By Karolina Slowikowska and Kuba Jaworowski
WARSAW, June 5 (Reuters) - Latvia's economic crisis risks spilling over into other countries in eastern Europe and the international community needs to provide more support for the small Baltic state, a Polish central banker said on Friday.
Latvia, its economy badly hit by the global crisis, is struggling to avoid a currency devaluation that would hammer heavily exposed Swedish banks and reignite worries over the wider region's prospects.
Its prime minister reaffirmed on Friday that his government was not planning any devaluation of the lat.
"There is a threat that the situation in Latvia may spill over into the region," Dariusz Filar, a member of the Polish central bank's Monetary Policy Council, told reporters on the sidelines of an economic conference in Warsaw. "This situation is a challenge that requires a reaction on a broader scale than just Latvian, there is a need for more international assistance."
Ex-communist eastern Europe has suffered a big outflow of funds since the global crisis struck last year as investors shun markets perceived as too risky.
Addressing the Warsaw conference, held to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of communism in Poland, EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia held out little prospect of early relief for the region.
"Beyond the current short-term liquidity risks, the region is also likely to face more difficult and volatile funding conditions in the coming period," Almunia said.
Filar's comments on contagion shaved 0.8 percent off Poland's zloty currency <EURPLN=>, traders said. Hungary's forint, seen as a proxy for risk in the region, was down 0.7 percent against the euro and the Czech crown fell 0.2 percent.
CONCERNS
Economists echoed Filar's concerns, noting that in Latvia and other countries in once-booming eastern Europe many households and companies hold debt in euros or Swiss francs.
"There's a problem with paying loans in Latvia and I guess such a problem is likely to appear in other CEE countries," said Bartosz Pawlowski, senior emerging market strategist at BNP Paribas in London.
"That is why the zloty, forint and crown have not taken advantage of the better sentiment on global markets."
In Riga, Latvian Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis said: "We have just to put this talk (about a devaluation) to one side. We are just getting ourselves all worked up and creating emotion."
The lat has been stuck at the weak end of its band against the euro, the level at which the central bank intervenes to support it, for about two weeks due to the devaluation rumours.
Ratings agency Fitch has said Latvia needs to clinch an agreement with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund on fresh funding in order to protect its currency peg.
On Thursday, the European Commission urged Latvia to make further cuts in public spending, offering little hope Riga would quickly receive more funds to tackle the crisis.
Latvia's economy is set to contract by 18 percent this year and unemployment is soaring.
Investors fear Latvia will finally be forced to abandon the peg despite firm official denials, a move that would increase pressure on the other Baltic republics of Estonia and Lithuania which also operate currency boards.
Filar is the first Polish policymaker to raise the risk of regional contagion from the Latvia crisis. Poland has generally been keen to stress the strength of its own economic fundamentals and to play down risks of contagion from outside.
IMBALANCES
European Central Bank Governor Jean-Claude Trichet told the Warsaw conference that Poland had built up fewer macroeconomic imbalances, allowing it to weather the global crisis better than many of its peers in ex-communist Europe.
Trichet also reaffirmed that countries queuing up to join the euro zone had to implement sound macroeconomic policies and structural reforms.
"Only after the elimination of major macroeconomic imbalances and when sufficient convergence has been achieved can countries expect to reap the full benefits of euro area membership," he said.
Poland, the largest ex-communist EU member, wants to join the euro in 2012 but economists say this date is unrealistic.
Economists expect Poland -- whose zloty currency floats freely -- to muster a small sliver of growth this year and to avoid recession, thanks in part to a weakening currency which has made Polish exports more competitive.
Underlining eastern Europe's economic travails, Hungary reported on Friday an annual fall of 27.1 percent in industrial output in April, based on preliminary unadjusted data.
Like Latvia, Hungary has reached out for IMF-led aid packages to plug its large financing gaps. (Additional reporting by Dagmara Leszkowicz and Mike Winfrey) (Writing by Gareth Jones; editing by Patrick Graham and Stephen Nisbet)