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Poland Faces Hurdles Before Slated 2011 Euro Switch

DPA news agency (kjb)September 16, 2008

Prime Minister Donald Tusk's plan for Poland to adopt the euro by 2011 has support among the business community and ordinary Poles, but others doubt that Warsaw can meet the strict economic criteria for joining the club.

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Euro coins on an EU flag
The majority of Poles support the euro by 2011Image: dpa

Post-communist Eastern Europe's largest economy has in effect chosen high growth over low inflation and fiscal restraint. Poland's gross domestic product expanded 1.5 percent in the second quarter compared to the previous three months, while the euro zone's GDP shrank by 0.2 percent.

Tusk's 2011 target date is his most concrete promise on joining the euro zone since he took office in November. Announcing the plan last week, he called it "difficult but possible."

Poland's next budget will add "credibility" to the goal, Tusk said -- an important point because the EU has criticized Poland's budget deficit in recent years. Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski promised to start work soon on a detailed timetable.

Majority in favor of euro by 2011

A poll Monday in the Dziennik daily found that 55 percent of Poles support the goal of switching to the euro by 2011. Business also greeted the news with enthusiasm, media reports said.

A Polish soccer fan celebrates the news that Poland and Ukraine will co-host the 2012 European Championship in Warsaw
Poland will co-host the Euro 2012 with UkraineImage: AP

Having the euro in place would also make it easier for Poland to co-host the Euro 2012 football championship, the sports minister said.

As the economy slows worldwide, Polish consumer prices declined a larger-than-expected 0.4 percent in August from July, official data showed Monday. Rostowski says that Poland's 2009 budget, which is slated to reduce the deficit, will be a milestone toward the euro.

Doubts about maintaining standards

But critics questioned whether Poland could move toward and maintain EU benchmarks on inflation, the budget deficit and national debt in time to reach the 2011 target.

Stanislaw Gomulka, an economics professor and former deputy finance minister, called the goal "unrealistic."

Poland, he told Dziennik, must maintain a stable course for two years before it can enter the euro zone and meet other fiscal and inflation criteria for at least one year before entry.

It missed a good opportunity in the last three years, he added, but the previous government was hesitant, and now inflation is too high, he said.

Warsaw slow to set deadline

Poland agreed to adopt the euro as part of its deal to enter the EU in 2004 along with eight other ex-communist nations, but Warsaw has been reluctant to set a deadline to join the 15-nation euro zone.

Meanwhile, Slovakia plans on Jan. 1, beating other former Soviet-bloc countries like Poland but also Hungary and Czech Republic.

Criticism came from Law and Justice -- the party of President Lech Kaczynski, a Tusk rival -- who wanted to see a concrete schedule for Poland's switch from the zloty.

A top presidential aide, Piotr Kownacki, called Tusk's announcement "propaganda," saying the government had yet to launch a "serious dialogue" with Poland's central bank about adopting the euro.

Many pointed out that the Polish constitution would have to be amended, because the Polish National Bank currently has sole power to print and distribute money. Rewriting the constitution would require support from the opposition Law and Justice, which is eurosceptic.