Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report

For Croatia, the challenge is to create conditions that will attract investment and produce growth. These conditions can broadly be categorized as (a) stable, progressive and predictable laws and institutions; (b) efficient labor and financial mark...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Country Economic Memorandum
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
GDP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2466160/croatia-country-economic-memorandum-strategy-growth-through-european-integration-vol-1-2-summary-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14619
id okr-10986-14619
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
AGRICULTURE
ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES
ASSET MANAGEMENT
ASSETS
AUTHORITY
BALANCE SHEETS
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKRUPTCY
BANKRUPTCY COURTS
BANKRUPTCY PROCEDURES
BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS
BANKS
BENCHMARK
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
BUDGET DEFICIT
BUDGET DEFICITS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
CAPITAL MARKETS
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSOLIDATION
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
CORRUPTION
DEBT
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
DEPRECIATION
DISCLOSURE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EMPLOYMENT
ENACTMENT
ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING
EXCHANGE RATE
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FISCAL
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL DEFICITS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL PROBLEMS
FISCAL REFORM
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FREE TRADE
GDP
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
GOVERNMENT'S POLICY
GROWTH POTENTIAL
HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
HUMAN CAPITAL
IMPORTS
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
JUDICIARY
KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LAWS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
LEGISLATION
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION POLICIES
MACROECONOMICS
MARGINAL COST
MEMBER STATES
MONETARY POLICY
NET LOSSES
PAYROLL TAXES
PENSIONS
POLLUTION
PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION
PRIVATIZATION
PRIVATIZATION OF STATE
PRIVATIZATION PROCEEDS
PRODUCTIVITY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
PUBLIC GOODS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC UTILITIES
RATIONALIZATION
REAL GDP
RECAPITALIZATION
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
REHABILITATION
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
SAVINGS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL WELFARE
SOFT BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
STATE AID
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX RATES
TAX REVENUES
TRADE FLOWS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE TAXES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WELFARE SYSTEM
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO EURROPEAN INTEGRATION
ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING
STRUCTURAL REFORMS
INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
GROWTH PROMOTION
PROPERTY RIGHTS
JUDICIAL REFORM
JOB CREATION POLICIES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER
COMPETITIVENESS
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH
WAGE LEVELS
FISCAL POLICY
GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY
SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEMS
CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS
COURT PROCEDURES
SMALL CLAIMS COURTS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
LABOR MARKET CHARACTERISTICS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
PRIVATIZATION OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
LAND RIGHTS
HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
AGRICULTURE
ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES
ASSET MANAGEMENT
ASSETS
AUTHORITY
BALANCE SHEETS
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKRUPTCY
BANKRUPTCY COURTS
BANKRUPTCY PROCEDURES
BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS
BANKS
BENCHMARK
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
BUDGET DEFICIT
BUDGET DEFICITS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
CAPITAL MARKETS
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSOLIDATION
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
CORRUPTION
DEBT
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
DEPRECIATION
DISCLOSURE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EMPLOYMENT
ENACTMENT
ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING
EXCHANGE RATE
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FISCAL
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL DEFICITS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL PROBLEMS
FISCAL REFORM
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FREE TRADE
GDP
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
GOVERNMENT'S POLICY
GROWTH POTENTIAL
HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
HUMAN CAPITAL
IMPORTS
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
JUDICIARY
KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LAWS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
LEGISLATION
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION POLICIES
MACROECONOMICS
MARGINAL COST
MEMBER STATES
MONETARY POLICY
NET LOSSES
PAYROLL TAXES
PENSIONS
POLLUTION
PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION
PRIVATIZATION
PRIVATIZATION OF STATE
PRIVATIZATION PROCEEDS
PRODUCTIVITY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
PUBLIC GOODS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC UTILITIES
RATIONALIZATION
REAL GDP
RECAPITALIZATION
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
REHABILITATION
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
SAVINGS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL WELFARE
SOFT BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
STATE AID
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX RATES
TAX REVENUES
TRADE FLOWS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE TAXES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WELFARE SYSTEM
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO EURROPEAN INTEGRATION
ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING
STRUCTURAL REFORMS
INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
GROWTH PROMOTION
PROPERTY RIGHTS
JUDICIAL REFORM
JOB CREATION POLICIES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER
COMPETITIVENESS
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH
WAGE LEVELS
FISCAL POLICY
GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY
SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEMS
CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS
COURT PROCEDURES
SMALL CLAIMS COURTS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
LABOR MARKET CHARACTERISTICS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
PRIVATIZATION OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
LAND RIGHTS
HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT
World Bank
Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Croatia
