Interestingly, the EUR/PLN exchange rate was almost perfectly aligned with the PPP-based estimate between 2012 and mid-2020. Since then EUR/PLN and the PPP estimate have diverged and the zloty has weakened despite improving fundamentals. This begs the question: what has driven negative zloty sentiment over the past eighteen months?
One factor that has surely played against the zloty is the escalation of tensions between the Polish government and the EU Commission.2 In the summer of 2020, the EU Commission made the disbursement of funding under the Recovery and Resilience Plan and the multiannual EU budget conditional on respect for the rule of law. Furthermore, following the 2017 EU Commission initiative to activate Article 7 of the EU Treaty against Poland, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that Polish judicial reform of the past few years violates EU principles and ordered its suspension.3
Tensions continued as the Polish government refused to follow the ECJ's decision and in October 2021 the Polish Constitutional Court ruled that some EU laws are incompatible with the Polish constitution. In response, the ECJ imposed a fine of EUR1 million per day for Poland's refusal to enforce its rulings and review the reform of the judiciary system. On 19 January, the EU Commission announced that it will withhold funding for Poland until it pays the fines imposed by the ECJ.
The Commission's decision shows how strained the relationship between Poland and EU institutions has become. It also poses a risk to the Polish economy: according to Moody's estimates, without EU funding, GDP growth could be reduced by up to 0.5 percentage points per year between 2022 and 2025.
Furthermore, the Polish economy and financial assets, including the zloty exchange rate, will be under pressure if foreign capital flows remain weak, as in 2021. According to IMF data, last year foreign direct investment and portfolio inflows towards Poland were less than their historical 20th percentile.
Conclusions
Despite ongoing monetary policy tightening, the Polish zloty appears undervalued. The divergence from equilibrium estimates based on Purchasing Power Parity that emerged from mid-2020 coincided with the escalation of tensions with the EU Commission on the application of the rule of law. The Commission's recent decision to withhold EU funding will hurt the Polish economy and will likely dampen capital inflows, extending the weakness of the zloty despite otherwise sound macro-financial fundamentals. Only an improvement in relations with the EU would create the conditions for a rise in the zloty in line with underlying fundamentals.
1 Trade between Poland and the eurozone absorbs about 60% of the Poland total trade and in 2021 it was worth more than 65% of Poland GDP.
2 Another headwind for the zloty might have been the tensions related to Russia and Ukraine.
3 Article 7 is the toughest punishment procedure provided for in the EU treaty to hold accountable governments whose actions threaten the bloc’s rule of law, human rights, and democratic principles. It can lead to sanctions and the suspension of the voting rights of member states that do not comply with it.