Chief Editor
  • Prof. Christina Nikolova, PhD
Editorial Board
  • Prof. Christina Nikolova, PhD - UNWE
  • Prof. Elka Todorova, DSc. - UNWE
  • Prof. Maya Lambovska, DSc. - UNWE
  • Assoc. Prof. Todor Nedev, PhD - UNWE
  • Assoc. Prof. Dorina Kabakchieva, PhD - UNWE
  • Assoc. Prof. Paskal Zhelev, PhD - UNWE
Scientific Secretary
  • Assoc. Prof. Aleksandar Valkov, PhD - UNWE
Coordinator
  • Assist. Prof. Veselina Lyubomirova, PhD - UNWE
International Editorial Board
  • Damian Stantchev, PhD
    Edinburgh NAPIER University, UK

  • Ivaylo Vassilev, PhD
    University of Southampton,UK

  • Prof. Irina Kuzmina-Merlino, PhD
    Transport and Telecommunication Institute, Riga

  • Milan Zdravkovic
    University of Niš, Serbia

  • Prof. Niculae Mihaita, PhD
    Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies, Romania

  • Prof. Ricardo Jardim-Gonçalves, PhD
    UNINOVA institute, New University of Lisbon, Portugal

  • Prof. Ing. Jaroslav Belás, PhD
    Tomas Bata University in Zlín, Czech Republic

  • Prof. John Rijsman, PhD
    Tilburg University

  • Prof. Ing. Zdenek Dvorák, PhD
    University of Zilina, Slovak Republic

  • Prof. Zoran Cekerevac, PhD
    “Union – Nikola Tesla” University in Belgrade, Serbia

Bulgarian GDP Expenditure Structure: Growth Impact and Convergence with Eurozone
YEARBOOK OF UNWE
year 2020
Issue 1

Bulgarian GDP Expenditure Structure: Growth Impact and Convergence with Eurozone

Abstract

The study represents an analysis of the Bulgarian GDP expenditure structure and its dynamics in the period 2000-2019. This structure is examined through two perspectives – its impact on economic growth in the short and long run, and its convergence with the one in the Eurozone. The relevance of structural convergence is interpreted in the context of its relation to the business cycle synchronization and the effectiveness of the future common monetary policy. The research methodology includes the assessment of the impact of GDP’s various components on the economic growth rate, the measurement of the rates of accumulation and consumption, and the evaluation of structural convergence through the indices of dissimilarity and divergence. Based on the empirical analysis, the conclusion is drawn that the high economic growth rate prior to 2009 was largely determined by the significant increase in investments, while during the following years there was a trend of growing decapitalization in the economy which had unfavorable implications for economic growth. At the same time the expenditure structure of the country’s GDP manifested an ever increasing convergence with the one in the Eurozone, which comes to show that the economy’s structural convergence appears to run counter to real convergence.

JEL: Е20, Е22, C43, F43, O11, O47

Keywords

Eurozone, economic growth, GDP, structural convergence, divergence index, expenditure structure, accumulation rate, consumption rate, business cycle synchronization, dissimilarity index
Download Yearbook_2020_No10_S Raleva_R.pdf
News

ISSN (print): 1312-5486
ISSN (online): 2534-8949