* EBRD sees emerging Europe GDP growing by 3.3 pct in 2010
* Polish, Russian, Turkish, Kazakh growth spur GDP revision
* Tighter fiscal policy, rising bad loans weigh
(Updates with background, details, link to table)
By Sebastian Tong
LONDON, Jan 22 (Reuters) - The economies of emerging Europe will expand an average of 3.3 percent next year, faster than the 2.5-percent forecast in October, but the pace of growth will vary across the region, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) said on Friday.
The development bank said the revision was driven by stronger-than-expected economic performance of Poland, Turkey, Russia and Kazakhstan, which have enjoyed a resumption of capital inflows and stronger commodity prices.
"The recovery in the region remains fragile, with large variations across countries. The gradual global recovery will support regional growth, but local factors will dampen it," EBRD Chief Economist Erik Berglof said in a statement.
Smaller economies that do not export commodities will continue to see slow growth, the London-based lender said, adding that it still expected economies in Hungary and the Baltics to contract this year.
The EBRD also adjusted its 2009 estimate for the regional economy to a 6.1-percent contraction, slightly smaller than the 6.3-percent decline seen in October.
The pace of recovery in the EBRD's 29 countries of operations would pick up next year, with a likely average expansion of 3.8 percent.
For a table on EBRD growth forecasts please click on [
].The EBRD's figures come ahead of the International Monetary Fund's release next Tuesday of its updated World Economic Outlook.
FISCAL TIGHTENING
The EBRD said Russia's economy would grow 3.9 percent this year after shrinking 8.7 percent in 2009.
Average growth in central Europe and the Baltics is seen at a more sedate 1.4 percent while eastern Europe and the Caucasus are predicted to grow 4 percent.
Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia are likely beneficiaries from a rebound in euro zone growth while recovery in Romania will lag due to domestic fiscal tightening.
Indeed, the EBRD expects curbs on government spending to impact many economies in the region, offsetting the improvement in external demand from Western Europe economies.
Unemployment is likely to rise, dampening domestic demand.
The bank also sees rising non-performing loans and cautious lending policies continuing to constrain the willingness of banks to extend credit.
"Appropriate public and private sector policies and actions to clean up balance sheets, restructure debt and deal with distressed assets will be important to help sustain credit growth and support economic recovery," Berglof added.
The EBRD was set up at the end of the Cold War to help former communist economies adjust to free markets. (Reporting by Sebastian Tong; editing by Ron Askew)