1. Key Policy Insights
Lithuania has successfully exited the covid-19-crisis, but is now weathering the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Growth is slowing and inflation has risen to one of the highest in the Euro area, fuelled by soaring energy and food prices. Fiscal policy is tightening amid a revised budget to help households and firms weather the energy crisis and support Ukrainian refugees. Ageing costs are rising. Accelerating reform of public firms and upgrading the education system will boost productivity and employment. Reducing poverty and regional disparities, improving institutional quality, and curbing carbon emissions will help make the Lithuanian economy more inclusive and sustainable.
The Lithuanian economy has successfully exited the covid-19-crisis, but is now weathering the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Lithuania was one of the fastest growing OECD economies of the past decade in per capita terms, buoyed by rising exports and integration into global value chains (Figure 1.1). Bold and effective policy helped households and firms through the pandemic, contributing to the mildest pandemic-induced recession of all European countries. A high vaccination rate helps protect the population against a new covid-19 wave. The government has embarked on an ambitious programme to boost investment in infrastructure, innovation, education, digitalisation and climate action, supported by the European resilience and recovery funds. A sound macroeconomic and financial framework and a friendly business climate enhance policy effectiveness. After a long period of net emigration, the migration balance turned positive in 2018.
Russia’s aggression against Ukraine will considerably affect the Lithuanian economy (Box 1.1). Lithuania has one of the highest inflation rates in the euro area, fuelled by soaring energy, food and housing prices. Russia is one of Lithuania’s largest trading partners, making the economy vulnerable to the impact of the war, even though much of the trade with Russia consists of transit trade. In Spring, Lithuania stopped importing oil, gas and electricity from Russia. A wave of refugees from Ukraine and Belarus could strain Lithuania’s absorption capacity and require considerable humanitarian aid. Given the nature of the shock, policy responses need to be carefully weighed. In view of these developments, Lithuania updated the budget in April to spend more on short-term support for households and firms as well as on investment in energy security.
Besides the war-related crisis, Lithuania faces several challenges, mostly pertaining to productivity and employment (Figure 1.2). Productivity has accelerated over the past few years, but its level remains below the OECD average. Participation is well above the OECD average, limiting further contributions to GDP. Unemployment remains high despite strong growth, pointing at labour market imbalances, in particular considerable skills and job mismatch. Investment, both public and private, remains stubbornly low. The broad reach of state-owned enterprises and inadequate regulation in transport, Lithuania’s largest service export sector, could also hold back productivity growth. Trust in government and quality of institutions is below the OECD average. The pandemic cut men’s life expectancy, already among the lowest in the OECD, by 1.7 years (women 1.3 years) in 2020, the sharpest reduction in OECD Europe (OECD, 2018[1]).
Russia’s aggression against Ukraine is first a human tragedy, but it has also consequences for the Lithuanian economy. By late August, more than 60 000 Ukrainian refugees – equivalent to 2% of the Lithuanian population – had reached Lithuanian soil, with arrivals having gradually declined to less than a hundred per day. Ukrainians already make up the largest group of non-EU foreigners living in Lithuania. Starting in March Ukrainian refugees were able to obtain refugee status with a simplified procedure, granting them full access to health and social services and the labour market. Refugees also help alleviate labour shortages. Ukrainian teachers are allowed to teach in the Ukrainian language. Procedures to hand out work permits for workers from Russia and Belarus have also been streamlined, with the stated objective of relocating skilled workers and firms from these countries to Lithuania.
Trade with Russia, Belarus and Ukraine is collapsing. In early April, Lithuania stopped importing gas from Russia, drawing instead on the LNG terminal in Klaipeda, becoming the first EU country to cut ties with Russian gas deliveries. In May, it stopped all other energy imports from Russia. Rail transport is expected to almost halve from its 2021 level. Traffic between Russia and its Kaliningrad enclave, which passes through Lithuania, has shrunk to a fraction of its normal level, affected by ever tighter EU sanctions. Growth of service exports – mostly transport – is expected to drop from around 14% in 2021 to 4% in 2022. Oil prices have nearly doubled since December 2021, and headline inflation exceeded 22% in September. Lithuania is an agricultural exporter, so rising food prices hurt households but benefit exporters. End-March the central bank published some scenarios, with the most optimistic one projecting GDP growth at 2.7% in 2022, whereas the “severe shock” scenario projected a 1.2% contraction, assuming that all exports to Russia, Belarus and Ukraine stop entirely and imports from these countries are curtailed by one-fifth. In the best-case scenario inflation was projected at 10.5% in 2022, as against 11.5% in the severe shock scenario.
In early April the government presented a revised draft budget under the heading “Mitigating the effects of inflation and strengthening energy independence”, allocating around 1.4% of GDP in 2022 to help households and firms absorb energy price shocks and increase energy efficiency, as well as to diversify energy supply. Electricity and natural gas prices are capped at 140% of pre-war levels until end 2022 for households, with energy providers being compensated for revenue losses. To help households further, pensions have been increased; income taxes for low-income earners reduced; and means-tested benefits – increased already in December 2021 - were expanded further. A notable part of investment to increase energy independence goes into renovation and rehabilitation of multi-apartment buildings and the support of public and private solar and wind energy production and electricity storage. Some of this spending was contained in earlier budgets, and around half is covered by EU funds. Another 0.6% of GDP are budgeted to support Ukrainian refugees.
Source: Various government agencies and central bank of Lithuania.
Stepping up progress with digitalisation will be a key means to boost productivity economy-wide. While the country has advanced in this area, there is scope to further increase investment in innovation and remove barriers to the adoption of advanced technologies by firms, especially smaller ones, including by addressing regional disparities in digital infrastructure and improving access to finance. Digital skills need to strengthen to ensure a solid transition towards the digital economy and a fair distribution of the digitalisation dividend. The government is developing a digitalisation strategy to reap the benefits of new digital technologies and to boost innovation and productivity.
Lithuania still suffers from considerable social and regional imbalances. Income inequality remains high, as often seen in rapidly growing economies (Figure 1.3). Poverty has increased until a few years ago, although it recently started to decline. Old-age poverty is of particular concern. With the population ageing rapidly, the government will have to find ways to increase pension system adequacy while maintaining its sustainability. Differences in productivity and employment across regions are large despite the small size of the country. The government is reacting with resolve to social and regional disparities, though. The level and effectiveness of social spending are rising, and reforms of the institutional framework are underway, providing local governments with more power and resources to develop their own investment and growth policies.
Against this background, the Survey’s key messages are for Lithuania to:
Taking into account the impact of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, strengthen energy independence; provide targeted support to vulnerable households and firms to help them cope with higher energy prices; and tighten fiscal policy at an appropriate pace to help adress inflationary pressures.
