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| Content Provider | OECD iLibrary |
|---|---|
| Organization | OECD |
| Abstract | Depuis 2007, la Pologne est le pays de l’OCDE qui a enregistré les meilleurs résultats économiques, tels que mesurés par la croissance du PIB réel (). Elle a ainsi pu combler, au rythme de 2 points de pourcentage en moyenne chaque année depuis 2005, son écart de PIB par habitant avec l’UE15, ce qui représente plus du double du taux de rattrapage observé au cours de la première moitié des années 2000. Cette bonne performance peut s’expliquer par les importantes entrées de fonds de l’UE (qui ont contribué à moderniser l’infrastructure des transports), par l’action de relance exercée par les politiques macroéconomiques nationales (jusqu’en 2010), par la dépréciation du taux de change et par la réglementation prudentielle efficace d’un système financier relativement solide. En revanche, malgré l’amélioration de la rentabilité du secteur des entreprises, les dépenses d’équipement privées ont été faibles jusqu’en 2010 (). En 2011, la croissance du PIB réel, alimentée essentiellement par la consommation privée et l’investissement public, surtout dans le secteur de la construction, s’est établie selon les estimations à 4.3 %, dépassant l’estimation de l’OCDE d’une croissance potentielle de 3-3.5 % environ. Cependant, ce rythme plussoutenu de croissance ne pourra être maintenu que si un large éventail de réformes sont entreprises pour faire face aux déséquilibres sous-jacents et surmonter les faiblesses structurelles. Le gouvernement ayant été reconduit pour un deuxième mandat, le moment est venu pour lui de formuler et de mettre en œuvre un programme de réformes qui favorisera un rattrapage rapide et continu et renforcera la confiance des marchés des capitaux dans l’avenir économique de la Pologne. |
| Language | French |
| Publisher | OECD Publishing |
| Publisher Date | 2012-06-22 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Economics |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Chapter |
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