Statement on Romania following IMF mission

Published: 11 August 2009 y., Tuesday

Rumunijos vėliava
A European Commission team participated in a mission carried out by the IMF in Romania in the context of the international financial assistance granted to the country.

The Commission delegation, headed by Head of Unit Fabienne Ilzkovitz, concluded that the implementation by Romania of its economic programme has been satisfactory. However, given the worsening of the economic situation during the first half of the year, the government will need to take further measures, including structural reforms, to contain the increase in the budget deficit that is now likely to be higher than previously expected. Ilzkovitz is Head of unit for a group of countries including Romania in the Economic and Financial Affairs Directorate General. The mission took place between 29 July and 10 August. 

Real GDP contracted by 6.2% year on year in the first quarter, more than expected when the Romanian economic adjustment programme was agreed in June, as a result of worse-than-expected domestic demand and external environment. The authorities' new growth projections for this year have been downgraded to around -8/-8½% from -4% previously with only a modest recovery expected in 2010, as weak household financial conditions and rising unemployment will keep domestic demand low.

Reflecting lower growth, public revenues in 2009 are also lower than expected by about 3.5% of GDP. The government agrees to additional spending cuts of about 0.8% of GDP in 2009 in order to contain the deterioration in the budgetary situation. Structural reforms will also be stepped-up to continue the budgetary consolidation beyond 2009. This will include further measures to restructure public sector employment and to strengthen fiscal discipline in local governments, decentralized entities and state-owned enterprises. This is on top of the implementation of a Fiscal Responsibility Law, currently under way, and reforms of the public wage and pension systems.

The Commission in October will carry out its own assessment ahead of the payment of a second instalment of the €5 billion medium-term financial assistance loan to the Romanian balance of payments agreed by the EU on a Commission proposal.  In July it paid a first instalment of €1.5 billion.  The current assessment at staff level by the IMF and the Commission together with the Romanian government puts the revised deficit target at 7.3% of GDP in 2009, compared to 4.6% agreed at the start of the programme (respectively 7.8% and 5.1% of GDP in terms of European System of Accounts - ESA95 - rules).

For 2010, further measures have been agreed to bring the deficit to below 6% of GDP in cash terms (corresponding to 6.5% in ESA 95 terms) mainly aiming at  reducing the size of the public wage bill and containing spending on goods and services , while giving priority to investment projects co-financed with EU funds.

Today, the Commission and the IMF have also welcomed the signing of formal letters by the parent companies of the nine largest banks in Romania committing their group's overall exposure to the country.

Šaltinis: euopa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

"Plastic soup" sea pollution highlighted by Anna Rosbach

Imagine a drifting mass of plastic and rubber 34 times the size of the Netherlands. more »

IMF and Botswana’s Financial Regulator Work Together to Improve Breadth and Quality of Macroeconomic Statistical Data

International Monetary Fund (IMF) statistical experts are working with officials of the Bank of Botswana (BOB) and of the Nonbank Financial Regulatory Agency (NBFIRA) to improve the breadth and quality of data collected from the financial industry. more »

EU and Argentina settle WTO case on Genetically Modified Organisms

The European Union and Argentina have today signed in Buenos Aires a final settlement of the WTO dispute that Argentina brought against the EU in May 2003 regarding the application of its legislation on biotech products. more »

Chile rebuilds after earthquake

The inauguration of Chile's new president was a moving moment for the EU's new commissioner for humanitarian aid - in more ways than one. more »

Results Profile: Morocco Public Administration

Between 2001 and 2008, Morocco enjoyed the benefits of sound economic management and reforms. Its growth rate doubled from the 1990s to an average of 5.1%, while per capita income also doubled to $2,850 in 2008. more »

Women Lead Transformation of Urban Slums in Vietnam

Thoung Ly ward in the bustling port city of Haiphong, Vietnam, is bordered by a sludgy grey canal that flows into the sea with the waste of those who live beside it. more »

Results Profile: Tunisia

In the half century since its independence, Tunisia has made major economic and social advances, including a quadrupling of per capita gross domestic product (GDP) and an increase in life expectancy to near developed country levels. more »

Middle East conflict: build trust and freeze settlements, says EMPA

The stalled Middle East peace talks dominated the sixth plenary session of the Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary Assembly (EMPA), in Jordan (12-14 March). more »

Storms in France and Madeira: mobilise EU solidarity funding fast and flexibly, say MEPs

The EU Solidarity Fund must be mobilised "in the most urgent and flexible way and to the greatest possible extent" to help the areas hit by severe storms in February, as soon as the national governments have submitted their aid requests, said MEPs in Strasbourg on Thursday morning. more »

Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty debated

During the cold war the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) was the cornerstone of international efforts to control the balance of nuclear bomb-making technology. more »