Tag: COVID pandemic

  • Interview with South Korea’s Ambassador in Romania, Rim Kap-soo

    Interview with South Korea’s Ambassador in Romania, Rim Kap-soo


    2023 marks 15 years since the establishment of the Strategic Partnership between South Korea and Romania. On this special occasion, the Ambassador of South Korea to Bucharest, HE Rim Kap-Soo was invited to Radio Romania, where he was also interviewed by Eugen Cojocariu. Ambassador Kap-Soo spoke of the excellent relations between Romania and South Korea, particularly in the economic field, where two-way trade stands at 1.3 bln EUR. Last week, Seoul donated 81 pieces of lab equipment to Romania worth 3.67 mln EUR, which will be used by the National Institute for Public Health. The South-Korean Ambassador said this is a gesture of goodwill in light of the excellent cooperation between the two countries in the COVID pandemic, when Bucharest donated 1.5 mln shots of anti-COVID vaccine to Seoul.




  • Housing challenges for young people

    Housing challenges for young people

    European statistics have confirmed over the
    years the existence of a phenomenon that is not showing any signs of slowing
    down: more and more young adults, aged 19-34, continue to live with their
    parents. The dream of leaving home and becoming independent as quickly as
    possible is no longer a priority for young Europeans, including in Romania. For
    instance, in 2018, approximately 42% of young Romanians aged 25-34 still lived
    with their parents, while the latest data shows that their number stands at 2.2
    million. The pandemic did little to correct the situation, Romania ranking
    among Europe’s top 10 countries with the highest rates of parent-child
    coresidence. Ranking first are Croatia, Greece and Slovakia, while Nordic
    countries such as Sweden, Finland and Denmark are the opposite end. Socilogist
    Dumitru Sandu, a university lecturer at University of Bucharest, has studied
    the phenomenon analyzing the recent data.


    In 2020, at European level, 65% of young
    adults in Croatia lived with their parents, 60% in Greece and 53% in Slovakia.
    Romania ranked 10th with 43%. In fact, over 2018-2020 a major change
    occurs that has to do with gender differences. The share of young men aged
    24-34 who still lived with their parents stood at 55%. Young women in the same
    age bracket accounted for 29%. Therefore, we are dealing with a difference of
    approximately 27%. In terms of gender gaps, Romania ranks 2nd at
    European level after Bulgaria, where the difference stands at 28%. Therefore,
    we are witnessing in Europe a gap not between the old EU and the new one, but
    between geographical extremes. There are southern countries like Croatia,
    Greece, Slovakia and Romania, which have demographic tendencies similar to
    Portugal, Spain, Italy and Malta, and then we have Nordic countries, creating a
    major rift between southern and northern Europe.


    The main cause behind this phenomenon is
    economic in nature. High youth unemployment, soaring rent and the growth of the
    real-estate market are reasons that prevent young people from leaving their
    parents’ house. The persistence of older cultural or social models might also
    contribute to this reality, all the more so considering the aforementioned
    gender differences.


    Economic reasons are real, but there’s also
    a cultural or social motivation, in the sense that in the traditional cultural
    paradigm the man is the main income provider. Men dominate the labor market.
    This social motivation impacts sociological studies. I have measured the social
    performance of the 27 EU countries in terms of life expectancy at birth, an
    indicator used in expert studies that measure the development of societies. In
    a nutshell, societies with underdeveloped social and health services tend to
    force young adults to continue to live with their parents, men in particular.
    Hence the huge gaps between men and women in southern Europe compared to
    northern Europe.


    Still, this doesn’t fully explain the
    phenomenon, considering southern Europe has undergone many transformations,
    Romania being a case in point.


    Poor countries in southern Europe have in
    the last 20 years experienced a process of accelerated growth in terms of the
    prospects of young adults. In brief, young people in Romania, regardless of
    their financial situation or the country’s economic development, want to live
    in the West. Under these circumstances, some of them leave to Western
    countries, but others stay behind. They curb their personal spending and
    prepare to make a family. For instance, Romanian society has started investing
    more in more in child education. We don’t want a lot of children, but to offer
    them a better live, in our family, in our household and in society, so that
    they have access to better education and higher living standards, Romanians
    tend to think. Therefore, this type of procrastination that might seem peculiar
    at first glance is completely sound. It results from the sudden increase in the
    aspirations of relatively poor young people in southern Europe who postpone
    making a family and building their own household until the conditions are
    ideal.


