Pro-inflationary GDP growth structure
Not only was the GDP growth rate high, but its structure was pro-inflationary. Private consumption remains the flywheel of the economy, which grew by 6.6% YoY on the back of rising household disposable income (double-digit wage growth, PIT cuts). Given increases in social spending (e.g. 14th pension) and further PIT cuts (first rate down from 17% to 12% from mid-2022), this factor will continue to support economic growth.
Investment performance was disappointing. The robust growth in accumulation (57.3% YoY!) was dominated by growth in investment in current assets (inventories), while fixed capital formation increased by only 4.3% YoY, after rising by 5.2% YoY in 4Q21. The change in inventories generated as much as 7.7 percentage points in the annual GDP growth rate. The role of this factor will fade in the coming quarters. Investment activity, on the other hand, will be weighed down by heightened uncertainty due to the war in Ukraine and signs of a marked slowdown in construction, which faces constraints on the demand side (rising interest rates) and on the supply side (strong material price increases, labour shortages).
Domestic demand grew by 13.2% YoY, while trade with foreign countries lowered the annual GDP growth rate by 3.8 percentage points. Exports grew by 2.0% YoY and imports by 8.8% YoY. The deterioration of the trade balance will be one of the factors limiting the GDP growth rate in the coming quarters.
It is worth noting that in nominal terms, GDP grew by as much as 16.3% YoY, which somewhat improves the fiscal picture. In particular, despite the VAT rate cuts, it allows for solid tax receipts and reduces the public debt to GDP ratio due to the strong denominator effect.
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