Continue structural reforms to raise productivity and employment, especially in the area of education and skills; address the fiscal costs of ageing; and reduce social and regional disparities further.
Foster digitalisation through more effective R&D support for businesses and by reducing barriers to technology adoption, especially among smaller firms, including through addressing regional gaps in digital infrastructure and improving access to finance, while accelerating progress towards digital government and strengthening digital skills.
The war in Ukraine exposes Lithuania’s vulnerability
Lithuania’s economy has been one of the least affected by the covid-19 pandemic thanks to effective containment measures, a well-functioning health system and high vaccination rates. It was again growing fast until before Russia’s aggression in Ukraine (Figure 1.4). Output reached the pre-pandemic level already in early 2021 (Table 1.1). Economic activity remained solid in the first quarter of 2022, led by exports and housing investment and despite waning confidence and the outbreak of the war in Ukraine. Real GDP weakened however in the second quarter, contracting by 0.5% compared to previous quarter. Consumer confidence tumbled with the resurgence of COVID-19 cases in early 2022 and surging energy prices, but fast wage growth and some unwinding of savings prevented a larger contraction of private consumption. The unemployment rate had been gradually declining from a peak of around 9% in mid-2020 to 5.3 % in the second quarter of 2022, below its pre-crisis level. Fiscal policy has become expansionary, following a revised draft budget presented in April (see fiscal section).
Consumer price inflation exceeded 22% in September 2022, the second-highest in the euro area, amidst soaring energy and food prices and, to a lesser extent, housing prices. Inflation would have been even higher if the government had not put a ceiling on energy price hikes. Relatively high energy intensity of the economy, energy inefficiency particularly in the housing sector (heating costs) and an excessive reliance on oil and gas – accounting for almost 80% of total energy production – account for the outsized impact of the energy price surge on headline inflation (Blöchliger and Strumskyte, 2020[2]). The comparatively large share of food purchases in the Lithuanian consumption basket works in the same direction. Strong domestic demand has facilitated the pass-through of cost increases to the prices of consumer goods and services, pointing at intensifying underlying price pressures. Export prices are rising more slowly than those of domestic inputs, suggesting that profit margins of export-oriented firms are being squeezed. Despite strong nominal wage growth, real wages started to decline from end 2021, keeping the risk of a wage/price spiral at bay so far. Even so, the high inflation rates point to the need for fiscal measures to mitigate the effect on domestic inflation of the European monetary policy stance calibrated for the euro area as a whole.
The economy is projected to slow to 1.6% in 2022 and 1.3% in 2023, affected by declining trade and increased uncertainty as the war in Ukraine, to which Lithuania is more exposed than most other OECD countries, takes its toll (Table 1.1). Investment, however, will gather pace during the projection period, supported by an inflow of EU funds and the government’s multi-year investment programme in several key areas. Lithuania will receive about 4.5% of 2020 GDP from the EU Recovery and Resilience Facility, around a third of which are expected to be spent by 2023. Headline inflation will decline but remain high due the EU embargo on Russian oil to take effect in 2023. Real wages will continue falling, albeit at a slower pace. The unemployment rate will rise because of the slowdown, although large skills shortages will keep labour market conditions tight.
The projections are subject to substantial uncertainty against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and the sanctions on Russia (Table 1.2). Despite gradual decoupling over the past decade, Russia remains one of Lithuania’s most important trading partners, with Russia accounting for 11% of total goods exports and 12% of total imports in 2021 although re-exports make up a large part of that trade. Before Lithuania stopped importing all types of energy from Russia in spring 2022, its dependence on Russian energy was considerable, with 42% of natural gas and 73% of crude oil coming from Russia in 2020. Liquefied gas imported through the liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in Klaipeda is expected to bridge gas shortages until the end of the year. More severe sanctions on Russia and supply disruptions could dent growth further. Against this background, it is important to remain vigilant with respect to energy security and diversification.
The labour market is recovering, but structural unemployment remains an issue
The labour market withstood the pandemic well, partly thanks to well-targeted government support (Figure 1.5). Unemployment stood below 7% in early 2022. The unemployment gap between men and women – unemployment has been traditionally higher for men – narrowed further during the pandemic and has virtually disappeared. The young, often working in contact-intensive service sectors, were disproportionally affected by pandemic-induced unemployment, and even though the gap is declining, youth unemployment remains above average. The short-term work scheme helped sustain most firms and jobs during shutdowns and other pandemic-related measures. When it was discontinued in 2021, unemployment hardly changed, pointing to an appropriate balance between the unemployment scheme protecting people and the short-term work-scheme protecting jobs (Giupponi, Landais and Lapeyre, 2021[3]).
Lithuania’s labour market is flexible, adapting to evolving challenges, as documented in the 2018 OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2018[1]). Workers are transiting from old to new jobs more rapidly than in most other OECD countries, contributing to the productivity and efficiency of Lithuanian firms and to cost competitiveness (Causa, Luu and Abendschein, 2021[4]). Labour market flexibility helps workers, especially young people entering the labour market, seizing better job opportunities and reducing wage inequalities, which might prove useful during the pandemic-induced structural shifts in the economy. Labour market participation continued to expand even during the pandemic, driven by a rising retirement age and rising immigration of skilled workers, both foreigners and returning Lithuanians. The spectacular turn in net migration over the past few years has likely been driven by rapidly rising living standards in Lithuania; a more welcoming immigration policy especially for high-skilled workers; an improving social climate; and the impact of Brexit, with many emigrants returning to their home country (Figure 1.5, Panel D).
Persistently high structural unemployment remains a salient feature of Lithuania’s labour market, though. Structural unemployment is estimated at around 6.5%, higher than in the surrounding countries and barely declining. According to the central bank, the relationship between vacancies and unemployment (“Beveridge curve”) has worsened during the pandemic, suggesting that the mismatch between available jobs and jobseekers has become even more acute. Labour market mismatch is largely driven by high skills mismatch - with many workers either under- or overqualified - and skills shortages, with high-skilled job offers often remaining unoccupied while low-qualified workers have difficulties in finding jobs. Against this background, Lithuania’s structural unemployment issues should be addressed by a framework that attracts, develops, upgrades and retains skills and brings them closer to labour market needs.
Competitiveness is declining
Lithuania’s competitiveness has declined vis-à-vis the OECD average, as measured by unit labour costs, although export performance – a measure for price and quality competitiveness - has improved (Figure 1.6). Lithuania’s labour productivity growth has accelerated to above the EU28 average but remains below leading European Union members or Central and Eastern European countries (National Productivity Board, 2020[5]). Aggregate real wages have consistently outpaced productivity since 2010, and the competitiveness gains achieved after the 2009 crisis are exhausted by now. Minimum wages accelerated even more, especially in the first half of the decade, with a potentially uneven impact on high- and low productivity regions in Lithuania, as shown in the 2020 OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020). Rising minimum wages likely helped reduce wage inequality and poverty, though. Moreover, the share of labour compensation in the total economy remains below that of the other Baltic countries.
