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The macroeconomic challenges
The Belgian economic fundamentals are sound.
· Belgium recorded GDP growth averaging 1.6 %
over the period 2000-2010, compared to 1.4 % in the euro area. The
growth prospects for 2011 are also tending to exceed the average for
the euro area (2 % versus 1.7 %).
· In 2010, unemployment reached 8.4 % in
Belgium, a rate which was below the average for the euro area (10
%). In 2011, unemployment should decline further to 8.3%.
· In terms of external performance, Belgium
does fairly well in the European context. After declining more or
less to equilibrium in 2008, owing to the combined effects of the
strength of domestic demand and losses on the terms of trade due to
higher commodity prices, the balance of current transactions in
Belgium became positive again in 2009 and is forecast to remain so
in 2011. Regarding net external assets, Belgium has a net balance in
excess of 50 % of GDP, well above the European average.
· As regards private sector debt, no
imbalance is evident:
- the private savings ratio (in % of
disposable income) in Belgium stood at 17.2 % in 2010 ;
- in 2010, the household debt ratio in
Belgium was close to 54 % of GDP and the corporate debt ratio
was in the region of 43 % of GDP(1).
Despite these sound fundamentals, the Belgian government is aware of
certain weaknesses in the Belgian economy, particularly in relation to
the labour market, the costs of ageing (see chapter 7 on the
sustainability of public finances) and competitiveness.
In that context, the Belgian government is committed to making a
consistent response in the coming 12 months to the 4 priorities put
forward by the Heads of State and Government.
Moreover, the measures taken recently by the government already offer a
partial response to those priorities.
Boosting competitiveness and employment
On 11 February the government concluded an
agreement in principle on a set of measures concerning the labour market
in the biennial wage negotiations in the private sector. On 25 February
the detailed texts of that agreement were presented to the Council of
Ministers for a first reading. The draft law is currently before
Parliament pending approval.
· The government set a wage norm for the
private sector as a whole which limits real wage growth to 0.3 %
over the period 2011-2012. Moreover, the wage increase will not be
granted until 2012.
· Belgium has an employment protection system
which distinguishes between whitecollar and blue-collar workers. A
start has been made on eliminating the differences in the rules on
employment law between blue-collar and white-collar workers. Various
measures will be phased in during 2011: redundant blue-collar
workers will receive redundancy pay; white-collar workers can also
be temporarily laid off by their employer if there is no work. And
from 2012 the periods of notice to be given to blue-collar workers
will be extended, while those applicable to highly paid whitecollar
workers will be reduced. In addition, a limited tax exemption will
take effect in the case of remuneration and/or compensation in
connection with compulsory and/or voluntary redundancy from 1
January 2012. That exemption will be up to € 600 in 2012 and 2013
and up to €1200 in 2014(2).
· Workers being paid the minimum wage will
receive a net increase of € 120 per annum via a tax credit amounting
to a fixed percentage of the actual reduction in personal social
security contributions. In order to avoid “ tax spikes”, this
reduction will be gradually tapered off for workers receiving
slightly more than the minimum wage. The rule will apply from 1
April. This measure alleviates the benefit traps and thus
facilitates the return to the labour market.
· The Generation Pact will be assessed before
October 2011. At present, men who have worked for 37 years and women
who have worked for 33 years can retire on a prepension. If the
employment rate of the over 50s does not increase 1.5 times as fast
as in the EU, the law provides that the eligibility conditions for
retiring on a pre-pension will be tightened up and increased to 40
years. Conversely if the employment rate of the over 50s does
increase 1.5 times as fast as in the EU, the eligibility condition
will be increased to 38 years for men and 35 years for women from
2012, and 38 years from 2014.
· The system of temporary lay-offs for
white-collar workers has been made permanent. In addition, the
social partners have been asked to devise a mechanism whereby firms
which have made excessive use of this system have to carry the
responsibility.
Under the budget, an action plan was approved
which aims to encourage the voluntary return to work of disabled
persons:
· For those going back to work part time,
levies on their benefits will be adjusted to make it easier for them
to combine benefits and a return to work.
· The procedures for authorising a return to
work will be simplified by abolishing prior authorisation and
replacing it with retrospective authorisation.
· The financial incentive to encourage
disabled persons to attend training will be stepped up.
· The quality and consistency of the medical
assessment of incapacity for work will also be improved.
Competition & Energy Market
· In connection with the transposition of the
third Energy Directive, to be approved at the Council of Ministers
on 15 April, the functioning of the energy market will be improved.
