Abstract

ABSTRACT This article considers the growth performance of the Baltic states from the mid-1990s to 2021. Economic growth was rapid before the global financial crisis but slowed markedly after the crisis. Panel data estimations using seemingly unrelated regressions suggest that the dynamics of the current account balance are important for short and medium-term growth in the Baltic states but that there is a break signifying a change of short-term growth regime around the time of the global financial crisis. Before the crisis, rapid growth was supported by domestic demand that was made possible by large current account deficits. After the crisis, economic growth was supported by external demand reflected in improvements in current account balances. The shift in the short-term economic growth regime after the global financial crisis has brought lower rates of economic growth but also reduced financial vulnerability.

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