Growing wage pressure in the wake of rising inflation could dent competitiveness further. Productivity differences across sectors are large, and wage growth has exceeded productivity growth in most sectors over the past decade (Figure 1.7). Differences are particularly marked between the tradeable and the domestic sector, albeit with exceptions. The wide differences in productivity contrast with the narrower differences in wages. This pattern is typical for a small open and converging economy where wages are largely determined by the export sector, spilling over to the domestic sector where they are absorbed by either lower profit margins or higher prices. Imbalances would emerge if wage growth started to exceed productivity in the tradeable sector. Against this background, the way forward to avoid imbalances and further losses of competitiveness is to support productivity growth in both the tradeable and non-tradeable sectors through higher public and private investment, digitalisation, and reforms in the public sector, especially in education to better match skills to labour market needs.
External positions are sound
The current account surplus and net exports increased in 2020 as demand for Lithuanian goods and services withstood the pandemic-related restrictions (Figure 1.8, Panel A). The only export sector that suffered severely was international tourism – although it makes up a small a part of GDP - and transport services following disruptions in trade between Eastern and Western Europe. Foreign direct investment (FDI) has been expanding rapidly over the past few years, although the FDI stock remains low compared to other Eastern European OECD countries since an important activity of international firms in the past – setting up service centers - required little capital spending (OECD, 2018[1]). While trade openness declined a bit during the pandemic, Lithuania remains highly open to the world (Panel B). The war in Ukraine will impact both exports and imports, including international transport services, thereby reducing openness.
The destination of exports has changed considerably over the past decade or so, and Lithuania’s integration into global value chains has deepened (Figure 1.9). While Russia and other Commonwealth of Independent States countries made up more than 27% of goods exports in 2010 (and almost 100% in 1991), their share has declined to less than 23% by 2020. At the same time, exports to the United States rose from 2.7% to 4.4%. Asia also has become more important, with mainland China’s share growing from 0.7% in 2010 to 1.2% in 2020 and Chinese Taipei’s from 0.1% to 0.2%. An officially undeclared embargo of China on trade with Lithuania over a name dispute involving Chinese Taipei seems to have had little impact except for switching trade flows towards alternative markets, particularly South-East Asia and the United States. Lithuania increased the share of medium- and high-technology exports by more than any other OECD country, albeit from a relatively low baseline. While the country has become a cutting-edge exporter in life science, laser technology and some ICT sectors, the large share of transport services and agricultural products still weighs on domestic value-added. Since a higher export share and integration in global value chains is associated with firms becoming more resilient and productive (see thematic chapter), policies should help improve competitiveness of all sectors including transport and agriculture.
The large transport sector has economic and environmental implications. While transport is by far Lithuania’s single most important service export, its technology content and value-added is relatively low. Moreover, the European Union’s mobility package, putting limits on free carriage, risks affecting Lithuania’s transport companies which operate mainly across Europe, rarely touching Lithuanian soil. In addition, the east-west goods corridor could be subject to severe disruptions following the war in Ukraine and the sanctions on Russia. Finally, transport is the main driver of Lithuania’s high carbon emissions and air pollution. Against this background, Lithuania should strive for a rapid completion of the Rail Baltica project which will improve productivity of the transport sector, strengthen Lithuania’s international transport hub position between Western and Northern Europe and help reduce carbon emissions.
The financial system seems profitable, well capitalized and liquid. It has remained remarkably stable during the pandemic, with no apparent signs of imbalances. A robust and timely policy response helped provide liquidity to households and firms throughout the pandemic (OECD, 2020[6]). Household credit continued to grow almost unabated, while corporate credit took a hit and started to recover in the second half of 2021 only (Figure 1.10). As firms have deleveraged for years, corporate balance sheets look healthy, and insolvencies actually declined during the pandemic. Direct exposure to Russia is very small. The central bank tightened financial policies somewhat in early 2022 as the situation was normalising and some signs pointed at the housing market starting to overheat. In the absence of further pandemic-related restrictions to economic activity and given the potential emergence of financial imbalances, policies should help preserve the long-term resilience and stability of the financial system.
Banks seem well funded, but market concentration remains an issue
The banking sector looks financially sound. Capital adequacy ratios are well above the required minimum. The share of non-performing loans continued to decline during the pandemic despite a small surge of non-performing corporate and consumer loans. In April 2020, the central bank reduced the counter-cyclical capital buffer from 1% to 0%, where it has remained since, but introduced a sectoral systemic risk buffer of 2% for domestic mortgage loans in early 2022. Buffers should continue to be rebuilt through targeted macro-prudential tools or a rise in the counter-cyclical capital buffer if signs of persistent imbalances in particular sectors start to emerge, or macroeconomic risks materialize. The effectiveness of such levers could be limited, however, as liquidity and capital levels are well above current requirements (International Money Fund, 2021[7]) and a large share of housing purchases is financed through savings. In addition, macro-prudential tools could have an asymmetric impact across income groups and regions within Lithuania.
Lithuania’s banking sector remains highly concentrated and foreign-owned, with the three largest banks accounting for around 75% of overall assets (Figure 1.12). However, new financial institutions have sprung up since 2018, currently making up around 4% of assets and strengthening competition especially in payments and the consumer credit segment (Bank of Lithuania, 2021[8]). Lending to SMEs has recovered and the number of rejected loan demands has declined. Moreover, the share of SME lending from the non-banking sector, including crowdfunding, is increasing, suggesting that the credit market is gradually becoming more competitive and diverse.
A national investment fund (NPI) was legislated in 2019 and is currently being set up. Its purpose is to finance sustainable investment - in both the public and private sector - thought to be strategically important for the Lithuanian economy. The NPI is to consolidate four existing public investment funds and help harmonise investment strategies, financing models and risk management, thereby increasing leverage considerably. The NPI is expected to become operational by 2023. As recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey, a rigorous governance framework is essential to avoid risky loans and the crowding-out of private finance (OECD, 2020[6]).
The authorities continue to step up anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing (AML/CTF) efforts and have substantially increased resources devoted to this end. As a result, the MONEYVAL expert group has rated Lithuania “largely compliant”, up from “partially compliant” (Moneyval, 2021[9]). Over the past two years, the central bank has been requiring more frequent and detailed AML/CTF data reporting and has increased the number of inspections. In May 2021, the Centre of Excellence in Anti-Money Laundering - a public-private partnership involving several government agencies, the central bank and commercial banks - started its activities. The centre acts as a platform for information exchange, research to improve the AML/CT framework and assistance to private sector entities in conducting internal risk assessments.
