REGIONAL CONFLICTS IN YUGOSLAV ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

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CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1
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May 1, 1970
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31 : CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 703 and 794, of the -US Code, as amended, Its transmission or revelation of. its contents to or re- ceipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. ("OUP I GduJ.d Iwm U.16M01Ie downprorrfng ,rnd JsdoiriRtortnn Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Directorate of Intelligence May 19 70 INTELLIGENCE MEMORANDUM Regional Conflicts In Yugoslav Economic Development Introduction With the question of presidential succession simmering in the background, the hottest political and economic issue in Yugoslavia today is "repub- lican nationalism." The Ninth Party Congress in March 1969 was filled with warnings: Mitja Ribicic, the President of the Federal Executive Council, warned that "Nationalism is growing on the soil of our socialist relations, ... becoming more aggres- sive," and Tito repeatedly complained that "eco- nomic problems are clad in nationalist garb ... there are certain elements that countenance autarchy and localism, ... such activity is in- creasing." Since the congress, a number of re- gional economic disputes have confirmed these warnings and have kept the issue of "nationalism" on the front pages. Most of these conflicts involve a clash of interest between the most advanced republics --. Slovenia and Croatia -- and the less developed regions -- Bosnia-Hercegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo, and Macedonia. They also reflect a basic conflict between the government's longstanding commitment to spur development in the backward areas and its newer commitment (since 1965) to increased economic decentralization. The development of backward areas requires strong federal intervention in the investment process, and decentralization requires just the opposite. Note: This memorandum was produced eoZeZy by CIA. It was prepared by the Office of Economic Research and was coordinated with the Office of Current In- telligence. CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL Regionalism in any form raises the question of future political stability, after Tito's unifying influence is no longer present. In the absence of strong. political unifiers -- such as an outside :threat to Yugoslav independence 'a large role would fall to regional economic interdependence to maintain stability. This memorandum examines the record of regional economic policy and eval- uates the obstacles posed by economic regionalism, now and in the future, to Yugoslav development. Have Versus Have-Not Regions 1. The typical Yugoslav tour director's mono- ,lggue is likely to begin with: "Yugoslavia con- ains six republics, in which live five (main) gtionalities, who speak four languages, have three ,:ferent religions, write in two alphabets, but 'have one desire -- independence."* Economically, Yugoslavia is equally diverse. In the south, the ..less developed regions of Bosnia-Hercegovina, Mace- -donia, and Kosovo bear the mark of economic neglect under Turkish rule, which lasted for most of the 15th through the 19th centuries. Agriculture remained primitive and mineral riches were left untouched; the only positive economic legacies were large trading centers, such as Sarajevo, in Bosnia-Hercegovina. Montenegro, although never con- quered by the Turks, was just as effectively cut off from the fruits of economic development. Of the lands under Turkish control, only Serbia, the first in the 19th century to free itself, was able to achieve significant development, aided by the return of more progressive Serbs who had fled north ,to escape the Ottoman invasion. 2. The northern regions -- Slovenia, Croatia, and Vojvodina --- fared better. Under Aus tro- Hungarian rule for the better part of ten centuries YugosZavia'ls six republics are Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia-ffereegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia, and Ser- bia. In addition, Serbia is divided into three regions, the two politically autonomous areas of Kosovo and Vojvodina, and the rest of Serbia, gen- eraZly known as Serbia Proper. For the locations of these eight regions, see the map. - 2 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL 2ngrab VOJVO% I) n? -Nov, O','M A : N I A 44 Ihvilir~ Yugoslavia International boundary Republic boundary Autonomous area boundary m National capital o Republic or autunomous area capital t MaJor ports Titogrado 1 - \ I(0S0 V0 ,1 BULGARIA' G EECE zz until world War I, the economies of these regions were at least exploited, leading to the develop- ment of transportation, coal mining, metallurgy, forestry, and textiles. Industry in Slovenia par- ticularly benefited because of its favorable loca- tion between the Austrian-controlled seaport of Trieste and the Austrian capital, Vienna. 3. The less developed regions continued to be neglected after Yugoslavia became a separate state in 1918. The new nation was dominated by Serbs -- under a Serbian monarchy -- which inflamed the historical conflict between the Roman Catholic Croats and the Orthodox Serbs. Thus preoccupied, the leadership made no concerted attempt during - 3 - CONFIDENTIAL MONTEryk GRO 1+ J Dubrov Ik? Priitlnao "IS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL the interwar period to modernize agriculture, develop mineral resources, or improve transporta- tion in the backward areas. As a result, the more advanced economies of Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia continued to outpace the rest of the country,. leaving an.even wider gulf in living standards than those. inherited from the years of foreign occupation. 