Western Balkans Competitiveness Outlook 2024: Regional Profile
Inclusive and sustainable economic growth in the six Western Balkan (WB6) economies depends on greater economic competitiveness. Although the gap is closing gradually, the standards of living in WB6 are well below those of the OECD and EU. Accelerating the rate of socio-economic convergence will require a holistic and growth oriented approach to policy making.
This is the fourth study of the region (formerly under the title 'Competitiveness in South East Europe') and it comprehensively assesses policy reforms in the WB6 economies across 15 policy areas key to strengthening their competitiveness. It enables WB6 economies to compare economic performance against regional peers, as well as EU-OECD good practices and standards, and to design future policies based on rich evidence and actionable policy recommendations.
The regional profile presents assessment findings across five policy clusters crucial to accelerating socio-economic convergence of the WB6 by fostering regional co-operation: business environment, skills, infrastructure and connectivity, digital transformation and greening. Economy-specific profiles complement the regional assessment, offering each WB6 economy an in-depth analysis of their policies supporting competitiveness. They also track the implementation of the previous 2021 study's recommendations and provide additional ones tailored to the economies’ evolving challenges. These recommendations aim to inform structural economic reforms and facilitate the region’s socio-economic convergence towards the standards of the EU and OECD.
Executive summary
Despite the Western Balkans experiencing a robust post-pandemic recovery, marked by a GDP growth of 7.9% in 2021, further progress was subsequently hampered by the economic fallout of the Russian aggression against Ukraine. The region has grappled with economic slowdown and inflationary pressures, primarily driven by escalating food and energy prices that have disproportionately impacted lower-income households and energy-intensive sectors. Furthermore, the energy crisis has underscored the critical need to diversify the energy supply and accelerate the Western Balkans' transition towards a low-carbon and environmentally sustainable economy. Against this backdrop, a comprehensive economic reform agenda that charts a course towards sustainable, inclusive and resilient growth and improved living standards is paramount for the region. This report seeks to contribute to this endeavour.
Also available in: Albanian, Macedonian, Montenegrin, Croatian, French, All
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