The housing market has been booming before the war
The housing market has continued to boom during the pandemic, and house prices have been rising fast before the war in Ukraine (Figure 1.13). Rapidly rising household income and credit, growing immigration including Ukrainian refugees and changing preferences for housing outside urban centres are among the reasons for high and rising housing demand. Surveys suggest that teleworking is set to endure, contributing to higher housing demand. Expectations of further house price hikes also seem to play a role. The phenomenon is broad-based, with prices rising in almost all parts of the country and for all types of housing. Construction remains strong, reflecting a relatively flexible housing market, although it recently declined in the capital area. Despite their upward trend, house prices seem to remain largely in line with fundamentals.
Against this backdrop, the central bank has taken several macro-prudential measures. The central bank has recently reduced the loan-to-value ratio for second loans from “less than 85%” to 70% and has introduced a systemic risk buffer of 2% for domestic mortgage loans. In the future, the central bank plans to address risks, if needed, with additional tools depending on the nature of developments on the housing market. Further tightening the macroprudential stance may be warranted should housing market developments start posing a risk to the financial system. To support the central bank in this area, the government could broaden the immovable property tax base, since a higher share of property tax in GDP is associated with less house price volatility (Blöchliger et al., 2015[10]).
The Fintech sector is expanding fast
Lithuania’s financial technology sector (fintech) has become one of the largest in the European Union, having grown by 20% annually since 2016. By the end of 2021, it counted around 265 firms – both domestic and foreign - and 5 900 employees or around 0.4% of the labour force (Figure 1.14). Fintech started to take off in 2016 when several government institutions, including the central bank and the Ministry of Finance, implemented a coordinated strategy with a view to address excessive concentration and lack of competition in banking. A supportive regulatory framework with a transparent and well-communicated toolkit – including a regulatory sandbox, a blockchain sandbox and an enabling regulatory and licencing regime – helped the sector grow beyond traditional banking, now covering digital payment systems, crowdfunding and investment platforms, peer-to-peer lending platform operators, digital currencies and fast data analysis.
The authorities are well aware of the need for rigorous fintech supervision, including the AML/CFT framework and the promotion of cybersecurity and cyber-insurance. They have defined fintech guidelines covering four areas: ensuring fintech sector growth and maturity; promoting the use of digital financial services; promoting and using technological innovations; and strengthening risk management. The authorities seem to be well prepared for further fintech expansion. They remain aware of reputational risks and take a rigorous supervisory and enforcement approach to maintain financial stability. A potential registration of online banks with a non-resident business model will create new supervisory challenges, while the issuance of a digital collector coin will help gain experience with new fintech technologies.
To maintain fintech’s edge, the sector requires adequate regulation fostering competition and access to finance. While fintech innovations such as digital platforms tend to increase productivity, their beneficial effect for the economy depends on a functioning competition framework (Costa et al., 2021[11]). Fintech has been a boon to competition so far in Lithuania, yet the inherent characteristics of the sector can also make it prone to anti-competitive behaviour. Against this background, fintech should be more closely watched from the standpoint of access and barriers to entry. The financial market development center, established in the central bank in early 2022, is dedicated to attracting new financial services in Lithuania and strengthening competition in the banking sector.
After reaching a small surplus in 2019, the balance fell sharply to -7.4% of GDP in 2020 before recovering in 2021 (Figure 1.15). Public debt rose from around 36% of GDP in 2019 to around 46% in 2021, still lower than in most OECD and EU countries. Pandemic-related support, in particular the comprehensive and well-funded short-term work scheme, has been driving fiscal positions: netting out all discretionary covid-19 measures, the structural balance would have settled at around -1% of GDP in both 2020 and 2021, suggesting a timely and appropriate deployment and withdrawal of support measures (Ministry of Finance, 2022[12]). As such, the fiscal stance was highly expansionary in 2020 and became contractionary in 2021.
The fiscal stance is becoming expansionary again in 2022. In early April the government presented a revised draft budget, allocating around 1.4% of GDP to help households and firms absorb energy price shocks, to increase energy efficiency and to diversify energy supply. A further 0.6% of GDP is dedicated to help Ukrainian refugees. To help households, pensions will be increased; the threshold for when the income tax kicks in will be lifted; and the means-tested heating compensation - increased already in December 2021 - will be expanded further to around 15-20 euro per month. Energy providers receive a compensation for lost revenue following capped energy prices for households. The programme is welcome, although it would be better to unwind energy price caps - as they tend to be costly and inefficient in the face of a supply shock - and increase targeted support to vulnerable households instead.
Before the war in Ukraine, the government had planned to return to the medium-term objective (structural deficit of minus 1% of GDP) rule by 2024, implying an improvement of the primary structural balance of around 1% per year. The stability programme 2022 published in May still echoes those targets. Various EU contributions planned to climb to around 3% of GDP annually will underpin public investment. Public debt was projected to remain at around 45% in 2024. Against the background of rising inflation and a still very expansionary euro area monetary policy stance, the government should tighten fiscal policy as originally planned to reduce demand, subject to additional support to vulnerable households and firms affected by the war and high energy prices.
Reforming the fiscal framework could strengthen sustainability
The fiscal framework has proved flexible during the covid-19 crisis, yet some institutional reforms could underpin the return to normal. The government is carrying out technical work to assess the possibility to introduce a debt target, which is welcome. Simplifying the budget balance rule – without amending its stringency - could also help make budgeting more predictable, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020[6]). Finally, medium-term budget plans cover three years only, which is at the lower end of what is common in the European Union, and they should be extended to four or even five years to allow for better forward-looking fiscal policy. The government believes that amendments to the European Union’s fiscal framework will affect the national rules and wants to align national reforms with supra-national changes.
Spending reviews can help improve the efficiency and impact of public spending and keep expenditure under control. Following a budget reform adopted in 2021, the government has established the framework for spending reviews, including the methodology and the unit carrying out the reviews, and plans to carry out comprehensive spending review soon. Spending reviews should become a routine part of the budget process, especially in areas like education or health care where they could considerably help improve spending effectiveness. Spending reviews are now commonly used in OECD countries as part of performance budgeting, and the government should take inspiration from best practice, e.g. in the Nordic countries, the Netherlands or the United Kingdom (OECD, 2019[13]).
The fiscal costs of an ageing population will rise
Lithuania’s population is set to age rapidly (Figure 1.16). The old-age dependency ratio – the share of the population 65 years and older – is projected to almost double between 2020 and 2060. Past emigration of the young, as well as low immigration, contribute to ageing pressures, although the outlook has brightened recently with a spectacular turn in net migration. The old-age gender gap is one of the largest across the OECD: while women’s life expectancy is around average, men’s is among the lowest albeit rising rapidly. Older workers are well integrated into the labour market, but their incomes tend to be low and contributions to the pension system modest. The share of pension spending is one of the lowest in the OECD. The retirement age is currently rising by two months per year for men and four months for women until it will have reached 65 years for both sexes by 2026, maintaining pension sustainability so far.
