Raksts par V. Dombrovski portālā „European Voice”

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/7/2019 Raksts par V. Dombrovski portl European Voice

    1/2

    The young pretender

    By Gary Peach

    02.04.2009 / 05:00 CET

    The EU's youngest prime minister andLatvia's new blood.

    When Valdis Zatlers, Latvia's president, announced that he was asking Valdis

    Dombrovskis to form the country's next government, no one even knew the

    whereabouts of the former finance minister and MEP. The president made a terse

    announcement and disappeared into his medieval quarters in Riga Castle.

    At that point most journalists left the castle, but a few lingered, calling their editors

    with the day's headline news. Suddenly, Dombrovskis appeared and bestowed upon

    them the day's second headline: if the next government did not overhaul its budget

    immediately, Latvia would go bankrupt.

    The story of Latvia's economic collapse is well known. Gross domestic product(GDP) fell by 10.3% in the fourth quarter of last year and has yet to hit rock bottom.

    But it was Dombrovskis's candid appraisal of the country's predicament a stark

    departure in style from his predecessorIvars Godmanis that left everyone stunned.

    The ruling coalition apparently did not want to admit openly that the state is on the

    verge of bankruptcy, Dombrovskis said.

    Some criticised him for scaremongering. Lawyers admonished him on a technicality

    (countries don't go bankrupt, they go into default) but many lauded him for speaking

    the truth about Latvia's economy. As things turned out, Dombrovskis's style dire

    content, drab tone did not undermine his nomination. On 12 March the parliament

    approved Dombrovskis's centre-right government and the 37-year-old became the

    EU's youngest prime minister.

    It is a sign of how desperate the times are that Latvia's head of state turned to a

    younger generation for fresh faces and bold leadership. Dombrovskis might not

    represent change that Latvians can believe in, but he is a step in the right direction

    because the Latvian political elite is known for its shameless selfishness: my party

    first, my business second, my country third. Dombrovskis, who is returning to

    domestic politics after nearly five years as an MEP, provides a chance to clean the

    Augean stables.

    If anyone can do it, he can. In October 2004, not long after taking his seat in the

    European Parliament, Dombrovskis openly criticised Ingrida Udre, Latvia's candidate

    for European commissioner, for her incompetence. Udre was a last-minute selection

    by Indulis Emsis, Latvia's then prime minister, in what was a quintessential example

    of the ruling elite's skullduggery. Udre was unqualified for the job that European

    Commission President Jos Manuel Barroso had planned for her, tax and customs.

    Dombrovskis pointed out why and Barroso later struck Udre from the list.

    The challenges that Dombrovskis faces now are of an entirely different magnitude.

    The immediate task is to cut back state expenses so that Latvia can continue receiving

    funds from the 7.5 billion bail-out agreement signed in December with theInternational Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Union.

    http://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/country/Latviahttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/country/Latviahttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Valdis+Zatlershttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/industryterm/financehttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Ivars+Godmanishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Ivars+Godmanishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Ingrida+Udrehttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Indulis+Emsishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Indulis+Emsishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Jos%C3%A9+Manuel+Barrosohttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/organisation/International+Monetary+Fundhttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/organisation/European+Unionhttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/country/Latviahttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Valdis+Zatlershttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/industryterm/financehttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Ivars+Godmanishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Ingrida+Udrehttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Indulis+Emsishttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/person/Jos%C3%A9+Manuel+Barrosohttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/organisation/International+Monetary+Fundhttp://topics.europeanvoice.com/topic/organisation/European+Union
  • 8/7/2019 Raksts par V. Dombrovski portl European Voice

    2/2

    There will have to be painful cuts, some of which are draining the life out of public

    sector. As Dombrovskis explains, each time the government slashes wages for

    teachers, doctors and the police, social tensions increase. In January, riots broke out in

    Riga the first such violence since Latvia won independence in 1991. A stone-

    throwing mob nearly stormed the parliament building. Farmers protested in February,

    forcing the resignation of the agriculture minister. Teachers have promised a massdemonstration in early April. When will it end? Can the government stop the vicious

    circle? Here, too, Dombrovskis surprised people with his plain-speaking. The task is

    close to impossible, he said on 23 March. Few would disagree.

    Latvia can take some comfort from Dombrovskis's track-record in economics. He

    worked for four years in the central bank, cranking out analysis on macroeconomic

    indicators a job that would bore most people to death. The mathematically-minded

    Dombrovskis, however, was ideally suited.

    In 2002, when he was just 31, he was appointed Latvia's finance minister and was an

    unwavering fiscal conservative. After his tour of duty in Brussels, he knows his wayaround EU budget and tax policies. If he is to rescue Latvia, the technocratic

    Dombrovskis will have to draw on all this experience.

    The finance ministry has forecast that GDP will nosedive 12% this year and the prime

    minister has hinted that the fall could be even steeper. Some private-sector economists

    have not excluded a mind-blowing 15%-20%. For now, the key will be persuading the

    IMF to allow Latvia a larger-than-expected deficit.

    A physicist and economist by training, Dombrovskis is arguably the most private

    individual in Latvian politics. Even his own party members confess that they know

    little about him. They say he is meticulous and loves to engross himself in the

    minutiae of state finance. One colleague said that Dombrovskis could show up at a

    party equally prepared with a good joke and a poignant question on economic policy.

    Married with no children, when he is not crunching numbers he likes to play

    basketball and go skiing.

    In the two weeks after the president nominated him, Dombrovskis managed to cobble

    together a five-party centre-right coalition, albeit one largely similar to the previous

    two governments. The only new face is New Era the centre-right party that

    Dombrovskis helped create in 2002 which will not necessarily endear it to most

    Latvians. Still, the coalition controls 64 seats in the 100-member legislature. Inaddition, Godmanlis's Latvia's First/Latvia's Way party, which was excluded from the

    coalition, has promised its support.

    So Europe's youngest premier has some room for manoeuvre. He will need all of it if

    he is to accomplish the labours of Hercules that he inherited.