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The Eastern Block by Jim Rogers
Regular readers of this column should know by now that I like to invest in countries almost as if they were stocks. This can be done in a number of ways, of course, such as purchasing a currency, investing in a mutual fund that targets a specific nation, or acquiring bonds issued by a foreign government. Those are just a few examples. The larger point I've tried to make is that it actually can be easier (and more interesting) to forecast the direction of a nation than that of a corporation. If a country has the proper resources and is doing the right things economically and politically, investors can be reasonably sure that its fortunes will improve over time. It also helps that the quality of public discourse about nations (in the press and elsewhere) is generally superior to what's out there about individual companies.
It's not always superior, though. Recently, for instance, I've been hearing a lot of talk about Eastern Europe as a potential hot spot for American investors. Many people now appear convinced that the old Warsaw Pact countries, steeped as they are in the grand tradition of European civilization, will show rapid progress because they've repudiated Communism and embraced capitalism. On the surface at least--and from our vantage point across the Atlantic Ocean--this is a pretty compelling story, not to mention one that many Americans, given their ancestral heritage, would certainly love to believe. I don't believe it. For all of my enthusiasm about the spread of free markets around the globe, I'm pessimistic about Eastern Europe. As a potential spawning ground for emerging markets, I don't think it's in the class of Africa, South America, or even Asia. Investors will do far better putting their money to work in places like Uganda, Peru, or China. (Or, for that matter, Ireland. See "Greener Pastures," in Worth's September 1998 issue).
Let's look at the largest of the Eastern European countries, a nation of about 40 million people in an area the size of New Mexico. It's Poland. Poland also happens to be one of the healthiest countries in the region from an economic and political standpoint. On the plus side, its government has been a parliamentary democracy since 1989. The nation's literacy rate, at 99 percent, is one of the highest in the world. Following the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the Polish economy underwent a profound transformation as the government introduced a free-market system to replace a 40-year-old centrally planned Communist economy. This shock therapy unshackled prices and privatized most small enterprises, bringing an end to the chronic shortages of consumer goods. In 1996, Poland was admitted to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. It now hopes to join the European Union within the next two to four years.
On the minus side, the legacy of almost half of a century of indifferent Communist oversight has left Poland with a seriously decayed infrastructure (this nation, with the same population as California, has only one major highway). The industrial base is so outmoded that Polish businesses must import (at huge expense) almost everything they need, from chemicals to computers. Poland's biggest industries--mining, machine building, and steel--continue to create serious pollution problems that will cost a fortune to clean up (so much for Marx's assertion that capitalism would be the scourge of the environment).
On the political front, the Solidarity Election Action Party, a collection of small centrist/right-wing parties, received 34 percent of the vote in the national election last year. Many factions within this coalition want to stop, or even reverse, many of the market reforms that have taken place since 1990. While both major political parties are anti-Communist, the new ruling party wants to increase social spending and support for many of its working-class constituents, not a prelude to a robust future for capitalism in Poland. I also have to wonder if a government made up of at least 40 political parties will ever be able to govern effectively.
Others closer to the scene are asking similar questions. Of all the Europeans, the Germans should know Eastern Europe the best. After all, they paid a pretty pfennig for East Germany, where they've received a firsthand lesson in the difficulties that arise from investing in a former Communist state. I find it especially revealing, therefore, that German industry acquired a total of 13 businesses in Poland during the first half of 1997 but only one so far this year.
What this suggests is that there really isn't much of a viable business base on which the Eastern European nations can build. It's true that Hungary was once the breadbasket of Europe and that Czechoslovakia has long possessed tremendous skills in engineering and manufacturing. Yet for all their fabled history, culture, and bred-in-the-bone business sense, Eastern Europeans today simply have little to sell. For decades after World War II, their only market was the USSR, to which they sold goods under a sort of casual barter system, one with little accountability. As they pretended to manufacture goods for the USSR, which in turn pretended to pay for them, any competitive discipline they once had was lost.
While Western European, Japanese, and American businesses were slugging it out in a way never before seen in global competition, Eastern Europeans were shipping whatever they liked to the USSR. The sad consequence is that today Eastern Europe simply doesn't have much to offer that could pass muster on the world market. Even East Germany, with the massive help it has received from West Germany, is finding it hard to produce.
Russia--now in a horrendous financial crisis of its own--has also become a terrible drag on Eastern Europe. Interest rates on short-term Treasury bills in Russia have risen dramatically, sometimes more than 200 percent a year, and the stock market has plunged more than 90 percent from its peak last October. The ruble was recently devalued a de facto 34 percent, and a 90-day moratorium was declared on payment of debts owed to foreigners. If the ruble continues to slide, Ukraine, with its close economic ties to Russia, will have to follow, and these events will have a devastating effect on their Eastern European neighbors -- much like we saw earlier this year in Asia. I don't expect the Russian government to solve these overwhelming problems anytime soon--and I've recently shorted the ruble in my own portfolio.
Perhaps an even more intractable problem for Eastern Europe is its crazy quilt of wrongheaded national boundaries, which remain much as they were drawn under the Treaty of Versailles almost 80 years ago. From an ethnic point of view, the region today is about as disordered as human affairs can become. Some examples: Hungary's population is two-thirds Roman Catholic and a quarter Protestant. Bulgaria's population is nearly 10 percent Turkish and 13 percent Muslim. The Croatians are but 78 percent of Croatia, alongside a Serb population of 12 percent. Nearly 10 percent of the population of Slovakia is Hungarian. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia contains Serbia and Montenegro, and has a population that is 63 percent Serb, 14 percent Albanian, and 6 percent Montenegrin. While 65 percent of its population is Eastern Orthodox, Muslims constitute 19 percent, creating the conflict that hits our front pages.
After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the Eastern Europeans were eager for democracy. As a result of the spread of television, the Eastern Europeans saw American programs and assumed (I suppose somewhat reasonably) that democracy meant automatic prosperity. TV dramas, of course, don't picture the toil that lies behind the prosperity they depict.
Disappointed expectations are at the root of the strife exploding in this part of the world. Throughout history, the breakup of empires has reverberated for decades. Even today we see the ongoing repercussions from the dismantling of the British Empire--just look at the fight between India and Pakistan and the disputes over various African borders. It will be the same in Eastern Europe for many years to come. Expect these countries to remain treacherous and unsure.
Contributing editor Jim Rogers is an international investor and the author of Investment Biker (Adams). |