* Czech c.banker says no need for pan-regional aid package
* Crown close to predicted levels, no drama for policy
* Hedging losses not big related to export volumes
By Jan Lopatka
PRAGUE, March 17 (Reuters) - There is no need for an economic aid package that targets all central and eastern European economies because some of them do not need it, Czech central bank Vice-Governor Miroslav Singer said on Tuesday.
Some analysts and policymakers in the region have repeatedly called for a coordinated aid package for all central and east European countries, most of which have been hit by steep currency falls and a sharp downturn in growth.
"It is not clear to me why there should be coordination of aid to countries that do not need any aid," Singer said in response to emailed questions.
"There are even countries in the region, like the Czech Republic, that themselves provide aid to others -- Latvia in our case. Of course there are countries that have big problems, and we need to help them, but when considering how to do it, it is necessary to look at their concrete situation."
The Czechs, who have relatively little foreign debt and current account deficit, have been leading calls for markets to differentiate among countries according to their varying economic fundamentals.
There has been some evidence investors have begun to treat them differently of late, with the crown currency recouping from losses and trading 0.7 percent up since the beginning of this year, at 26.59 to the euro on Tuesday <EURCZK=>.
It has outperformed its peers, and the region's next best performer is the Romanian leu <EURRON=>, down 6.5 percent.
Some analysts have said differentiation would not work in case of a speculative attack, and called for an aid package for the region which individual countries could tap from as needed.
Serbia's central bank Governor Radovan Jelasic urged a coordinated approach in a Financial Times article on Tuesday, saying funds should start flowing in quickly.
But Singer said a quick inflow of euros into the Czech Republic could cause trouble.
"I am afraid it would only lead to a not too much desired deviation of the crown from its trajectory in the direction of a stronger exchange rate, which would be forcing us into a corresponding monetary policy reaction," he said.
The central bank does not target the currency level, but the country's highly open economy makes the exchange rate an important factor in setting interest rates.
Singer said the crown was now relatively close to the central bank's predictions -- its quarterly model sees the average 2009 crown rate at 25.80 -- and that it "implies no drama" for monetary policy.
Singer and Governor Zdenek Tuma warned last month when the crown dropped to as low as 29.69 that the market should not expect any more rate cuts and rather prepare for hikes.
The central bank has slashed the main interest rate by 200 basis points since last August to 1.75 percent.
HEDGING LOSSES NOT HUGE
Singer said losses in the corporate sector from exporters' hedging contracts, a problem in neighbouring Poland, were not large compared with overall export volumes.
He said information from banks showed exporters had been exposed to 50-60 billion crowns ($2.46 billion) in losses from currency hedging contracts when the crown weakened to 28-29 per euro.
But this was only a fraction of about 2.2 trillion crowns in annual export revenue and was outweighed by the fact that a weaker currency raised crown receipts from exports, an effect that would reach about 120 billion crowns before adjustments for falling export volumes at the 28-29 crown exchange rate.
He said the numbers were lower now, as the crown has firmed closer to the original hedging levels around 25 crowns. (Editing by Andy Bruce)