The new 'sick man' of Europe
Step aside, Greece.
According to BMI Research, Europe has a new "sick man": Finland.
The country in northern Europe could be looking at a muggy economic future as its major industries continue to struggle and its demographic situation works against long-term growth.
"Finland is set for years of economic stagnation, and will be one of the worst performing eurozone economies in growth terms," the BMI Research team argued in a recent report.
"Structural reforms being implemented by the government will be insufficient to offset the decline of key industries, an uncompetitive export base and labour market rigidities."
The team believes that the country's real gross-domestic-product growth will log an average of only 0.9% over the next decade, far below the pre-financial-crisis average of 4.0% from 1997 to 2007.
Moreover, they think average wages will fall modestly as the country works to "regain competitiveness via a painful internal devaluation."
As for what's ailing Finland, here's an abbreviated rundown:
- The country's economy is having a hard time bouncing back from its dying paper industryand Nokia's slump. Notably, Nokia alone was responsible for a stunning 24% of Finnish real GDP growth from 1997 to 2007, according to data cited by BMI Research.
- The country' demographics - which, much like the rest of Europe include a shrinking working-age population and a growing aging population - will most likely drag down long-term growth.
- Finland uses the euro, which means it can't adjust fiscal or monetary policy to its specific needs.
Notably, the government's labor-market reforms - which aim to cut worker benefits - have, unsurprisingly, not been a huge crowd-pleaser.
Plus, they "will likely increase unemployment and restrict wage growth in the coming years, implying that private consumption will be subdued," the BMI Research team argued.
Of course, it's worth nothing that Finland is already one of the most developed, wealthiest in terms of GDP per capita, and least corrupt countries in the world. Plus, it's one of the strongest countries when it comes to research and development.
So, it's not that its economy will totally crater in on itself - more that living standards might not tremendously improve in the near future.
But, notably, that's exactly what could have some implications further down the road.
"Stagnating improvements to living standards will continue boosting a growing eurosceptic movement in Finland, even if an exit from the currency union is highly unlikely at any stage over the next decade," the team said.
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