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Polish Municipal Elections Will Trigger Changes In The Public Finance System

This report does not constitute a rating action.

What's happening

Local and regional government (LRG) elections took place in Poland on Sunday, April 7, at which mayors and municipal councils were elected. We rate two cities in Poland, the cities of Lodz (BBB+/Stable) and Krakow (A-/Stable).

Following the elections, we don't anticipate any changes in Lodz's financial policy or strategy, as incumbent mayor Hanna Zdanowska of the Civic Coalition secured her fourth term, with 59.3% of the votes. The composition of the municipal council did not change much compared with the previous term, as the Civic Coalition kept its majority.

We anticipate a revision of Krakow's financial policy after a runoff mayoral election. Krakow's incumbent major, who has been ruling the city for almost 22 years, did not rerun for office. Moreover, the composition of Krakow's city council has now changed, as the Civic Coalition has strengthened its position considerably, winning an absolute majority of 56% (see chart 1). The new city council composition could possibly lead to easier decision-making.

Krakow's new mayor will eventually be elected in a runoff on April 21 as none of the candidates achieved 50% of the votes in the first round. In the initial round, the candidate from the Civic Coalition party, Aleksander Miszalski, led the race, with 37.2% of the votes, while the candidate from the independent local party Krakow for Residents, Lukasz Gibala, running for the third time, gained about 26.8% of the votes. We will closely monitor which direction the city and its new mayor will take.

Chart 1

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What could change

We expect that after the local elections, the central government and LRGs will intensify their discussion of the key elements of the institutional framework under which Polish LRGs operate. The key focus areas are revenue sources and regulations at the LRG level. We think that the institutional framework for Polish LRGs has been on a weakening trend in recent years, as the previous PiS-led central government suspended fiscal and debt rules for LRGs.

We think that the temporary suspension of those rules, which is effective until 2025, could set a precedent that would make rule-bending a structural feature of the Polish LRGs' financing system. This could reduce predictability, including with regard to investment planning. In particular, we see risks that the temporary measures might be prolonged or extended, leading to unsustainable spending and higher debt burdens.

At the same time, the previous central government introduced a tax reform in 2022--the so-called Polish deal--that lowered revenue for LRGs and only partly compensated them with capital transfers from the central government. As a result, together with elevated investment spending, Lodz's and Krakow's budgetary performance weakened considerably in 2023 (see chart 2).

From 2024, we expect the cities' financial performance to improve and their debt burden to fall as investment spending will subside. Previous high investment spending was tied to the end of the co-financed EU multiyear financial framework (2014-2020). Given the more pro EU-stance of both the central government's ruling coalition, as well as the rated cities' city council and mayors, we expect the cities to obtain EU funds and central government grants more easily. Party affiliation has played a role in the past and relations between the central government and EU have eased, thereby improving fund release.

Chart 2

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Related Research

Primary Credit Analysts:Michelle Keferstein, Frankfurt (49) 69-33-999-104;
michelle.keferstein@spglobal.com
Felix Ejgel, London + 44 20 7176 6780;
felix.ejgel@spglobal.com
Secondary Contact:Maxim Rybnikov, London + 44 7824 478 225;
maxim.rybnikov@spglobal.com

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