July 5, 2024
Investment

Consumption drives Polish recovery; investment declines | snaps


The sources of GDP growth in 1Q24 did not surprise us, nor did they present a very optimistic picture of the economy. As expected, the recovery is primarily driven by a gradual rebound in consumption. Despite the higher propensity of households to save, the buoyant growth in real disposable income is translating into an increase in purchasing activity. Robust growth of labour income (double-digit growth in nominal wages and salaries) and proceeds from social benefits (high indexation of pensions and child benefits, among others) are supporting consumers. This is accompanied by a marked fall in inflation from very high levels last year. There was an impressive increase in public consumption (10.9% YoY) boosted, among other things, by an increase in public sector wages.

We note without satisfaction that our forecast of a decline in fixed investment in 1Q24 has indeed materialised. Investment developments were closely linked to the completion of projects financed by the 2014-20 EU financial perspective and the slow start of projects from the 2021-27 perspective. This factor strongly boosted public investment in 2023. Last year, public investment was as high as 5.0% of GDP (the highest since 2011), which is unlikely to happen again in 2024, especially given the delay of Poland’s Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRF). Last year’s investment boom (up by 13.1% in 2023 overall and 15.8% YoY in 4Q23) was about two-thirds driven by public investment. However, business investment (apart from a few large investments including state-owned) was weak, especially in the small and medium-sized business sectors. The 1Q24 data exposed this low business investment. We expect investment activity to improve in 2H24 and accelerate markedly in 2025.



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