4. The postwar Communist government, under Tito, gave top priority to the problem of region- alism. Tito stocked the government with solid delegations from all republics, and both the Roman and Orthodox churches were stripped of political power, thereby reducing some of the sources of former political conflict. Finally, Tito's re- gional economic policy from the outset was ded icated to narrowing the gap between the have and have-not republics. 5. This last task proved to be the most dif- ficult in the attempt to solidify the federation. Although it could be seen that Yugoslavia's regions complemented each other economically -- rich raw materials in the south, manufacturing in the north -- disunity had been deeply embedded by~ foreign rule, sharp ethnic contrasts, and even geographic barriers. These factors had discour- aged labor mobility and had stifled any signif- icant movement of capital from north to south. As a result, the gap between the incor;a levels of the have and have-not regions was indeed wide. In 1947 the national income per capita of the less developed regions was 65% of the level in the more developed areas, and the per capita national in- come of Kosovo -- the poorest region -- was only one-half the Yugoslav average and less than 30% of per capita income in Slovenia -- the richest re- public. 6. Boris Kidric, the chairman of the Federal Economic Council, set up an economic plan in 1947 to deal with these disparities, specifying average per capita growth rates of ll%-14% for the less developed regions and 6%-10% for the more advanced areas. To achieve these rates would eliminate the difference in per capita national income by about 1964. Kidric's plan posed a major political chal- lenge. Not only would more new factories be built in the less developed areas than in Slovenia and Croa;.ia, but Slovenia and Croatia would also have - 4 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL to foot a ,large share of the investment in other republics. The regime ran the risk of alienating the advanced republics,, and possibly stirring up jealousies' among the less developed republics which might not be satisfied with their respective shares of federal, support once their appetite for growth : had been activated. Nevertheless, Kidric's model was .put into effect in the first five-year plan in 1947. 7. The regime actively pursued the policy of rapid growth during the 1950s, pushing new capital intensive investment in the backward areas. The results, however, were just the opposite from Kidric's projection; the gap in per capita national income widened substantially. Moreover, the policy of extensive growth produced severe inflationary pressures and balance-of-payments difficulties. Thus, in the mid-1960s the regime abandoned the forced growth policy and'turned to a program which stressed monetary restraint and more efficient allocations of investment resources., Under this new policy, the'gap between north and south widened even further, as shown in the accompanying chart. Yugoslavia: Index of Growth of Per Capita National Income (in constant prices - 5 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL The Widening Gap, 8. Between 1947 and 1968,' the average per capita income of. the backward.regions'dropped from two-thirds 'to one-half the average in the more de- veloped areas. Only Montenegro was able to gain round 'on the average national income of the an y g more developed areas;. and none of the backward regions.was able to gain on the most advanced regions -- Slovenia and Croatia. Kosovo, in fact, fell from 30% to a mere 17% of the par capita national income of.Slovenia, The average annual rate of growth of per capita national income during 1948-68 was4.6%.for the less developed regions, compared with 5.7% for. the more developed areas, as shown below. Percent Average Annual Rate of Growth of Per Capita Percent of Yugoslav Average National income 1948-68 1947 1968 Less developed 4.6 72 62 Bosnia-Hercegovina 4.3 83 67 Montenegro 6.0 71 79 Macedonia 5.6 62 65 Kosovo 3.2 53 34 More developed 5.7 112 121 Slovenia 6.1 175 201 Croatia 6.2 107 127 Serbia Proper 5.5 96 98 Vojvodina 4.8 109 97 9. The lag of the less developed areas also shows up in a slower growth of personal income. Per capita personal incomes in the backward regions. grew by 8.6% a year in the 1950s, compared with 12.5% in the more developed areas, and the lag continued, in the 1960s, as shown in the tabulation below. 6 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL Less developed Bosnia-Hercegovina Montenegro Macedonia Kosovo More developed Slovenia Croatia Serbia Proper Vojvodina Average of Growth Personal Annual Rate of Per Capita Income 1953-60 1961-69 8.6 6.4 10.4 5.5 13.1 7.8 6.2 8.8 8.5 7.5 12.5 13.9 7.3 12.2 8.6 11.9 10.0 12.3 5.9. Only Montenegro in the 1950s and Macedonia in the 1960s were able to achieve a .faster increase than the average for the more developed areas.. Similarly, there appears to have been little if any relative improvement in the standard of living of the, less developed regions. The average living area of housing per capita in 1968 was less than two-thirds of that in more developed regions; it was the.same share in 1950, According to rural . surveys, per capita consumption of meat in less developed regions was roughly two-fifths of that in more developed areas in 1958; it is now roughly one-third. 