Tag: insolvency law

  • Changes to the insolvency law

    Changes to the insolvency law


    The Romanian government has issued
    an emergency decree to modify the insolvency law. According to Prime Minister
    Viorica Dancila, the changes are meant to put an end to abusive practices such
    as repeated insolvency seeking to evade the payment of obligations to partners
    and the state budget. More than 6,000 companies employing over 64,000 people
    are in insolvency at the moment. The government’s decree provides for the
    conversion of debts into shares to be taken over by the state. The finance
    minister Eugen Teodorovici says the tax authority will put in place a clear
    procedure in this regard. The business community has criticised the measure
    saying there’s no place for the state in a private company, while experts on
    insolvency speak about masked nationalisation. Eugen Teodorovici has explained
    that the changes to the insolvency law were meant to address the dysfunctions
    triggered by the application of previous versions of the law:


    These dysfunctions have caused budget arrears of more than 63 billion
    lei (13.5 billion euros) from the companies in insolvency, while only 6% of the
    sums owed to the body of creditors have been recovered. We can also add here
    the arrears to the lending companies in the private sector. We must allow for
    the conversion, reduction or transfer of the debts to the budget, under certain
    circumstances, of course, in order to prevent the bankruptcy of many companies
    with a real potential of recovery and other serious social and economic
    consequences.


    The finance minister has also said
    that the regulations proposed aim to ensure the necessary conditions to allow
    for the recovery of companies so that they continue to operate and thus protect
    public funds through the recovery of the money owed to the state budget. The
    main changes to the insolvency law also include greater responsibility for
    insolvency administrators and more accountability for debtors in the management
    of their companies. Other changes refer to the fact that the request to start
    the procedure will be rejected if the National Agency for Fiscal Administration
    has not been notified in this regard. According to data published on the
    website of the National Trade Register Office, the number of commercial
    companies and authorized natural persons in insolvency dropped by almost 2.5%
    in the first 8 months of the year compared with the same time last year. Most
    of them are in Bucharest, while the areas most affected by insolvency are
    retail and wholesale trade and car and motorcycle repair services.

    (Translated by C. Mateescu)

  • December 23, 2015 UPDATE

    December 23, 2015 UPDATE

    COMMEMORATION– Events marking 26 years since the anti-communist Revolution of December 1989 continued across Romania on Wednesday. Military and religious services were held to commemorate the soldiers who died in the line of duty to defend Romania’s largest airport, Otopeni, in the north of Bucharest. On December 23, 1989, 40 soldiers, mostly draftees, sent to beef up the troops guarding the airport, were mistakenly killed by the very troops they were supposed to back up. Following an inquiry that dragged on for years, the ground troop commanders involved in the incident have been given jail sentences. The Otopeni massacre, whose causes still remain unknown, is believed to be the bloodiest event in the 1989 Revolution in Bucharest.



    INSOLVENCY LAW– The Romanian government on Wednesday decided to postpone, until December 31, 2016, the implementation of the provisions stipulated in the Law on the insolvency of natural persons. The one-year postponement of the law’s enforcement has been decided by the cabinet in the context in which part of the implementation mechanism is not ready yet and the methodological implementation norms have not been adopted. The law, which was approved by Parliament in May and should have taken effect on December 26, was drafted with the declared aim of supporting indebted Romanians to redress financially. The law on insolvency procedures for natural persons stipulates that any citizen who can no longer pay his or her debts, for objective reasons, stands the opportunity to space out his or her debts, based on a financial redressing plan, spanning a five year period.



    SPECIAL PENSIONS LAW — Romania’s president, Klaus Iohannis, on Wednesday promulgated the law on special pensions for MPs. The bill was adopted in June, but it was sent back to Parliament for revision, by Klaus Iohannis. The law stipulates that MPs will benefit from this pension only if they have entirely completed at least one mandate. Deputies and Senators who have received final rulings for corruption, during their tenure, will not benefit from such pensions. The pension is calculated in accordance with the number of complete mandates, but no more than three. Consequently, an MP with one mandate will receive a monthly pension of 342 Euros, an MP with two mandates 685 Euros, and an MP with three mandates 1,017 Euros.



    CHISHINAU– The Prime Minister designate of the Republic of Moldova, a former Soviet state with a majority Romanian speaking population, Ion Sturza, continues consultations with the parliamentary parties, with a view to forming a new government, at the end of a year during which three prime ministers have been replaced. After a first round of talks, the Liberal-Democrats have announced they will support the candidacy of Ion Sturza for the position of prime minister. However, in the current political context, he stands slim chances to be accepted as head of government, pundits say, after the Democratic Party and its 14 MPs who on Monday left the Communists’ Party said they would not support a cabinet led by Ion Sturza. Socialists will not vote for the cabinet, either, as they call for holding early elections. A well-known businessman, Ion Sturza says he wants to form a technocratic cabinet and has 14 days available to convince Parliament to offer it a vote of investiture.



    AWARDS– Romanian Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos on Wednesday awarded the Romanian national women’s handball team for the good results it got at the World Championship in Denmark. He thanked the Romanian handball players for what they have done for Romania, saying their good results brought immense joy to the Romanians. The Romanian national women’s handball team on Sunday won the bronze medal of the World Championship in Denmark. Romania defeated Poland and thus got the first bronze medal in the last 10 years and the first bronze medal in the history of Romanian handball. In the competition played in Denmark, Cristina Neagu has been declared best left back and the most valuable player of the tournament. Romania is the only team to have participated in all editions of the World Championship since 1957, winning a gold medal (1962) and two silver medals in 1973 and 2005, respectively.


    (Translated by: Diana Vijeu)