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Albanian Consulting
Your Guide to Doing Business in Albania
The Second Coming in Albania
by: Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.
Blessed with Chinese GDP growth rates (7-8% annually in each of the last 3
years) and German inflation (4%, down from 32% in 1997, mostly
attributable to increases in energy and housing costs), it is easy to
forget Albania's Somali recent past.
In 1997, following the collapse of a series of politically-sanctioned
pyramid schemes in which one third of the impoverished population lost its
meager life savings, Albania imploded. The mob looted 700,000 guns from
the armories of the army and the police and went on a rampage, in bloody
scenes replete with warlords, crime, and 1500 dead. It took 5% of GDP to
recapitalize Albania's tottering banks and overall GDP dropped by 7% that
year. During the two preceding years, Albania had been the IMF's poster
boy (as it is again nowadays). Since October 1991, the World Bank has
approved 43 projects in the country, committed close to $570 million and
disbursed two thirds of its commitments. This, excluding $100 million
after the 1999 Kosovo crisis and $50 million for agricultural development.
The European Investment Bank (EIB), the EBRD, the EU, and the Stability
Pact have committed billions to the region for infrastructure, crime
fighting, and institution building projects. Albania stood to benefit from
this infusion and from a future Stabilization and Association Agreement
with the EU (similar to Macedonia's and Croatia's). Yet, as Chris Patten
(the Commissioner in charge of aid) himself admitted to "The Economist":
"The EU'S capacity for making political promises is more impressive than
our past record of delivering financial assistance". The aid was bungled
and mired in pernicious bureaucratic infighting. The EU's delegation in
Tirana was recently implicated in "serious financial irregularities".
The economic picture (if notoriously unreliable official statistics are to
be trusted) has been mixed ever since.
The budget deficit hovers around 9% (similar to Macedonia's, Albania's war
ravaged neighbor). The (very soft and very long term) external debt is at
a nadir of 28% of GDP (though still 150% of exports) and foreign exchange
reserves cover more than 4 months of imports. This is reflected in the
(export averse) stable exchange rate of the lek. But the overall public
debt is much higher (70%) and the domestic component may well be
unsustainable. Money supply is still roaring (+12%), interest rates are
punishingly high (8% p.a.) though in steep decline, and GDP per capita is
less than $1000. It is still one of Europe's poorest countries (especially
its rural north). Most of its GDP growth is in construction and trade.
Health and education are decrepit and deteriorating. And people vote with
their feet (emigrate in droves) and wallets (the economy is effectively
dollarized).
Privatization receipts which were supposed to amortize public debt did not
materialize (though there were some notable successes in 2000, including
the completion of the privatization of land and of the important mining
sector). Negative sentiment towards emerging economies, Albania's
proximity to the Kosovo and Macedonia killing fields, and global recession
make this prospect even more elusive. Had it not been for the $500 million
in remittances from 20% of the workforce who are employed in Greece and
Italy - Albania would have been in dire straits. Money from Albanian drug
dealers, immigrant smugglers, and other unsavory characters still filters
in from Prague, Zurich, and the USA. These illicit - but economically
crucial - funds may explain the government's foot dragging on the
privatization of the omnipresent Savings Bank (83% of all deposits, no
loans, owns 85% of all treasury bills, 2% net return on equity) and its
reluctance to overhaul the moribund banking system and enact anti money
laundering measures. It took crushing pressure by IFI's to force the
government to hive off the Savings Bank's pension plan business into
Albapost, the local Post Office.
In the intervening years, Albania got its fiscal act together (though its
tax base is still minimal) and made meaningful inroads into the informal
economy (read: organized crime), not least by dramatically improving its
hitherto venal and smuggler-infested customs service. A collateral
registry has been introduced and much debated bankruptcy and mediation
laws may be enacted next year. Everything, from the operations of the
Central Bank to the executive branches is being revamped. Those who
remained in Albania are much more invigorated than they have been in a
long time.
But the problems are structural. Albania is among the few countries in our
post-modern world which rely on agriculture (55%) rather than industry
(24%), or services (21%). Only 40% of the population live in cities and
female illiteracy is still at 24%. Tourism (especially of the
archeological kind) is promising. But there are less than 6 computers and
40 phones per 1000 citizens and less than 40% of the roads are paved
(Albanians were forbidden to own private cars until 1985). FDI amounts to
a measly $50 million a year and aid per capita has tripled to c. $160
since 1997. Pervasive electricity shortages (despite budget draining
subsidies of imported energy) hamper economic activity. Albania was rated
100th (out of 174) in the UNDP's Human Development Index and 90th (out of
175) in UNICEF's Report on the State of the World's Children (under-five
mortality). Its neighbors ranked 55-73.
The isolationist legacy of the demented and paranoid Enver Hoxha is only
partly to blame. Mismanagement, corruption, the criminalization of
society, and tribalism are equally at fault in post-Communist Albania.
Everyone takes bribes - not surprising when a senior Minister earns less
than $1000 a month (ten times the average salary). A well developed,
though fast eroded, social (extended family, village, tribe) safety net
ensures that only 20% of the population are under the official poverty
line. But these extended ties are one of the reasons for local
unemployment (almost 20% of the workforce) - immigrant workers (mostly
family members) constitute more than 25% of those employed.
With a youthful (32) Prime Minister (Ilir Meta, overwhelmingly re-elected
this year) who is an economist by profession, Albania is reaching out to
its neighbours. As early as 1992 it joined the improbable (and hitherto
ineffective) Black Sea Economic Cooperation Pact (with Greece, Turkey and
... Azerbaijan and Armenia!) - which currently lobbies for the re-opening
of the Danube River. Albanian cheap exports are competitive only if
transported via river. Albania signed recently a series of bilateral
agreements with Montenegro regarding transportation on the Bojana river
and the Skadar Lake, use of harbors, the extension of railways and roads,
and the regulation of aviation rights. Despite the fact that Macedonia is
(abnormally for geographical neighbors) not an important trading partner,
Albania has responded positively to all the Macedonian initiatives for
economic and political integration of the region. It is here, in regional
collaboration and synergy, that Albania's future rests. Should the region
deteriorate once more into mayhem and worse, Albania would be amongst the
first and foremost to suffer. Hence its surprisingly conciliatory stance
in the recent crisis in Macedonia. It seems that Albanian politicians have
wisely decided to move from a "Great Albania" to a prosperous one.
About The Author
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He is a columnist in
"Central Europe Review", United Press International (UPI) and ebookweb.org
and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The
Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served
as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.
His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com
This article was posted on February 2, 2002
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