The government projects ageing-related fiscal costs, including for pensions, health and long-term care, to rise from 15.3% in 2019 to 17.6% of GDP in 2060 ( (Ministry of Finance, 2021[14])). Spending on health and long-term care is expected to contribute around 1.3 percentage points of that increase, and pension spending another percentage point. The relatively modest rise of projected pension spending can be attributed to a commendable “sustainability indicator” – like a balanced budget rule – that limits expansion of pension benefits to the growth of the economy-wide wage bill. To maintain sustainability, especially in the wake of several measures weakening the sustainability indicator, the government should consider establishing an automatic link between the retirement age and life expectancy beyond the year 2026, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey ( (OECD, 2020[6])) and as practiced in several other countries (Box 1.2). Longer -run developments in health and long-term care should also be assessed. Recently the government mandated the OECD to develop a framework to improve the sustainability and adequacy of the long-term care system.
Automatically adjusting the statutory retirement age to life expectancy is arguably the most effective means to maintain both sustainability and adequacy of a pension system. An automatic - or parametric - rule tends to adjust the retirement age in a less erratic, more transparent and more equitable way across generations than discretionary or ad-hoc changes. Moreover, introducing automatic adjustment might come at lower political cost than discretionary pension reform. Since an automatic adjustment to life expectancy needs a broad political consensus to remain viable after a change in government, its implications must be carefully assessed and debated. Public support for an automatic rule may increase if voters perceive it to be fair.
Altogether seven OECD countries (Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Italy, Netherlands and Portugal) link the statutory retirement age to life expectancy, with somewhat different parameters. The link is fully automatic in those seven countries except in Denmark, where parliamentary approval is required to activate the adjustment. Denmark, Estonia, Greece and Italy link their statutory retirement age one-to-one to life expectancy, meaning that a one-year increase in life expectancy translates into a one-year increase in the statutory retirement age. This parameter is two-thirds in the other countries, which keeps the share of adult life that people can expect to spend in retirement roughly constant and might hence have a broader appeal. In the Netherlands 2019 Pension Agreement, social partners and the government agreed to apply a two-thirds automatic adjustment. Sweden is in the process of legislating an automatic two-thirds link.
Although the pension system is quite redistributive – as replacement rates differ considerably between high- and low-income earners – it leaves many old people behind (Figure 1.17). Old-age poverty has increased over the past few years, often due to incomplete or informal work careers when Lithuania transited to a market economy, resulting in low pensions (the 2018 OECD Economic Survey provides an overview of the pension system). The government has reacted resolutely to the poverty challenge over the past two years, largely in line with the previous OECD Economic Survey recommendations (OECD, 2020[6]). First, the government raised benefits for pensioners with incomplete work careers; second, it increased social assistance pensions for those with low pensions; and third it will increase benefits for all if old-age poverty exceeds 25% and/or the current net replacement rate falls below 50%. However, options for early retirement were also extended, which weigh on the sustainability of the pension system, reduce work incentives and do little to reduce poverty. The measures, implemented from 2022, are expected to reduce the old-age poverty rate by around 2 percentage points overall.
Overall, Lithuania’s long-term debt scenarios depend on the implementation of structural reform, including an automatic link between retirement age and life expectancy (Figure 1.18). In a baseline scenario with the primary balance kept at -0.5% of GDP, debt will remain roughly constant at around 50% of GDP. Ageing costs, however, will make debt unsustainable, with age-related spending rising by 3.5% points until 2060 (from 11.3% to 14.8% of GDP), against the 2.3%-point increase projected by the government. Implementing the structural reforms described in Box 1.3 would improve debt sustainability but still fail to stabilise debt in the long term. The fiscal recommendations would improve the budget balance. Reform progress in the financial and fiscal domain is shown in Table 1.3.
Spending quality has room to improve
Government spending accounts for around 43% of GDP, below the OECD average (Table 1.5). Spending increased considerably in recent years, not least because of pandemic-related support programmes, but also because of rising social benefits and public wage hikes in education and health. The Fiscal Council estimates that since 2015 public spending growth consistently exceeded growth of potential GDP, most often by a factor of two, and predicts spending obligations to continue to rise above GDP growth (Lithuanian National Audit Office, 2021[16]). Spending quality – i.e. the composition of spending across policy areas – is geared to foster more inclusive growth, with the share of spending on education slightly above the OECD average, spending on pensions and subsidies below, and social spending raising rapidly, especially on child and family benefits (OECD, 2020[6]).
Public investment has been stepped up after years of neglect, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020[6]). The government is increasing investment in digital and green infrastructure, health, social affairs, research and innovation, education, and public governance by around 1% points of GDP between 2021 and 2026, helped by the European Union’s “Next Generation” programme funds which cover around 80% of spending. These funds provide an opportunity to muster support around politically challenging structural reform, especially in education and health care where in the past rapidly rising public wages met with shy reform efforts (Figure 1.19). To improve productivity and the quality of the public finances in these sectors, the government should link investment to productivity-enhancing reforms such as the consolidation of the extensive school and hospital networks.
The tax base should be broadened
After several significant reforms to make taxation more efficient and equitable, the overall tax burden as well as progressivity of the tax system remain below the OECD average (Figure 1.20). Social security contributions remain high, discouraging work and encouraging informality, while income and property are taxed rather lightly. Consumption taxes are comparatively high. The VAT gap, i.e. the gap between actual and theoretical/maximum VAT collection, is declining but remains above the OECD average, reflecting both reduced VAT rates and informality.
The government’s plans to broaden the tax base go in the right direction. The government wants to reduce informality further by implementing 37 measures, especially digitalising the tax administration further, which is welcome. In addition, the government should again subject restaurants and accommodation to the standard VAT rate, which had been reduced during the pandemic to support this sector, as it has recovered. The government also has recently developed plans to broaden the base of the immovable property tax, currently considered a “luxury tax” yielding little revenue. To reduce the tax burden of low-income property owners, the government might consider introducing some progressivity into the system, either by introducing a progressive scale or by setting a property value threshold from which the tax kicks in. Finally, reducing social security contributions further and raising personal income taxes commensurately would help reduce the burden on labour and broaden the tax base.
Lithuania’s statutory business tax rate is 15%, below the OECD average of around 23%. Various tax incentives to foster investment and innovation reduce effective tax rates, although take-up is low (see thematic chapter). More generally, while tax incentives tend to have a positive effect on innovation, they likely favour incumbent firms at the expense of small innovative, credit-constrained start-ups (Box 1.4). Also, Lithuania’s policy mix is skewed: while tax incentives are generous, direct government support for innovation is tiny, with recent OECD research suggesting that a balanced policy of tax and direct support is more effective than reliance on tax incentives alone (Appelt et al., 2020[17]). Against this background, the government should thoroughly assess the effectiveness of tax incentives and consider increasing direct support for innovation, e.g. through grants or stronger collaboration with universities and schools, as in Germany, Switzerland or the Nordic countries.
