Tag: migration data

  • December 12, 2019 UPDATE

    December 12, 2019 UPDATE

    GOVERNMENT – The minority
    Liberal government in Bucharest on Thursday asked Parliament for a vote of
    confidence on three bills referring to the amendment of the justice laws, free
    local road transport for pupils, pensioners and people with disabilities, and
    to the budget caps on next year’s spending. Given that the Senate already
    approved on Wednesday some of the justice amendments proposed by the
    government, namely postponing by two years the early retirement of magistrates
    and by one year the transition to three-panel judges, the government says it
    will only ask for a vote of confidence on the postponement of the increase in
    the length of service required to enter the magistracy. Unless a no-confidence
    motion is filed within the next three days, the bills proposed by the
    government will come into force as soon they are signed into law by the
    president. The Social-Democratic Party in opposition announced it would notify
    the Constitutional Court over the first bill for which the Orban Cabinet has
    asked Parliament’s vote of confidence, the one modifying the justice laws
    regarding the seniority requirements for being admitted to the National
    Magistracy Institute, saying this was unnecessary.






    EU COUNCIL – The EU
    multi-annual budget, its efforts to combat climate change and Brexit are the
    main subjects discussed by the European Council meeting on Thursday and Friday
    in Brussels. Romania is represented by president Klaus Iohannis, who upon his
    arrival said he disagrees with the Finnish presidency’s proposal regarding the
    upcoming multiannual financial framework, saying that too little money is being
    allotted to the cohesion policy. President Iohannis said the agenda includes
    other complicated topics as well, such as climate change. In that respect the
    EU wants to introduce an ambitious goal, climate neutrality, to be implemented
    by 2050, which would be very complicated for East-European economies. Such
    expenses should be covered by the EU budget as well, so talks won’t be simple,
    Klaus Iohannis said.






    AIR FORCE -
    Romania is to purchase another five F-16 fighter jets from Portugal, with the
    same configuration as the 12 that are already in the possession of the Romanian
    Air Forces. MPs have adopted a bill on the continuation of the multiroll
    aircraft programme. The bill also provides for the modernization of all of the
    Romanian Army’s F-16 jets. The bill has been backed by all parliamentary groups
    and the defence minister has hailed the passing of the law.










    MIGRATION – Over 4%
    of Romania’s population has left the country in the last four years, the
    vice-president of the Romanian Center for Integration, Ioan Puhace, said on
    Thursday on the sidelines of the conference titled Legal Migration in 2020 -
    Challenges and Opportunities on the Labor Market ahead of a new Migration Boom.
    The Romanian official said solutions need to be found regarding the development
    of the labor market. One such solution is legal migration. Ioan Puhace explained
    Romanian employers are constantly looking for workforce, and as such there
    needs to be flexibility in terms of migration. In turn, the vice-president of
    the European Union of SMEs, Florin Jianu, pointed out that right now, Romania
    has a labor force shortage of approximately one million people. It is his
    opinion that Romania can attract workers from areas with Romanian-speaking
    populations, such as Serbia, Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova.






    STRIKES IN FRANCE
    – Public transport in France was again disrupted on Thursday by strikes in
    response to the government’s intention to reform the pensions system. Most
    trade unionists are categorically opposed to the replacement of the current
    system. Prime Minister Édouard Philippe on Wednesday made public the pensions
    reform bill, which is to apply fully beginning in 2022. He said the new system
    maintains the retirement age at 62, but that the government will encourage employees
    not to retire by means of a system of reductions and bonuses.






    ISRAEL – In Israel,
    Benjamin Netanyahu remains the prime minister of an interim government after
    the Knesset has voted for its own dissolution and the holding of new early
    elections in March next year. The leaders of the major parties, Likud and Blue
    and White, Benjamin Netanyahu and Beny Gantz, respectively, have failed to form
    a government. The two have made no fundamental compromise allowing the
    formation of a ruling coalition and have accused each other for this failure.


    (Translated by C.
    Mateescu & V. Palcu)

  • December 12, 2019 UPDATE

    December 12, 2019 UPDATE

    GOVERNMENT – The minority
    Liberal government in Bucharest on Thursday asked Parliament for a vote of
    confidence on three bills referring to the amendment of the justice laws, free
    local road transport for pupils, pensioners and people with disabilities, and
    to the budget caps on next year’s spending. Given that the Senate already
    approved on Wednesday some of the justice amendments proposed by the
    government, namely postponing by two years the early retirement of magistrates
    and by one year the transition to three-panel judges, the government says it
    will only ask for a vote of confidence on the postponement of the increase in
    the length of service required to enter the magistracy. Unless a no-confidence
    motion is filed within the next three days, the bills proposed by the
    government will come into force as soon they are signed into law by the
    president. The Social-Democratic Party in opposition announced it would notify
    the Constitutional Court over the first bill for which the Orban Cabinet has
    asked Parliament’s vote of confidence, the one modifying the justice laws
    regarding the seniority requirements for being admitted to the National
    Magistracy Institute, saying this was unnecessary.






