Poland’s economic development story
is one of success: since the early 1990s, the country has
transitioned to a market economy, integrated into the
European Union economy and global supply chains and
sustained robust growth, avoiding the middle-income trap and
increasing the resilience of its economy. Poland has
sustained strong growth over the past three decades, making
substantial advances in converging towards the European
Union (EU-27) average per capita income, although there is
still a considerable gap in both productivity and income
convergence when compared with aspirational peers. Poland
successfully transitioned to an EU-integrated market
economy, moving from upper middle-income to high-income
status in less than a decade and a half. Its economy
underwent a deep structural transformation, supported by
cost-competitiveness, and is now well-diversified and more
resilient to shocks. Long-term growth has been supported by
increased total factor productivity (TFP), grounded in
efficiency gains, although capital accumulation has remained
the main contributor to growth. While capital deepening did
occur, investments in Information Communication and
Technology (ICT) and in intangible assets that have high
growth potential lagged those of peers. A skilled labor
force has contributed more to growth in the case of Poland
than it did in peer countries. The COVID-19 pandemic,
however, has resulted in important learning losses, as
observed throughout the world, and together with reversals
in education reforms in recent years could weigh down on
labor quality and productivity in the future.COVID-19