10. Per capita differences have been compounded by the much higher rate of population increase in the backward regions than in the more advanced areas. Population in the poorer regions has increased at an average annual rate of 1.9% since World War II, com- pared with only 0'.9%.in the richer areas, as shown in the accompanying tabulation. The rate of popu- lation increase has not declined in most of the poorer areas as it has in the richer republics. Kosovo, in fact, has experienced a sharp rise in population growth, mainly because of the influx of immigrants from Albania during the 1960s. - 7 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31 : CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL Population (Thousand Persons) -1968 Less developed Bosnia-Hercegovina 2,564 3,799 Montenegro 377 535 Macedonia 1,153 1,574 Kosovo 733 1,183 More developed 11, 015 13,063 Slovenia 1,440 1,691 Croatia 3,780 4,364 Serbia Proper 4,154 5,079 Vojvodina ' 1,641 1,929 Average Annual Rate of Growth (Percent) 1949-68 1949-60' 1.961-68 2.0 .1.8 1.6 2.4 0.9. 0.8 0.8. 0.8, 0.7 0.7 '0.6 1.0 1.2 0.7 0.8 0.9 0.6 11. Migration has not been sufficient to ease the problem of population pressure in the backward areas _ '` There has been considerable migration within regions to new centers of industrial activity, but this has aggravated the problems of cramped living particularly in the case of Montenegro, Macedonia, ll lt y ura and Kosovo, which are most separated, cu blics t c repu hes and physically, from the. ri Croatia"and Slovenia. 12. Most migration from south to north has been Serbia'Proper. This is not surprising; Croats, and t h etwee ar " population, and there is no language 11- MI rc has a1 Sn he border to - the poorer parts or Serbia Proper . Y~ -- tenegro have gone mainly to Serbia. Indeed, Mon of these migrants were Serbs,_ judging from the. many slow growth of the Serb population in. Macedonia and d 1 09Z 1, ' 'I rmo an Very few emigrants have gone to Slovenia. A rough indication of migration between-the census years of - 8 CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL 1953and 1961 is.provided by the following tabula- tion, which shows the increase,'in .the number of : persons who,lived'in the north but were born in the south. Slo- venia Serbia' Croatia, Proper Vojvo- diva Total Shure of population born in !the, . south, Percent 1953 0.5 2.3 2.9 8.4 3.2' 19.61.. 0.9 3.6 3.6 10.1 4.2 Increase during 1954-61' : in number of people born in Thousand Persons Bosnia-Hercegovina 4.8 '54.9 19.7 38.3 117.7 Montenegro Negi. .1.5 5.1 0.8 5.8 Macedonia 0.6 2.8 5 . 1 1.8 10."3 Kosovo 05 3.1 15.0 2.9 21.5 Total .south 5 9 62.3 44.9 42 ,.,2 155.3 Effects. of Forced Growth 13. For less developed"regions -- in contrast to ''the more advanced regions - investment.in.the postwar,period'usually equaled or ..exceeded;. contribution' to national income. Only.. inKosov0, which did not increase its share of,, investment sig- nificantly until the 1960s, can, any case be made for :economic neglect... On 'the : other hand, the out- lays actually required under Kidric's plan ',to nar- `row the income gap were We 11 beyond: Yugoslavia"s capability, unless income,. parity was to be achieved by stifling investment and. growth in the more.ad- vancedrepublics. The sectors 'of activity ;chosen ror'.development in the backward areas -- electric power, mining. an metallurgy were those with among the lowest. yields in growth,,of output per unit' of investment. Because such '.deveaop:nent'could not be :undertaken simultaneously in. all backward. areas, the government ;tried to ` alternate invest ments in these regions 14. Early in the postwar period', huge funds ,were poured into coal and ferrous metals in. Bosnia- Hercegovina. In 1952,' is ,:republic was absorbing 9 CONFIDENTIAL. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Co A roved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-R DP85T00875R0016000300 . 61-1 pY pp Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL nearly 30%,of all Yugoslav investment while gener- atirig.only about 14%, of Yugoslavia's national in- come By the mid-1950s, however, the investment boom in )3osiiia-Hercegovina was over, and its share of investment fell to. 12% at the end of the 1950s, as shown in Table 1. In the mid-1950s, it was Montenegro ':s. turn for a steel mill. This project, .together. with:increased spending in electric power and nonferrous metallurgy, boosted Montenegro's ,share of investment to 5% in 1956, compared with ,only a l%` share. of Yugoslav national income. The same pattern was repeated for Macedonia in the first half of the 1960s . A new steel mill' at Titov Veles, coupled with reconstruction funds to compen- satefor the disastrous earthquake that leveled Skopje in 1963, raised investment from 6% of Yugo- slav investment in 1959 to nearly 13% in.lyb3-64, when Macedonia accounted for only about 5% of the 15, The inain benefit.of capital.-intensive de- velopment in,'the backward arias was a fairly large inbrease' in labor productivity, often exceeding that in the more developed areas. Except in Bosnia- Hercegovina, industrial output per employee, did, not begin to rise'in'theless developed areas until the last half of.the .'1950s -- in Kosovo; not-until the 1960s. Only in Kosovo was the early stagnation of ,productivity the result of lagging output. In- Montenegro,andMacedonia substantial increases in output in the' early 1950s were swamped 'by new em- ployment =- in Montenegro,. this. occurred in. coal, nonferrous metals, wood processing,` ...and, of,, all things',' refrigerator: production;, in Macedonia, in refractories,. ceramics, textiles, food processing, and `tobacco'..` Productivity did not increase greatly in 'these republics until after substantial. invest- ments' began to be made in electric power and ferrous. ncietallurgy. In Bosnia-Hercegovina,, increases in.. productivity', were the highest in Yugoslavia in the early '1950s; but were the lowest in the 1960s, _re- . `the shift in. priority to other backward, areas Productivity. 