    Unfortunately, none of the current studies
    indicates the fact that the level of parent-child coresidence will go down any
    time soon, at least as long as the current economic context persists. (VP)



  • June 16, 2020 UPDATE

    June 16, 2020 UPDATE

    COVID-19 – The
    government in Bucharest extended by another 30 days the state of alert, at the
    same time easing some lockdown restrictions. Church services will resume inside
    the churches with the observance of physical distancing and the mandatory
    wearing of masks. Certain border crossing points will also reopen. Liberal
    Prime Minister Ludovic Orban has explained that most experts believe the state
    of alert is necessary given the present epidemiological context. The
    government’s decision must be approved by Parliament and the largest opposition
    force, the Social-Democratic Party, have announced their intention not to
    endorse an extension longer than 15 days. The Social-Democrats also believe the
    relaxation measures proposed by the government are not enough. Romania has so
    far reported 22,415 infections and a number of fatalities that has gone up to
    1,437. Over 16 thousand patients have been cured. 34 hundred Romanians have
    been confirmed infected abroad and 114 of them died.




    FESTIVAL – The first weekend of the International Theatre
    Festival in Sibiu, central Romania, which has this year been staged exclusively
    online due to the COVID pandemic has registered an impressive audience. The
    festival’s shows and other events posted on its Facebook or webpage at
    sibfest.ro have registered roughly 181 thousand visitors. The event continues
    until June 21 with prestigious dance, music, opera and street performances,
    circus and special conferences, all broadcast online. The festival’s present
    edition unfolds under the motto ‘The Power to Believe’. The International
    Theatre Festival in Sibiu is the first big performing arts festival in Central
    and Eastern Europe.




    WEATHER – Romania is still facing extreme weather phenomena
    in most of its territory, where meteorologists are expecting heavy downpours
    and thunderstorms for the entire week. Scores of towns and villages have been
    affected by the weather in 20 Romanian counties. Firefighters have been
    deployed to pump water out of hundreds of households and public institutions or
    to remove the fallen trees from the streets. Traffic has been temporarily
    disrupted on national and county roads.




    NATO – The Romanian Navy has handed over the command of
    Standing NATO Mine Countermeasures Group Two, a press release issued by the
    Navy Chief of Staff on Tuesday announced. By assuming the command of the
    aforementioned military force, Romania proved its capabilities as a security
    provider for the defence of the allies as this navy force has made a major
    contribution to maintaining the alliance’s battle and immediate response
    capabilities in crisis situations as well as to the promotion of NATO’s images
    and values. In the past six months, the group has carried out missions in the
    Black Sea, the Aegean and the Mediterranean Sea involving the participation of
    military vessels from Bulgaria, Germany, Greece, Romania and Turkey.








    FORESTS – The Senate on Tuesday passed the law on creating the
    Directorate for Investigating Environment-related Crimes. The scope of
    environment-related crime demands the specialization of prosecuting bodies in
    this field and the allocation of resources for the creation of an institution
    with specific and clear competences, the initiators of the draft law explain,
    saying that in the last 5 years over 20 million cubic meters of forests have
    disappeared illegally, causing a prejudice of hundreds of millions of Euro
    every year. All Parliamentary groups have voted in favor of the project, with
    the exception of the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians.




    BORDER – According to the Romanian authorities, 65,200
    Romanian and foreign nationals transited Romania’s border checkpoints on
    Monday. The traffic has increased by 60% as compared to the month of May.
    Romania’s border with Hungary proved to be the busiest, as it has been crossed
    by roughly 43,800 people. According to the same sources, the number of people
    who entered Romania has doubled as compared to the previous state-of-alert
    period.


    (Translated
    by D. Bilt & V. Palcu)