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http://www.reuters.com/article/homepageCrisis/idUSBYT832920._CH_.2400


Reuters
November 20, 2009


After billions in aid, Kosovo still poor and idle
By Fatos Bytyci



-"The country with the highest unemployment rate in Europe has a surplus? This 
is an economic phenomenon that does not happen anywhere in the world."
Many people give up the search for work and leave for the West, sometimes 
illegally.




DRENICA VALLEY, Kosovo: Nezir Jonuzi sips black tea, stares at Prime Minister 
Hashim Thaci's boyhood home and wonders whether he can get a job to feed his 
family.

Thaci came to power in 2007 promising jobs, less poverty, better roads, 24-hour 
power and water. But while Kosovo elected local officials on Sunday in its 
first vote since independence from Serbia in 2008, many are pessimistic about 
the future.

In the heartland of the ethnic Albanian rebellion against Serb rule 10 years 
ago, people like Jonuzi and his ethnic Albanian family are among the 15 percent 
of Kosovo's two million people living in extreme poverty, making less than 93 
cents a day, according to the World Bank.

"I know there will be nothing, no work during the winter," said Jonuzi, 42, who 
has done odd jobs at construction sites.

For decades the poorest part of socialist Yugoslavia, Kosovo is weighed down by 
the destruction of the 1998-99 war and a legacy of waste and corruption, 
illustrating the limitations of international help.

Over the past decade it has received 3 billion euros in aid, according to the 
World Bank, and is expecting another billion by 2011. Yet officials in Pristina 
say they may need more. 

The government has talked with the International Monetary Fund about a loan of 
$200 to $300 million and hopes to conclude a deal this month, according to the 
central bank governor.

In Kosovo, unemployment is 40 percent and average per capita income is 1,760 
euros. That compares with average joblessness of just under 10 percent in the 
European Union and an average salary of about 24,000 euros ($35,930).

BUDGET SURPLUS

The government hopes big public projects will pull the roughly 45 percent of 
the population who earn up to 1.42 euros a day out of poverty.

"If nothing improves in the next two years there will be social unrest from 
those who have no jobs and those working in the public sector but are not paid 
well," said Alban Hashani, an economist working for development and research 
group Riinvest.

Its lack of exposure to financial markets, the unilateral use of the euro, 
fiscal stability and a balanced budget has saved Kosovo some of the woes of the 
global economic crisis.

Deputy Economy Minister Bedri Hamza says energy, roads and the private sector 
will fuel future growth. The country is expected to grow 4 percent in 2009, 
down from 5.4 in 2008.

But years of high growth will be needed to gain ground on even the poorest EU 
states. "To reduce poverty and unemployment we need to have economic growth of 
more than 8 percent for the next six or seven years," said Hamza.

Economists are sceptical. An investment boom, widely expected after 
independence, has not materialized.

This week Kosovo abandoned a project to build a 2,000 megawatt power plant due 
to lack of investor interest, a problem in a country where water and power 
shortages happen every day.

With a budget surplus, privatisation and pension revenues this year, Kosovo has 
a billion euros in unused cash, but officials are unsure how to use such funds 
effectively. 

Hashani said government should use it to create jobs.

"The country with the highest unemployment rate in Europe has a surplus? This 
is an economic phenomenon that does not happen anywhere in the world," he said.

Many people give up the search for work and leave for the West, sometimes 
illegally.

"The last day I worked was four months ago for ten euros a day," Jonuzi said at 
his house in the village of Buroje. "I am thinking about leaving the country 
and going somewhere to work, but I don't have 3,000 or 4,000 euros to pay the 
traffickers." (Editing by Benet Koleka and Adam Tanner)
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