity, at a time when there was strong popular support for the protection of replacement income. De Crombrugghe recommends pension reform and caution about wages: the current economic recovery should create jobs, not raise wages, he says, and ensuring equitable opportunities for all requires moderating the income claims of the best-protected groups. This paper-a joint product of the Office of the Senior Vice President, Development Economics and Chief Economist, and Research Advisory Staff-is part of Fiscal Reform in Poland (RPO 678-96), a study funded by the Bank's Research Support Budget.

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  • "June 1997 Poland's current economic recovery should create jobs, not raise wages. Ensuring equitable opportunities for all requires moderating the income claims of the best-protected groups- reforming the pension system. After Poland's remarkable stabilization and liberalization in 1990, the economy faced three related problems: high wage and pension claims, a rising number of pensioners and unemployed workers, and a budget crisis, especially in 1991 and 1992. De Crombrugghe studies the role that wage and pension pressures played in this crisis. He also explains the persistence of the high tax wedge that later helped overcome the budget crisis. The positive effect on revenues of higher wages and higher tax rates could not compensate for both the inevitable loss in profit taxes and the excessive growth of spending on replacement income. Counterfactuals constructed for revenue and spending show the rising number of social benefit earners (pensions, unemployment) to be responsible for much of the budgetary burden. But they also show that the better protection of social income (over other income) explains part of the burden. Part of the employment loss and social spending can be ascribed to the excessive wage recovery of late 1990 and 1991. Insiders set wages ignoring the unemployed and exploiting the pension system in a context of uncertainty about profits and productivity, at a time when there was strong popular support for the protection of replacement income. De Crombrugghe recommends pension reform and caution about wages: the current economic recovery should create jobs, not raise wages, he says, and ensuring equitable opportunities for all requires moderating the income claims of the best-protected groups. This paper-a joint product of the Office of the Senior Vice President, Development Economics and Chief Economist, and Research Advisory Staff-is part of Fiscal Reform in Poland (RPO 678-96), a study funded by the Bank's Research Support Budget."@en

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  • "Wage and Pension Pressure on the Polish Budget"@en
  • "Wage and pension pressure on the polish budget"
  • "Wage and pension pressure on the Polish budget"@en
  • "Wage and pension pressure on the Polish budget"