Poland has been the biggest beneficiary of EU membership among the eastern member states that have joined the bloc since 2004, a new report by Polish bank Pekao shows. Over that period, its economy has also grown the third fastest among all 27 countries in the union.
Poland’s real GDP – a measure of economic output adjusted for price changes – doubled between 2004 and 2022. That was more than any of the other Central and Eastern European countries that have joined the EU.
Among them, Romania recorded the second-strongest growth, of 80%. Meanwhile, Poland’s neighbours Slovakia, Lithuania and the Czech Republic saw growth of 78%, 74%, and 51%, respectively. Over the same period, the GDP of the EU as a whole rose by 27%.
In its report, Pekao notes that “across the EU, only small Malta and Ireland, with its preferential taxes for global corporations, experienced faster growth over this period”. Between 2004 and 2022, Malta’s GDP rose by almost 200% while Ireland’s grew by 185%.
“Many indicators demonstrate that Poland was the largest beneficiary of EU membership among all the countries in the region that joined the community in 2004 and later,” writes the bank.
Its report notes that, over the last two decades, Poland’s sectors of information and communication and business services for companies both saw a three-fold rise in added value, the EU’s fourth and third fastest rises respectively.
Meanwhile, Poland’s added value in the financial services sector grew by a factor of 2.9, the second-fastest growth in the EU, while the industrial manufacturing sector grew by 2.8, which was fastest rate in the EU.
“Excluding the aforementioned Ireland and the smallest EU economies (Luxembourg, Malta, and Cyprus), Poland ranked in the EU top three in terms of the scale of growth since 2004 in as many as eight large sectors of the economy,” the report reads.
The bank found that Poland has also advanced most strongly in the EU’s ranking of exporters.
“All countries in the [CEE] region gained from the accession as suppliers within regional supply chains, but it was Poland that was the biggest beneficiary of the European industry relocation process,” notes its reports.
Poland’s share of total EU state exports increased by 3.1 percentage points between 2004 and 2022, compared to a rise of 1.5 p.p. and of 0.8 p.p. recorded by its southern neighbours, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
But Pekao notes that although Poland has made huge strides over the past two decades, it is still lagging behind on issues such as research and development investment – even compared to other countries in the region – particularly in sectors such as automotive and pharmaceuticals.
In addition, in industries such as chemicals, pharmaceuticals and machinery, Poland’s share of EU exports is low, while its foreign trade balance is negative, “generally much more so than at the time of accession”.
Poland also remains one of the EU’s most energy-intensive and “dirty” economies. The share of zero-carbon technologies in electricity generation, although it has recorded solid growth in recent years, is still the lowest in the entire EU.
“The high cost of CO2 emission allowances means we are entering an era of expensive energy (more expensive than the EU average) and penalisation of Polish companies for their above-average emissivity,” wrote the bank. “Accelerating the energy transition is becoming our investment priority, affecting the competitiveness of companies.”