'growth in'. the more developed areas' has. been mar' more consistent, ." as ,shown in the accompanying tabulation. CONFIDENTIAL `, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31 CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 'CONFIDENTIAL Bosnia-Hercegovina Montenegro Macedonia Kosovo Slovenia Croatia Serbia 1 per Employee in Iria'ustrial Output. Average Annual increases 6.3 3 8 1.2 8'2 1.8 8 0 0 7.2 4.3 4.8 3.9 6.6'. 4.4 5.L 16. High rates of productivity, however, could not outweigh the high costs of investmvnt.in the less developed, areas. These costs begun to show up in the mid-1950s, when Bosnia-Hercgovina's initially high growth rates quickly. evaporated,,. falling even below Kosovo's in the.1960s. The same thing might have happened to Morntenegro.and Macedonia when It was time to invest heavily in Kosovo and rejuvenate Bosnia-Hercegovina's economy. Moreover, the stress on heavy industry-in the south resulted in considerable, ; duplication of northern facilities, particularly in ferrous metallurgy,,, where capacity often exceeded demand during the 1950s. Cn the other hand, minimal' investments were put into some industries having good growth potential, such as nonferrous metals in'Bosnia-` Hercegovina, and textiles, leather goods,and food processing in all of the backward.' areas. 17. Lectors other than industry, and transporta- tion were neglected. In fact, the largest part of,_,; the lag of the less developed areas was accounted for by the slow growth of agriculture and retail trade relative to the developed areas.. As shown in Table 2, the rate of growth of per capita na tional product in agriculture averaged'2.8%.ayear during 1953-67 in the less developed areas, com- pared with 4.5% in the advanced areas. The slow growth of agriculture was a major factor in the ersonal i ncnmes and retail trade in the ' a of g p have-not areas, the latter growing by only. 6.4%,,a,. ' 8% in the. more, developed areas,. year compared with 11 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31 CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Tablel Yugoslavians Regional Shares . ofInvestment and'- National -Income a Z based - on data in=current - pr-ices . Private _ in- a.. The- percentage shares-ate vestment is excluded. -Because inves-tment _-data were =not- available for Kosovo and Vojvodina for 1960 to 1964; 1959 :an-d--1965 are.: used: Because of rounding,- components may not add to the totals shown National'Income 1952 1956 1959` 1965 . 1968 1952 _ 1956 -1959 - :1965 1968_. Less develop e:~ 39. 27 24 31 29 22 22 21 21 20 #kiosnia- H -.-cegovina 29 14 12 13 12 '' ld_ =13 13 12 11 Mc-~teaegro 4 5 3 3 3 1 1 1 2 2 cedonia' 5 6 6 11 '.9 _5 6_ 5 5 5 _ oso:~o l 1 3 4 5 2 2 2 2- 2 More developed 61 73, 76 70 71 -78 78 79 78 80 Slovenia 11 13 12 14 13 18 16 16 15 16 Croatia 22 24 23: 23 21 26 27 27 26 27 Serbia Proper 25 28 28 24 28 25 25 25 25 27-- Vojvodina 3 8 13 9. 9 9 --10 11 12 -10 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL Yugoslavia: Average Annual Rate of Growth of Per Capita National Product, by Sector 1 1953-67 Percent Industry Agriculture and Forestry Trans- port Trade and Catering Less developed 9.5 2.8 7.8 6.4 Bosnia-Hercegovina 8.7 1.8 6.7 6.4 Montenegro 16.1 2.9 15.4 5.0 Macedonia 11.6 4.6 8.3 7.2 Kosovo 6.1 3.5 6.2 6.1 More developed 9.7 4.5 8.1 8.0 Slovenia 8.5 2.6 9.5 9.2 Croatia 9.4 4.2 7.8 8.2 Serbia Proper,,,, 10.9 4.5 7.4 7.0 Vojvodina 11.1 6.2 10.2 8.9 Yugoslavia total 9.5 4.0 7.9 7.6 a. The percentage rates of growth are based on constant 1960 prices. ?18. Similar misallocations of resources had occurred throughout the economy, contributing to chronic inflation and to an excessive need for im- ports to feed the industrialization drive. More- over, the creation of less competitive industries -- particularly in the south -- was tending to make Yugoslavia overly dependent on the less demanding export markets of the Communist countries. Trade with these countries had been cut off in 1949, when Yugoslavia was ousted from the Cominforx, and did not resume until the mid-1950s. By 1965, however, the countries of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CEMA) accounted for over 40% of Yugo- slav exports. This was dangerously close to the 50% share taken by these countries in 1948, and too high for a country that was trying to achieve an independent position between East and West. 19. If the regime had been willing to continue to incur these costs, it is pcasible that the gap .,in per capita national income eventually would CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL have been narrowed. During the brief period of 1962-64, under conditions of rapid inflatiotn, the south seamed to be gaining on the north. In 1964, per capita national income in the pourer regions increased by l4., compared with 10.9% for the north. Even it this sizable advantage had been muintaineci, however, the gap between north and south would not have been cloned for nearly 20 years. feform and t ecennion, 1965-67 20. inflation and trade difficulties finally forced the leadership to give up ita obsession with rapid growth and concentrate inatend on improving the structure and quality of output. beginning in 1964, the government put tight controls on invent- ment and consumer credit. The next atepe, which came in 1965-67, were to revamp the price struc- ture, cutting unwarranted profits in inefficient manufacturing enterprises, and to liberalise im- ports of many raw materials, metal products, and consumer goods, admitting foreign eo'petition an a larger scale. The itr-mediate result of these measures wan a aharp drop in the rate of growth of industrial output, which finally fell to zero in 1967. 