Lithuania’s business (corporate income) tax framework provides several tax incentives to promote investment, research and development, and innovation. Incentives include enhanced deduction of R&D expenses; accelerated tax depreciation for R&D investment; a “patent box” regime; allowances for investment in “technological improvement”; free economic zones (“green channel”) where companies benefit from business tax relief for 10 years; and business tax holidays for up to 20 years for companies involved in large-scale investment projects. Small businesses are also supported through various business and personal income tax incentives encouraging entrepreneurship, such as reduced business tax rates or additional tax credits.
However, the take-up rate of the various R&D tax incentives is low. As a result, Lithuania actually spends only around 0.025% of GDP on R&D tax incentives, against more than 0.1% across the OECD. The various incentives seem to miss the trigger points of Lithuania’s catching-up economy involving many small, innovative start-ups. Credit-constrained innovative firms need funds as early as possible, but benefit from tax incentives only once intellectual property (IP)-related revenues materialise. Moreover, the patent box supports IP activities only if they lead to patents and copyrighted software, discouraging other forms of IP creation. Finally and unlike direct financial support, tax incentives do not address the key problem for innovative but risk-averse entrepreneurs, namely potential failure.
Source: Ministry of Finance.
Fostering decentralisation and local investment
Lithuania is one of the fiscally most centralised OECD countries, with local governments enjoying little tax and spending autonomy (Figure 1.21). The recurrent taxes on land and buildings are the only autonomous local taxes, yielding little revenue, although some limited autonomy is granted on the personal income tax. Municipalities rely on a fragmented system of intergovernmental grants that are conditional on narrowly defined investment purposes, thereby lowering spending effectiveness. Administrative capacity is considered weak. Coordination of investment projects between municipalities is poor, preventing economies of scale and scope. Stringent local fiscal rules limit municipalities’ capacity to borrow for investment purposes (OECD, 2020[18]). As a result, local investment largely relies on central government and EU funding, despite local budgets being in surplus in recent years.
The government has started to reform the intergovernmental fiscal framework. Reforms include the full assignment of the property tax to the municipalities, and a change in budgeting allowing municipalities to keep savings on transfers rather than having to return them to the central government. Moreover, the government plans a constitutional change allowing local governments more flexibility to borrow for implementing EU-co-funded projects. These reforms are welcome, but they could go further. For instance, providing some autonomy over income taxes; or overhauling the system of intergovernmental transfers could help municipalities to implement comprehensive and efficient investment projects (Box 1.5). More tax autonomy might have to be accompanied by effective equalisation as economic fortunes across local governments vary. The recently established regional development councils could play a larger role in governing supra-local investment projects.
Ireland and Finland provide some insights from opposite institutional angles - one centralised, the other decentralised - on how to promote local investment.
Ireland is even more centralised than Lithuania, yet has a strong tradition of integrated local investment funding. Comprehensive multi-annual planning and strong enforcement of policy priorities is one of the cornerstones of the Irish public investment-financing framework. In 2018, Ireland established a Rural and an Urban Regeneration and Development Fund, inspired by the EU structural funds’ competitive bidding process and matching requirements. Irish local governments are required to co-finance at least 25% of an investment project. Importantly, the funds are not bound by thematic or sectoral conditionality and hence allow for targeted and tailor-made local investment.
Finland is highly decentralised, with local government tax autonomy well above the OECD average. Finland’s municipalities also enjoy large discretion to borrow and spend, within a set of tightly enforced national fiscal rules. Incentives for productive local investment are high since returns accrue to the municipality in the form of higher personal or corporate income tax revenues. Cooperation between municipalities is extensive since joint projects offer mutual gains in the form of scale and scope economies. Borrowing costs are low as municipalities have strong incentives to remain solvent. Two municipally-owned financing and guarantee funds provide additional oversight on the sustainability of municipal finances.
Both Ireland’s integrated funding model and Finland’s high tax autonomy model may provide inspiration for Lithuania on its way towards a more effective intergovernmental fiscal framework.
Source: (OECD, 2020[18]).
The business climate is friendly, with regulation stringency mostly below the OECD average, supporting domestic business and helping to attract foreign firms (Figure 1.22). In particular, market entry is highly facilitated, and the regulatory and administrative environment for small and innovative start-ups is favourable. Recent reforms, including a change to the Constitution, also eased restrictions to non-residents in areas such as legal services and land acquisition, although some barriers in these areas remain. Based on a “one-in, one-out” regulation principle, the government continues to aim at reducing compliance cost, facilitating the licencing procedure for businesses in sectors such as health care and reducing the number of areas where licencing is required at all. The only area with a less-than-average quality regulatory environment is that of state-owned enterprises. Reforms could help raise GDP per capita by up to 5% (Box 1.6). Reform progress is shown in Table 1.7.
Selected reforms proposed in the Survey are quantified in the table below, using simple and illustrative policy changes and based on cross-country regression analysis. Other reforms, including in the areas of education or environmental policy, are not quantifiable under available information or given the complexity of the policy design. Most estimates rely on empirical relationships between past structural reforms and productivity, employment and investment, assuming swift and full implementation, and they do not reflect particular institutional settings in Lithuania. Hence, the estimates are merely illustrative, and results should be taken with caution.
Making public enterprises more productive
Public, or state-owned enterprises (SOE) are active in many areas, and the quality of their governance needs to improve further (Figure 1.22). Lithuanian SOEs are concentrated in the network industries such as energy and transport but are also active in agriculture, forestry and financial services. Around half of SOEs only (18 out of 33) reach the financial targets set by the supervising authorities, similar to earlier years, although the pandemic might be partly responsible for weaker results (Governance coordination centre, 2021[21]). Municipal SOEs in particular lack a transparent regulatory and governance framework, potentially distorting competition with private providers and exerting a burden on local economies (Lithuanian National Audit Office, 2021[22]). OECD-wide, the strength of SOE governance is positively associated with corporate efficiency (Égert and Wanner, 2016[23]).
Over the past few years, the government has substantially strengthened the public ownership strategy, reformed the SOE governance framework, and reduced the number of SOEs by two-thirds, which is welcome. At the end of 2021, it specified plans to convert all SOEs, including Vilnius airport, inland waterways and Klaipeda port into (state-owned) limited or public companies, thereby abandoning special legislation for these entities by 2024. The number of SOEs is planned to be reduced further, either by privatisation or mergers. The government should also turn its attention to the municipal sector, particularly in view of the planned strengthening of municipal fiscal capacity (see above). All public undertakings should be bound by the same legal, financial and regulatory framework as private firms.