description For Croatia, the challenge is to create conditions that will attract investment and produce growth. These conditions can broadly be categorized as (a) stable, progressive and predictable laws and institutions; (b) efficient labor and financial markets; (c) macroeconomic and financial stability; (d) social and environmental sustainability; (e) effective integration into the European infrastructure networks ensuring competitive cost and quality; and (f) a dynamic business-oriented environment which facilitates the production of high value added goods and promotes the adoption of efficient processes and innovative technologies. This Report proposes a reform strategy for faster economic growth through European integration. Other key inputs for creating a favorable investment climate and consolidating growth prospects include skilled labor, efficient financial markets, and high-quality cost-efficient infrastructure services. Croatia has already achieved substantial progress in these areas. However, pursuing reforms in these sectors would not be costly and would be good for growth and European integration. Thus, higher education reform should be pursued, as should reforms to create market-oriented infrastructure institutions as envisaged in EU Directives, including the institutional development of regulators and the strengthening of the competition agency. The highly competitive European environment requires, in particular, well-focused training and higher education programs that offer firms qualified staff and adequate skills for an innovation-driven knowledge economy. The further deepening of financial markets, which is closely connected to the reforms in the legal and institutional framework outlined above, ought to focus also on the strengthening of the regulatory and supervisory functions, particularly in the non-banking sectors. Similarly, market-oriented energy, transport, and communications are crucial to enhance the global competitiveness of the Croatian economy and to foster its integration into the European economy while creating opportunities for FDI.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Country Economic Memorandum
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
title_short Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
title_full Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
title_fullStr Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
title_full_unstemmed Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report
title_sort croatia country economic memorandum : a strategy for growth through european integration, volume 1. summary report
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2466160/croatia-country-economic-memorandum-strategy-growth-through-european-integration-vol-1-2-summary-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14619
_version_ 1764428069345427456
spelling okr-10986-146192021-04-23T14:03:16Z Croatia Country Economic Memorandum : A Strategy for Growth through European Integration, Volume 1. Summary Report World Bank ACCOUNTING AGGREGATE DEMAND AGRICULTURE ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSETS AUTHORITY BALANCE SHEETS BANKING SECTOR BANKING SYSTEM BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY COURTS BANKRUPTCY PROCEDURES BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS BANKS BENCHMARK BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BUDGET DEFICIT BUDGET DEFICITS CAPITAL EXPENDITURES CAPITAL MARKETS CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVENESS CONSOLIDATION CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORRUPTION DEBT DEPOSIT INSURANCE DEPRECIATION DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC SITUATION EMPLOYMENT ENACTMENT ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING EXCHANGE RATE FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FISCAL FISCAL DEFICIT FISCAL DEFICITS FISCAL POLICIES FISCAL POLICY FISCAL PROBLEMS FISCAL REFORM FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FREE TRADE GDP GOVERNMENT AGENCIES GOVERNMENT'S POLICY GROWTH POTENTIAL HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INFLATION INFLATION RATE INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL RESERVES INVESTMENT CLIMATE JUDICIARY KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKETS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION POLICIES MACROECONOMICS MARGINAL COST MEMBER STATES MONETARY POLICY NET LOSSES PAYROLL TAXES PENSIONS POLLUTION PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION PRIVATIZATION PRIVATIZATION OF STATE PRIVATIZATION PROCEEDS PRODUCTIVITY PROPERTY RIGHTS PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC UTILITIES RATIONALIZATION REAL GDP RECAPITALIZATION REGIONAL INTEGRATION REHABILITATION REVENUE MOBILIZATION SAVINGS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL SECURITY SOCIAL WELFARE SOFT BUDGET CONSTRAINTS STATE AID STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES SUSTAINABLE GROWTH TAX RATES TAX REVENUES TRADE FLOWS TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE TAXES TRANSPORT UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE VALUE ADDED WAGES WELFARE SYSTEM WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO EURROPEAN INTEGRATION ENTERPRISE RESTRUCTURING STRUCTURAL REFORMS INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT GROWTH PROMOTION PROPERTY RIGHTS JUDICIAL REFORM JOB CREATION POLICIES BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER COMPETITIVENESS MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH WAGE LEVELS FISCAL POLICY GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEMS CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS COURT PROCEDURES SMALL CLAIMS COURTS LEGAL FRAMEWORK UNEMPLOYMENT RATES BARRIERS TO ENTRY LABOR MARKET CHARACTERISTICS CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PRIVATIZATION OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEBT SUSTAINABILITY EMPLOYMENT CREATION LAND RIGHTS HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT For Croatia, the challenge is to create conditions that will attract investment and produce growth. These conditions can broadly be categorized as (a) stable, progressive and predictable laws and institutions; (b) efficient labor and financial markets; (c) macroeconomic and financial stability; (d) social and environmental sustainability; (e) effective integration into the European infrastructure networks ensuring competitive cost and quality; and (f) a dynamic business-oriented environment which facilitates the production of high value added goods and promotes the adoption of efficient processes and innovative technologies. This Report proposes a reform strategy for faster economic growth through European integration. Other key inputs for creating a favorable investment climate and consolidating growth prospects include skilled labor, efficient financial markets, and high-quality cost-efficient infrastructure services. Croatia has already achieved substantial progress in these areas. However, pursuing reforms in these sectors would not be costly and would be good for growth and European integration. Thus, higher education reform should be pursued, as should reforms to create market-oriented infrastructure institutions as envisaged in EU Directives, including the institutional development of regulators and the strengthening of the competition agency. The highly competitive European environment requires, in particular, well-focused training and higher education programs that offer firms qualified staff and adequate skills for an innovation-driven knowledge economy. The further deepening of financial markets, which is closely connected to the reforms in the legal and institutional framework outlined above, ought to focus also on the strengthening of the regulatory and supervisory functions, particularly in the non-banking sectors. Similarly, market-oriented energy, transport, and communications are crucial to enhance the global competitiveness of the Croatian economy and to foster its integration into the European economy while creating opportunities for FDI. 2013-07-26T16:37:14Z 2013-07-26T16:37:14Z 2003-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2466160/croatia-country-economic-memorandum-strategy-growth-through-european-integration-vol-1-2-summary-report http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14619 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Country Economic Memorandum Economic & Sector Work Europe and Central Asia Croatia