21. The poorer regions had suffered tno t during the slowdowns of 1955-5G, 1957-50, and 1961-0. The recession in 1965-0-71 was fl? cuxeep IUf. As r-hOwr, in the tabulation below, the tight monetary policy had its grenteet effect oil 1fivcie 77 nt, c6na_ gr and real personal inc a in the less de*.veloped areas. The hardest hit were thoania-tfiercertovina and Monte- negro, which at the pit of the recession in 197, experienced deelinea !n industrial output of 4 and 3%, respectively. industry fared better in Mace- donia and Eoaovo, 5o that on balance, the growth of industry during 1965-67 was about the sate in the less developed an in the more developed areas. s i.1 fi ly .too-w tA_a ?.-t! .... aL ofkites drop in QL WII14I! only vd V%r"A*.v rrv~r output. Industrial employr-nt grew faster in the loss developed regions, but still at a glow enough pace relative to population growth to produce a sharp .increase in unemployment. Unewploy? ent in 1968 wan about 8% in F.toania-Hercegovina and Monte- negro and about 20% in Kosovo and Macedonia. Un- employment in the north -- particularly in Slovenia and Croatia -- won eaacd somewhat by a r i9ration of -orkers to %'eatern Europe. Only about one-fourth - 14 - CONFID EN" I Al Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 (X)N11 t)E TIAL Of the 3G0,000 ?uyoslaVg It WeeLern fsurope in 19610 Came fro, the- $outih, ahtl nearly all of these Were from hoshiauferc egoVitia. AVerarle Annual bates of 0'roatti 116S.i7 Legs t,9ore ~p~e~i3j*i?rl t)~?t3elr~ire Industrial output 13 3.9 Industrial erp1cyr:-eht 1.9 0.5 In'.,ecUAeht (current Prices) 6.7 11.1 Real personal itiec a 3. 6.) Congui- r credit -13.0 -11.6 22. The structures or industrial output in t3ognia~t#etee o= iha and tehtshejro "were file tot Vulnerable to the tt e' eeohe iL- Policy. The tots r, $z affe s ?i by the reel#ssion -- coal and ferroiag r,e 2.$s; t`teta$;c r~:ih~a; '+ ~.?~3Lr t it~fi, he 'tiles, leather qo?nds, and t aceo -- adgouhteci for 70% of indu-dtrial 4 tu.duetioh in i?oshia-Hergo"loWina and rOk ox that in MEohtensjru. The steel at-d #,etal- orcih~ i thi ttie icet'~s hart fitet b a the cut:ra k +. iti IItia~? t +en n-hd iata?r in 1? (,,7 by i?tp rt c?f-p3'd-ti tio- follavinnri the izp rt IH2Qstalio-atien. #" a d-a- iilt'fQ of sta'eaE o' tpTut, Ta'y' iii ita $_t.o:.ctaia~}# rc?esovitta and -9*, in r' #tte#.et t in lit--7, =ur tiger ve-rset.d vie t=t. gitiw(:ia 0iii ttoal pre-t t-sts" tti late f in ?osnia- $$txt, ' ei(h had already suffered fto the r it'tu ups f -i l ;4? a full. Textile and leath@r ry'a'tas Arai u etr? als=o Vgr'e of feete J by itieteagetl f r.crt i ;4rcir tc, ag ice U i a;^, 'b?bv a i l't?wlwvs' in "r? be'?[a it't`k. Output fell for t;;uch the ,5 to Pofi in atj alt ' h thego ; ~i F-'SaT:-~, ~. IC k ss c 7 Y v _ A ? 41x'"' "4.i of a iF s -p a~ 7'!i .d4 p r; ~ i n 1'61. In ltacedfanla, r erg tr s lain in4ugtrles ads up a $ar" e g3rat'??, output Uas aided by tie startup of t're'es capacities for eteel aid chts;+"?ical 1, and in og ro. overall in u.?t rial outpv_ %rag ?ne- fited by t1m, d -ifa to of tk~ t~.'~+ rto c :a -_ t inndu. tt'y f !Vro.t ! t 3?? tefo r ~.' cau !jam i t ** CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL export position. The latjginy itiduntties repretlentecl a much lower share (40%-50%) of output in the more developed regions, except in tlovenia, whose yen- erally more efficient enterprises were better able to Cope with the recessions crfeets of beeentraligatt.on 24. One of the most important features or the new econoowic policy was the gu;;stantial. decenttrali= sattion of inveett?rent. The 'gdktial investMent funds"' of the federal, republic, and local governments were abolished and transferred to a revitalised bankini system, more independent of political con- tirol. This step gave enterprises, which were now allowed to round banks, a much theater gay in the distribution of invegtmeht resources , 25. 1"ederal inveg?.r efit fell greatly in the more developed areas, but i t still remained a large share of the ihvest;r?ent in backward regions. In order to provide for the poorer rections == which would ob- vicialy fare badly without outside support -- a federal investr..ent fund was get up, financed by tax contributions arm the t'tiore advan,e4 tecti+ans and administered l.aroely through the Yugoslav In- Vestmont. Lank (forr?erly one of the three special tedetr6l banks but now ostensibly more Independent). in 1969, federal invest"tient et.i l l accounted for about 'O of itlvds `"-;ant in Scinia= to ~? f?3 + a, 40% si U_ c't- iv otici C, I.fV T ''T6.lVU e[jv L} r l 471 4 ,f __ pared with an average or only Z#, in theo#e de= ?e.s ~~,s .va ~4s_.., sre `-cry. a.a.in ~, vrtA L2.1L1i.!!. %~!ae.. 4ffW~$i+"~. A ent: by banks, thoug1I a 'itch lar(jer share or invegt;= pent than before the tefott's. accounted tor only j7t at the total in less c;adeloped ales:_, co pared with ~0 in the 'gre* t1 elol cd, as shin in the follaofny tabulati-an. - 16 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL Lean Developed More bevo1op- d 1963 1969 1903 1969 i"edetal government 33 20 17 2 Republic and governments local 30 9 31 6 Enterprises 22 19 is 32 tanks $3 37 9 54 other institutions 7 7 II 6 Twat 100 100 100 100 26. The rerortrma also tesulted in more decentrali- nation of authority to enterprises and banks to en- gage in foreign trade operations. Exporting enter- prises were alicy4ed to retain a larger share of foreign exchange earnings, although the bulk of foreign exchange (except in enterprises exporting most of their output) still went to the National bank. These measurea, combined with a devaluation of the dinar in 1965, were intended pri;rarily to prcte greater hard currency exports. In addition, large investj,Ants were now encouraged in tourism: free custot ports were emtahlished along the Adriatic, which perr?itted foreign enterprises to set u shop on Yugoalav soil: and, In 1967# a law was p saws allowing foreign investr-ent throughout the country, providing it was in partn'rehip with Yugrnla'v 27. Again, the more developed areas stood to gain the :tat. 