IMF Staff Country Reports

Slovenia: Recent Economic Developments

November 20, 1996

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Slovenia: Recent Economic Developments, (USA: International Monetary Fund, 1996) accessed November 27, 2024

Summary

This paper reviews economic developments in Slovenia during 1990–96. Slovenia experienced its first positive real GDP growth in 1993. Real GDP grew by 1.3 percent. This modest recovery began under the impetus of buoyant domestic demand, which grew by 8¼ percent; real foreign demand contracted by 6½ percent owing to a recession in Western markets. Despite the growth in real aggregate demand by more than 2 percent, the output response was dampened as domestic demand growth spilled primarily into a boom in consumer goods imports.

Subject: Banking, Exchange rates, Foreign exchange, Income, Inflation, Labor, National accounts, Prices, Wages

Keywords: Aggregate demand, Central and Eastern Europe, CR, Exchange rate, Exchange rates, Foreign exchange, Gross domestic product, Income, Inflation, Investment funds, ISCR, Rate of return, Wages

Publication Details

  • Pages:

    195

  • Volume:

    ---

  • DOI:

    ---

  • Issue:

    ---

  • Series:

    Country Report No. 1996/120

  • Stock No:

    1SVNEA0011996

  • ISBN:

    9781451835588

  • ISSN:

    1934-7685