Transport regulation should improve further
The regulation of transport – by far Lithuania’s largest service export - has improved, partly by addressing long-standing issues of a blatantly anti-competitive stance in the railway sector. The government has eased access for private operators on the rail network over the past two years, especially by reforming the “priority rule” which had unduly favoured the incumbent public railway company. Following the infrastructure management reform, one private company started to offer both freight and passenger transport services besides the state-owned operator. Even so, in May 2022 the competition authority raised concerns about the working of the new priority rules and urged the Ministry of Transport to grant more equal access to the rail infrastructure. The competition authority also found that the concession rules for bus companies providing regular passenger services restrict competition and impede the entry of new market participants. Given the inherent risk of anti-competitive behaviour in the network industries, the government should continue to reduce barriers to entry in the transport sector to raise productivity.
Trust, corruption and quality of institutions
Surveys and polls suggest that the share of Lithuanian citizens trusting their government is below the OECD average (Figure 1.23, Panel A). In the same vein, both the responsiveness of political institutions to citizens’ demands and satisfaction with the political process is considered poor, although they remain above the Central and Eastern European average (OECD, 2021[24]). Institutional quality is below the OECD average, especially with respect to political organisation, transparency and social capital (Panel B). Lower institutional quality is associated with less trust (Prats and Meunier, 2021[25]). Low trust may reduce the effectiveness of economic policy making when success of policy reform depends on citizens’ compliance, buy-in and participation. Improving communication with citizens, curbing rampant legal inflation, improving the design of laws and regulations, and fostering an evidence-based decision-making culture across government agencies could help improve institutional quality and citizens’ trust in government (OECD, 2021[26]). The government has made a better policy-making process one of its priorities.
Lower trust and institutional quality tend to be associated with higher levels of corruption. Indicators of control and perceived risks of corruption suggest that Lithuania performs below the OECD average, although the gap has ostensibly been narrowing over the past 15 years (Figure 1.24). According to the authorities, personal experiences of corrupt practices – such as bribes in the health care sector or in public procurement – have become rarer, and no case of foreign bribery has been recorded since 2020. The government continues to implement measures to improve integrity. Since January 2022 amended legislation is promoting an anti-corruption environment; embracing measures to prevent corruption; raising anti-corruption awareness; and ensuring the reliability of staff. Moreover, in February 2022, an updated version of the whistle-blower protection law entered into force, establishing higher standards of protection in both the public and private sectors.
High-quality education can help raise human capital and productivity in the long term (Egert, de la Maisonneuve and Turner, 2022[20]). In Lithuania, education outcomes and skills are comparatively poor, and skills mismatch is considerable, although it declined over the past few years (Figure 1.25. Government spending on education is below the OECD average and skewed towards maintaining an extensive infrastructure that often fails to reach critical mass. Education is focused on the general rather than the vocational track, resulting in labour market imbalances as many graduates are not well matched to their jobs (OECD, 2021[27]).
PISA outcomes are improving but remain below the OECD average
The quality of compulsory education as measured by PISA hovers below OECD averages and varies a lot across regions and schools (Figure 1.24). Reasons for weak performance include an excessive network of too many small schools; low teacher competencies with almost no remuneration for experience and excellence; and an inadequate curriculum (OECD, 2021A, 2021B). Recent OECD research suggests that PISA results are strongly associated with adult skills and productivity: persistently higher PISA scores close to the OECD average would be associated with a 3% to 7% increase in the level of multi-factor productivity, although this would take many years to materialise (Egert, de la Maisonneuve and Turner, 2022[20]).
The government has started a primary and lower secondary education reform in 2021, by developing a new teacher competency framework with better career opportunities, increasing wages for head teachers, adapting the curriculum towards more clearly defined basic skills and increasing minimum school and class size. These reforms are welcome and in line with recommendations in earlier OECD Economic Surveys. The government should continue reforming the school network as school size is an important factor determining the quality of education and interaction of children with peers (see also thematic chapter).
Bringing vocational education and training closer to the labour market
The significance of vocational education and training (VET) is among the lowest in the OECD (Figure 1.27). The reputation of VET is poor, even though many students go back to vocational training after graduating in the general track. The low VET share could be one responsible for the lack of trained professionals in certain areas and relatively high skills mismatch. The government has started to make the vocational path more attractive, however. Study programmes have been decentralised to the school boards composed mainly of businesses, and re-engineered to become more modular and reactive to labour market needs. Student career guidance after compulsory education has been strengthened. These initiatives are welcome. The government should continue to strengthen VET to develop, attract and retain skills, reduce youth unemployment and increase productivity, in particular by broadening pathways towards tertiary education, as is done in France, Germany and Switzerland.
Work-based learning – apprenticeships or “dual system” – is almost non-existent in Lithuania. The number of apprenticeships is only a few hundred overall and has even declined since 2017 when they became formalised in the labour code. Employers resist the dual system because they prefer students who graduated from the (cost-free) VET schools, and because they fear that trained talents would leave after completing work-based education. Collaboration between schools and employers is weak (OECD, 2021[27]) To increase employer interest in apprenticeships, the government has recently stepped-up financial support for firms that hire apprentices, by offering 70% instead of 40% of an apprentice’s wage in selected cases. Firm-based professionals’ (or master’s) teaching costs are also partly taken over. Given the importance of work-based learning for skills and employment, the government could do more to increase labour market relevance of firm-based learning, by making the apprenticeship system more beneficial to both employers and prospective apprentices (Box 1.7).
Like in most central and eastern European countries, the limited role of work-based vocational education and training in Lithuania is partly the legacy of socialist times when most vocational training schools were attached to large industrial conglomerates. The demise of the industrial fabric and the transition to a market economy severed the links between schools and firms, with the work-based element largely disappearing. Re-connecting vocational schools and new firms for workplace-based training proved difficult, and cooperation between the education system and employers remains weak. The region’s many small firms often find that the cost of investing in and training apprentices outweigh the benefits.
Several Central and Eastern European countries have reformed work-based training over the past few years to make it more attractive. Hungary in 2021 introduced two separate VET tracks with two different qualification levels, to find a better balance between general and vocational skills. The share of VET graduates with work experience is higher than in any other Central or Eastern European country (OECD, 2021[28]). Latvia in 2015 introduced a work-based learning programme where at least 25% of the time is spent in a company, and financially supports firms that hire apprentices (OECD, 2019[29]). The Slovak Republic in 2016 introduced a “dual” VET model to increase work-based learning, with firms receiving some tax incentives for offering apprenticeships (OECD, 2020[30]).