'these regions account for over 10i of total Txigosiav exports and possibly even a larger share of hard currency exports. A larger share of exports ;.n the more advanced regions goes to 4eatern countries than is the case in tho poorer regions. Aithough "r`sacr-donia appears to be an exception, a ai 3ni f scant share of its grade with the nest has begin on clearing account with itia neighbor +Groece -- usually counted a:zong leap developed countries. A-# would be expected, CEHA and less developed countries account for a larger share of the exports in leas 'r a9 F Z .4%p C-2 e ?: C ft -,I- C it a b 7 s ~+i j 9'C ~ "!1 -' n-A4 n V4A.?;0,". to tieve_ .~h4 4ri# -dn r rt Cora of 4rP3eg - 17 CON 1: 1 t) N"I'I At, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL developed regicinn than in more developed republioa, an nhown in the following tabulation, for 1969. Shane of Share of t N r,to,by Hevublic Total Yugoa lav Or= Leers Cxport Countries / Ct134n Doyelopgrl tioania- tteroegovina 11 Hontonagro 2 Macedonia 4 Slovenia 19 Croatia Zit Serbia 36 41 41 59 69 52 57 r1. cau+7Lre of Ole Oradni#ation for aonomzo Coop- eraitvn dnd P eve tope nt l dh tnctudna Weo torn Europe, Turkey, 'roo-ve, Japan, tce tQ11d, and N)rO Aimeriaa. b. Isiotud',ii gc+oovo and Voavodi'u. 20. Moreover, neMrly grit of foreign tourists in 1961 went to the developed areas: Croatia alone, with its near monopoly on Adriatic reaor; a, in- cludin) dubrovnik, accounted for 5614 of the nwsiber. Alront all the free ports ouch as uplit and Rijeka are also in Croatia. rinally, moat of the trickle t A4;4"& t y1L ma 4-" G w.M. k..... t. L1: i- 1i n.: i. s. R I .t i+Y. .f rte: lsttb a at=~1^ t11~t fl tttCY1R tIm Irwin b;G .. alr t. raC!L6d thua far has been in partnership with ?ir+?na in the ....+ry.we. ti ? 1""" re^ s yX??s:.r a.. fr.. v ..Fi ? j f t t t+. tw/;C Vv. Yf~LVt.:C~ UL. ri:V~'s 'tYt YC.'. f'+C1~Vt Llt ka f~tt4iY~Tlt~ ii tr coaea about, will be a propobed 8:aiaer=tx; ergoinvegt joint investment in an al inue cc bine wear Hoatar in Ucaania-lercegovina. 29. An indicated earlier, the liberali. ation of imports of raw : ateria.la and metal and wooed protucto also generally . avare4 the amore developed areas, which not only could better withstand foreign corn- petition but ntiv c sulcl. it t# t wiabud. rely on alternative aourt:ea of the rawr and .ac ?ifinighed gooda produced in the purer regions. The govern- ? er.t did not go nearly oo far an the yore developed regions would have liked in liberating foreign ex- change controls, eo that lea developed regiona still were able to acquire gu.batantial oupplementii 10.. CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL to their own foreign exchange earnings. Nevdrthe- lean, the more developed areaa, aided by earnings from tourism and transport, obtain more of their imports from the West and lean from the Communist countries than do the lean develo ad areas. Monte- negro is the exception here, but its tirade in any case in extremely small -- lean than 2% of total Yugoslav turnover. The regional distribution of imports in 1969 in shown in the accompanying tabu- lation. lioanin- llercegovina Montenegro Macedonia Glovenia Croatia Serbia a/ #u 1 ti ple destination Share of imports Share of b Republic Total Yugoslav lmp_rt n_ OECD Cogntriati CEMA Latin t)eyeloped. 7 52 39 9 1 73 26 1 5 61 34 5 20 77 to 5 26 69 21 10 31 64 29 7 ai~js3vu . 2. including Av#vtfO d ?id b. lrlport ti 400 eta deed wt' Ch f log 102 norc, r UL"1i0. 30. Thuti, d1ocentralixation hen drawn an ever sharper line between the richer and the poorer re- gionn. The more developed areas, particularly I-lovenia and Croatia, would like less government control, while the poorer regions still need what they can get in the form of price and import pro- 4oreover, it in now far easier for the more de- veloped areas to quantify their role in the support given to the poorer regiona than it was in the 1950n, when the federal government financed a nit- able part of investment in all republics. The richer republics complain that much of the support given to backward areas has aeon wasted on inoffi- cient prestige projects. They have aomo grounds for quentioning the effectiveness of major projects - 19 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL and are increasingly disposed to auk much quentiong in the service of their own economic interoo,tg. On the other aide, the backward regions often grumble about the inadequacy of federal support. oania- ileroegovinta particularly fools alighted -- not one major new project had boon started there since 19G4. Recant Conflicts 31. Decentralization brought with it an atmos- phere of more open political and economic discussion. it has also eiponod up now regional conflicts, in which Slovenia and Croatia usually have been pitted against the federal government and the lean developed regions, In the moat publicized flaroup, the Slovene government in 1969 lambasted the federal government for unexpectedly reversing an earlier promise and cutting Slovenia out of funds earmarked for road conatruction under a proposed loan from the inter- national Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBi*D). The Slovene officials in turn were severely reprimanded for engaging in "republican nationalism." Aa it turned out, the Slovene roads had not been eliminated but rescheduled under another loan to be negotiated with the IBhb in 1970. Slovene offi- cials in due course made the proper public apologias for the outburst, and repeatedly denied the exietenco of significant separatist .sentiment within Slovenia, but they remain extremely sensitive to such issues. 