Changes to the indexation formulas for gas and electricity suppliers
will be subject to ex-ante control by the CREG, while price changes
resulting from the formula for indexation, which will in future be
permitted only every three months, will be subject to ex-post
control. These measures should curb the volatility of energy prices.
· In order to cope with higher inflation, the
federal government decided, in the 2011 budget, to confer additional
powers on the Price Observatory to monitor the movement in prices of
certain products. In that connection, the competition authority may
ask the Price Observatory to conduct surveys and may use the
Observatory’s analyses for the purpose of its surveys on
infringements of competition law.
Ensuring the sustainability of public finances
See above (point 6).
Strengthening financial stability
In the context of the financial crisis which spread to all financial
centres and the global economy, the government wanted to reform
financial supervision while also providing for legal instruments to
reduce the global risk of the financial sector.
Reform of supervision
The legislature wanted to learn the lessons of the financial crisis and
develop the Belgian financial supervision structure in the same
direction as the reforms implemented in a number of European countries.
Thus, the legislature opted for the “Twin Peaks” supervision model.
Since 1 April the supervision architecture of the financial sector has
operated as follows:
· The National Bank of Belgium is responsible
for maintaining the macroeconomic and microeconomic stability of the
financial system. From now on, the NBB is therefore in charge of the
individual prudential supervision of the financial players. It thus
ensures that the financial institutions subject to its supervision
are financially sound, e.g. by setting solvency, liquidity and
profitability requirements for those institutions. Financial
undertakings which come under the prudential supervision of the NBB
will be approved by the NBB.
· The FSMA (Financial Services and Markets
Authority) – formerly the CBFA (Banking, Finance and Insurance
Commission) – continues to perform its traditional task of
safeguarding the smooth functioning, transparency and integrity of
the financial markets, and watching out for the illicit offering of
financial products and services. It will also check on compliance
with the code of conduct applicable to financial intermediaries in
order to ensure that customers receive honest, fair and professional
treatment.
The Committee for Systemic Risks and Systemic Financial Institutions,
which has been responsible for supervising “systemic” institutions since
the last quarter of 2010, is therefore giving way to a fundamental
reform of the financial supervision architecture in Belgium.
This model presents a number of advantages, notably the avoidance of
conflicts of interest between microprudential supervision and consumer
protection. More fundamentally, it means that micro- and
macro-prudential supervision can be brought together to combine all the
relevant information for determining systemic risks in a single
institution, the NBB. This institution is also the lender of last
resort.
The FSMA – the former CBFA – will be given new powers concerning
consumer protection and financial training.
Strengthening the financial regulation and reinforced legal
framework
Apart from these large-scale reforms the government has set up a new
legal framework – in accordance with the IMF’s recommendations -
enabling it to intervene in the event of a serious financial crisis
threatening financial stability. In future, that framework will enable
the government to effect the assignment, sale or contribution of
financial undertakings concerning assets, liabilities or various
branches of activity, or securities or shares issued by financial
institutions, whether or not in accordance with voting rights. Also,
when the State wants to make use of the powers to order the assignment
of assets or securities, it will have to refer the matter to the court
of first instance for the latter to verify both the legality of the act
of assignment and the fairness of the proposed payment. Moreover, there
is now provision for sanctions to apply in the event of the circulation
of information or rumours which could give false or misleading
impressions about the situation of a credit institution, insurance
company or clearing house, such as to damage its financial stability.
The government has also transposed the directive on remuneration
policies in the financial sector, intended to reduce the risks taken by
those institutions. In particular, the new regulations provide for the
creation of a remuneration committee in accordance with the European
requirements on the subject, and stipulate that the payment of the
variable element of remuneration must not exceed 30 % in the first year.
(1) Belgium is home to
many subsidiaries of multinationals, which even base their general financial
headquarters
there for the rest of Europe. That therefore generates large
flows of finance, capital and loans between Belgium
and the rest of the
world. To gain a proper understanding of the economic reality it is vital to
take that into account.
Thus, inter-company loans are a less important
factor for assessing a country’s macroeconomic stability. That is why
the
analysis mentioned above is based on the consolidated series of statistics
published by Eurostat. Since the
non-consolidated series is available for a
larger number of Member States it is often used for the purpose of
international comparisons. Analyses based on nonconsolidated data
overestimate the macroeconomic risk associated
with the gross debt ratio of
Belgian firms. In Belgium, the difference between the consolidated and
non-consolidated
data is in fact over 100 % of GDP, whereas the euro area
average is 16 %.
(2) 2011 index
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