Work-based learning only works if both employers and students can gain from it. Rather than offering subsidies or other financial incentives that could generate deadweight losses, it is more effective to adjust the parameters of apprenticeships, i.e. the length of the programme, time spent with the company versus at school, or else apprentice wages (Mühlemann and Wolter, 2019[31]). Another way forward to boost the attractiveness of work-based leaning is to extend apprenticeships beyond the technical and craft sector towards service sectors such as health care or tourism. Finally, the government could encourage international firms, especially from countries with an established dual system, to offer more work-based learning opportunities, and encourage the formalisation of firm-internal training.
Source: as cited.
Universities need more excellence
Academic excellence and labour market relevance of Lithuanian universities is below comparable countries (Figure 1.28, Panel A). The widely above-average wage premium for tertiary education and a high percentage of unfilled study places in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics suggest some rationing, a mismatch between the supply of higher education programmes and actual labour market demands, or a lack of awareness on the part of students (Panel B, see also thematic chapter). With around 40 separate institutions, the network of tertiary education is scattered, featuring much overlap and duplication across campuses and lacking critical mass to reach excellence. Finally, students from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds find it more difficult to enter university, partly because of the restrictive allocation of state-funded places.
Funding and governance reforms could help increase labour market relevance of tertiary education. First, linking a part of public funding to labour market performance could encourage universities to better adapt the curriculum to demand. Countries such as Denmark, Estonia, Finland or Poland link between 3% and 7.5% of tertiary education funding to graduates’ labour market performance (OECD, 2021). The government plans to allocate around 20% of funding according to performance targets agreed with higher education institutions, which is welcome. Additional funding could also help improve access for students coming from weak socio-economic backgrounds. Second, further consolidating the network of universities and colleges could help reach critical mass and avoid overlap, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020).
Attracting more foreign students could help increase the quality of tertiary education and reduce skills mismatch in the Lithuanian labour market. The share of foreign students in total enrolment remains low at around 6% against 11% in Estonia or 10% in Latvia, although access has become easier for non-EU students since 2019 (Figure 1.29). Including indicators reflecting number and quality of the international exchange of students could help Lithuanian universities become more international and outward-looking. Both Denmark and Norway include mobility indicators in their funding models. Also, expanding the number of courses held in a language other than Lithuanian could help universities to attract and retain foreign skills.
Lithuania’s social and regional cleavages are declining but remain high. Although many rapidly growing economies display inequality in opportunity and outcomes, well-designed policy can help reduce them without affecting growth prospects. The government considers income inequality, poverty and regional disparities as a priority issue, and it has strengthened various programmes to foster inclusiveness.
Poverty remains a challenge
Reducing poverty remains an important challenge for Lithuania, and the covid-19 pandemic may have exacerbated social vulnerability. The share of the population living below the poverty line has started to decline only recently, and the at-risk-of poverty rate remains the second highest among European OECD countries (Figure 1.30). Some indicators such as the labour income quintile ratio suggest that the social impact of the pandemic fell disproportionately on low-wage earners, thereby increasing inequality. Unemployed, single parents and low-educated are most likely to become victims of poverty, although old people are the largest social group concerned in absolute terms. Social spending is low by international standards, and the effectiveness of the tax-transfer system in reducing inequality and poverty remains weak, as shown in the thematic chapter of the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020[6]).
The government is addressing poverty in earnest, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020[6]). Social benefits, including child and family benefits and pensions, were considerably raised and partly indexed to income developments, and the share of social spending in GDP is rising. Services such as social housing and long-term care have also improved and are becoming better tailored to needs. The government should continue to link social support to needs, especially for the elderly, while further strengthening policies that help address the underlying reasons for persistent poverty such as high unemployment or low skills, through greater activation and better education.
Disparities are being addressed by strengthening regional institutions
Regional differences in GDP per capita, productivity, and employment exceed the OECD average despite the country’s small size. Remote and peripheral areas are ageing rapidly as the active population is migrating towards larger agglomerations. The exodus from these areas has accelerated in recent years, while the productivity difference between core and peripheral regions is trending down (Figure 1.31). Educational achievements and skills vary strongly across regions in a context of below-average education outcomes overall. The “digital divide” – as measured e.g. by fixed broadband connectivity across regions - is still wider than the OECD average albeit declining. Finally, regulatory barriers hinder the development of a flexible rental housing market in agglomerations.
The government is addressing regional disparities by strengthening regional institutions. In 2020, the government created so-called regional development councils to steer and coordinate strategic planning in the areas of regional development, transport, pre-school and vocational education and training, and potentially health care. In 2021 the government reinforced and clarified the role of the regional councils by stressing their inter-municipal character and the importance of coordinated investment, as recommended in the previous OECD Economic Survey (OECD, 2020[6]). The government considers empowering regional institutions as a key priority to foster inclusive regional development. Local and regional autonomy tends to be associated with lower regional disparities (Bartolini, Stossberg and Blöchliger, 2016[32]). Against this background, the government should continue devolving power to the regional level and ensure strategic planning is well-coordinated across policy areas.
Lithuania aims at reducing carbon emissions by 30% by 2030 from its 2005 level and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050, as set out in the national climate management agenda adopted in 2021. These ambitious targets will require strong and effective policy action. Carbon emissions per capita are below the OECD average but continue to rise. Transport contributes the largest share of total carbon emissions, while agriculture – mostly producing methane – is the sector most clearly above the OECD average (Figure 1.32). Both sectors provide growing export revenue for Lithuania and are sensitive to carbon pricing. Since large industry is subject to the European Union’s emission trading system (ETS), carbon is taxed above the OECD average, yet persisting fuel subsidies partly undermine effective carbon pricing. Environmental spending is low. Ambient air and water pollution is below the OECD average.
The government has taken steps towards decarbonisation, to reduce both emissions and increase energy security (Box 1.1). To meet emission targets, Lithuania is planning to update its National Energy and Climate Plan by 2023, in line with EU regulations. The EU plans to subject additional sectors such as transport and buildings to the European-wide ETS. Around a third of the EU Recovery and Resilience Funds, totalling around 0.8% of GDP per year to be disbursed over the coming years, will be invested in green transformation, in particular renovation and rehabilitation of multi-apartment buildings and the support of public and private solar and wind energy production and electricity storage. In 2020, the government introduced an emission-dependent car tax, and it plans to phase out fossil fuel subsidies and to introduce a CO2 component in excise duties on energy products in 2025, pending parliamentary approval. Against this background, the government should broaden carbon pricing, by either introducing a carbon tax or establishing a national permit system for sectors not covered by the European ETS. While Lithuania, being a small country, should focus on the adoption of innovative technologies, the government should also invest in targeted research and development, especially in the transport sector and in agriculture. Lithuania has mandated the OECD to develop a set of actionable policies to reach climate objectives in an effective and efficient way.
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