32, Angthor ian>9n balm been nimmnr1ng in thn more advanced regions aince the reform of the for- aian oxchanoe nvntam in 1967, Tho Croats, in par- ticular, have complained that, although import lib- eralization has made it far easier for importing enterprioeo to obtain hard currency, the amount of foreign exchange that can be retained by oxportero in still too small to encourage them to sock now markets. In fact, a largo share of the available foreign exchange goon for hard currency imports of equipment for firma in loon developed rogiono, ueua.lly with liLtie hope of return in the form of hard currency exports. Am a result, while Croatia accounted for about 28% of all co. odity exportz (and 38% -- the largest sham -- of all foreign exchange earnings including tourism and other aer- vices), it accounted for only about 13% of invent- ment in machinery imports in 1967. 20 CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31 : CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 sified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL 33. Duplication of plants also results frpm re- gional self-interest. One example in the ambitious plan of local intoroets in Split, Croatia, to build a giant steel mill on the Adriatic, a plan that Tito has criticizcid strongly an costly and unnecessary. Apparently, work on blueprints for the project in continuing in spite of Tito's protest and in spite of the probability that it will be difficult to amass the necessary funds anyway. 34. Another instance of regional duplication in reflected in a dispute, under consideration by the federal government since late 1960, between petro- chemical and plastics combines in Croatia, Sor :pia, and Macedonia, which have formulated conflicting long-range plans for development. The Croatian firma -- OKI and INA (the large Croatian petroleum consortium), of Zagreb, and Jugovinil, of Split -- plan to build a large polyester fibers factory, which would be in direct competition with a similar plant proposed by the O11IS firm in Skopje. More- over, Jugovinil wants to quadruple its present production of polyvinyichlorido, in conflict with Serbian plans to build a now polyvinyl plant in Pancovo. 35. The list of recent conflicts scams endless. Croatia and Slovenia complain that the federal government's longstanding refusal to raise rail freight rates has put the railways in financial difficulty and has only served to subsidize mar- ginal enterprises, particularly in the lass de- veloped art-an. Also working against Croatia and Slovenia in a now federal law limiting the carrying capacity of private truce to five tons. Private truckers in these republica, with the sympathy of republican officials, have demonstrated against the law, and one public official -- the Mayor of Mari- bor, Slovenia -- han privately stated that the law in "stupid" and will not be strictly enforced in Slovenia and Croatia. i6. c:ueh conflicts and old ethnic rivalries, revived now and again, an in the "nationalist" dom- onetrationa of the large Albanian minority in Kosovo in 1968, have prompted Belgrade to launch a now attack on rogionaliam. Beginning in 1969, the leadership preasod for revisions in the structures of government, increasing the authority of the Chamber of Nationalities and bringing some of the 21 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 lassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL more influential republican leaders to Belgrade to so,rvo in the Federal Executive Council and in high- level,, economic councils. In addition, a now 15 member Communist Party Executive Bureau was created, ataffod by high-level representatives from all re- gions. The leadership hoped that many potentially explosive regional conflicts could be thrashed out before they surfaced and that key republican leaders, removed from the source of their political power, might develop more of a "Yugoslav" outlook. Indeed, it was Mitja Ribicic, the new head of the Federal Executive Council, and a Slovene, who took the lead in condemning his own republic's stand on the road controversy. 37. An important element in the government's now regional economic policy is the push to inte- grate enterprises, and especially across republican boundaries. But most intrarepublican mergers thus far have been among firms or banks in the more de- veloped areas. Two important mergers have occurred in Macedonia, where the FIAT-sponsored Crvena Zastava automobile factory of Serbia has estab- lished a component parts subsidiary and Rade Koncar of Croatia has absorbed both a refrigerator plant and an electrical equipment factory. Prospects 38. Tito -- and his successors -- will try 10 steer a middle course between the competing Bern nds of the north and south, in the attempt to,further tha national Yugoslav interest. The north will be favored by continued efforts to increase hard cur- rency exports, including the provision of added incentives to enterprises through gradual 3ecen tralization. The south will be favored by con- tinued large federal investments and continued efforts to promote mergers with the more estab- lished northern firms. Kosovo recently has been singled out for special federal attention, in- cluding help in obtrining credits to bail out firms in debt. Thdre will be setbacks to these policies in the short run. The Yugoslav economy,'' still is highly vulnerable to inflation and balance- of-payments crises, which periodically will force the government to step in with.def lationary controls on imports, prices, investment, and consumer spending. - 22 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL 39. As in the past, the rich probably will get,. richer in spite of federal support to the backward areas. Yugoslavia's backward regions are in much the same position relative to Slovenia and Croatia as these republics are in relation to Western Europe. The soik;h, in effect, is a microcosm of most less developed countries, having the same dim prospects of'catching up. The north will be favored to the extent to which the government maintains its cur- rent stress on decentralization and efficiency. Moreover, the south is particularly vulnerable to recession and stands to be hurt more than the north during periods of retrenchment brought on by infla- tion and balance-of-payments problems. 40. On the other hand, the incomes of the back- ward areas will not stagnate. Given the current emphasis on efficiency, investments even in the poorer areas will be allocated to more profitable uses -- agriculture, food processing, and nonferrous metals -- as well as to transportation and housing. A particularly bright spot is Montenegro, where large funds will be spent in developing tourism, supported by large expenditures in agriculture, all as part of the United Nations South Adriatic Project. Moreover, integration and business dealings in-gen- eral between more and less developed areas really seem 'to be on the rise. 41. Regional disputes are unavoidable. The north will continue to press for greater liberali- zation in the struggle to become more competitive. The south, as revealed in recent statements by leaders there, will try to use local resources to create new manufacturing industries, which will continue to encourage demands for federal price and import protection. The government that suc- ceeds Tito, struggling to gain acceptance, probably will have more difficulty in juggling regional con- flicts. Moreover, these conflicts are a natural target for any attempt by the USSR to increase its influence in Yugoslavia. - 23 - CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 CONFIDENTIAL 42. Yugoslavia has come 'a lon? way as a state and may have developed the, cohesiveness to withstand. ,regional disputes. As the President of the Chamber of Nationalities, Mika Spiljak, puts it, "less than 25 years ago Yugoslavs were killing each other. There are Serbs and Croats in public life today whose relatives were murdered by. each other. We can stand these inefficiencies of mixing together for 'a few years more." Conclusions 43. In two decades, Tito's.Communist regime has tried and failed to narrow the economic gap between the more developed northern part of Yugoslavia and the less developed south. Indeed, differences in output, and income per capita have increased, and .what is more, the economic objectives of the north and south have diverged. The north is pressing for more decentralization of federal economic control; the south still relies heavily on direct federal support and federal protective controls. Regional economic conflicts, together with the historical. rivalry among the several nationalities -- Serb- Croat rivalry is not dead .-- pose a challenge to the leadership unique for a country of Yugoslavia's size. With the question of succession becoming increasingly important, regionalism now has become the, most publicized issue in Yugoslavia. 44. The attempt made in the 1950s to narrow re- gional economic differences was just a beginning, and an expensive one, since most investment in the south was in capital-intensive sectors -- road- building, electric power, mining, and metallurgy. A continuation of the forced growth policies of the 1950s, with continued preferential treatment of the south, probably would have eventually reduced the gap, though very slowly, especially in view of the. cultural barriers to south-north migration. But thispolicy had to be given up in the mid-1960s because it had resulted in chronic inflation, severe deficits in the.hard currency balance of payments, andexcessive dependence on the export deflationary`; policy adopted in the mid-1960s tended to discourage. development in the south. The. less efficient, protected industries. of the south, such Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1 ahead on national policy objectives. The middle course between efficiency and equalization -- between decentralization and control -- will likely as stool, col.ild only lose from the steps taken to curtail now irivestmsnts and encourage hard currency exports, which largely come from the north. 45. Even though the current national policy continues to favor the north, the government will maintain its commitment to help the backward regions. This dual policy -- a political necessity'-- will mean slower progress in raising efficiency through- out the economy as a whole, and continued direct federal economic influence and control in the econ- omy. Although fed, a], investment in the south prob- ably will be put t6 better use, local resources are likely to go into new manufacturing industries which duplicate those in the north and create demands for federal price and import control. The south, in effect, will be an obstacle to northern demands for more decentralization particularly a reduction in federal foreign exchange controls which would prod enterprises to export. 46. Tito's unifying influence has so far been sufficient to dampen conflicts that could break up the federation. To provide for the. day when he is gone, Tito has set up-,.a strong Party Presidium made up of key republican leaders, hoping thaw: at least some regional disputes can be settled betore they inflame public opinion. Nevertheless, the leaders who follow Tito will have far more di:fitulty in satisfying competing regional demands while moving Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/31: CIA-RDP85T00875R001600030061-1