    EU COUNCIL – The EU
    multi-annual budget, its efforts to combat climate change and Brexit are the
    main subjects discussed by the European Council meeting on Thursday and Friday
    in Brussels. Romania is represented by president Klaus Iohannis, who upon his
    arrival said he disagrees with the Finnish presidency’s proposal regarding the
    upcoming multiannual financial framework, saying that too little money is being
    allotted to the cohesion policy. President Iohannis said the agenda includes
    other complicated topics as well, such as climate change. In that respect the
    EU wants to introduce an ambitious goal, climate neutrality, to be implemented
    by 2050, which would be very complicated for East-European economies. Such
    expenses should be covered by the EU budget as well, so talks won’t be simple,
    Klaus Iohannis said.






    AIR FORCE -
    Romania is to purchase another five F-16 fighter jets from Portugal, with the
    same configuration as the 12 that are already in the possession of the Romanian
    Air Forces. MPs have adopted a bill on the continuation of the multiroll
    aircraft programme. The bill also provides for the modernization of all of the
    Romanian Army’s F-16 jets. The bill has been backed by all parliamentary groups
    and the defence minister has hailed the passing of the law.










    MIGRATION – Over 4%
    of Romania’s population has left the country in the last four years, the
    vice-president of the Romanian Center for Integration, Ioan Puhace, said on
    Thursday on the sidelines of the conference titled Legal Migration in 2020 -
    Challenges and Opportunities on the Labor Market ahead of a new Migration Boom.
    The Romanian official said solutions need to be found regarding the development
    of the labor market. One such solution is legal migration. Ioan Puhace explained
    Romanian employers are constantly looking for workforce, and as such there
    needs to be flexibility in terms of migration. In turn, the vice-president of
    the European Union of SMEs, Florin Jianu, pointed out that right now, Romania
    has a labor force shortage of approximately one million people. It is his
    opinion that Romania can attract workers from areas with Romanian-speaking
    populations, such as Serbia, Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova.






    STRIKES IN FRANCE
    – Public transport in France was again disrupted on Thursday by strikes in
    response to the government’s intention to reform the pensions system. Most
    trade unionists are categorically opposed to the replacement of the current
    system. Prime Minister Édouard Philippe on Wednesday made public the pensions
    reform bill, which is to apply fully beginning in 2022. He said the new system
    maintains the retirement age at 62, but that the government will encourage employees
    not to retire by means of a system of reductions and bonuses.






    ISRAEL – In Israel,
    Benjamin Netanyahu remains the prime minister of an interim government after
    the Knesset has voted for its own dissolution and the holding of new early
    elections in March next year. The leaders of the major parties, Likud and Blue
    and White, Benjamin Netanyahu and Beny Gantz, respectively, have failed to form
    a government. The two have made no fundamental compromise allowing the
    formation of a ruling coalition and have accused each other for this failure.


    (Translated by C.
    Mateescu & V. Palcu)

  • March 21, 2019 UPDATE

    March 21, 2019 UPDATE

    CONFERENCE – As a strategic partner of the
    USA, Romania considers its mandate at the rotating EU presidency as an
    opportunity to promote a positive agenda of cooperation between the EU and the
    USA, Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said on Thursday at the annual
    Transatlantic Conference staged by AmCham in Brussels. Iohannis went on to say
    that annual trade exchanges between the two entities exceed one trillion
    dollars creating 7 million jobs in the USA and 5 million in the EU. On Thursday
    and Friday the Romanian official is attending the European Spring Council where
    he is expected to urge the EU members to carry on efforts towards the
    consolidation and streamlining of the single market in all its dimensions. Several
    other issues are also high on the summit’s agenda, such as the consolidation of
    Europe’s economic base, climate change, the future summit with China as well as
    ways of fighting disinformation. The European leaders are also to discuss a
    request by Prime Minister Theresa May for postponing Britain’s leaving the bloc
    until June 30th.




    PROTESTS – Trade unionists from Bucharest’s underground picketed the building of
    the Transport Ministry in Bucharest on Thursday. They are denouncing the
    authorities’ indifference towards the safety issues present in some of the trains.
    Transporters have again rallied in downtown Bucharest for their second day of
    protest. After the protest rally staged by FORT Federation on Wednesday, the
    Confederation of Authorized Operators and Transporters COTAR has mounted its
    own protests during which taxi drivers in Bucharest are calling on the
    authorities to amend the present legislation to be able to regulate alternative
    city transportation, which they consider disloyal competition.




    MIGRATION – 4.4 million migrants entered
    the EU countries in 2017, a figure, which includes migration inside the EU,
    data released by Eurostat show. The statistical office of the European Union
    registered 2.8 million migrants in the 28 member states from outside the union
    as well as 1.9 million people who already were in a member state and migrated
    to another. At the same time, 3.1 million migrants have left a state in the EU.
    More immigrants than migrants have been registered in 22 EU countries. The
    number of emigrants exceeded immigrants in six countries, Bulgaria, Croatia,
    Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania. The largest number of immigrants was
    reported by Malta (46 per 1,000 inhabitants. Luxembourg reported the largest
    number of emigrants in 2017 (23 per 1,000 inhabitants).




    VISIT – EU Commissioner for Regional
    Policy Corina Cretu on Friday will visit Bucharest to discuss investment
    priorities in the next EU budget. Corina Cretu will attend the presentation of
    the country report as part of the European semester and the conference titled
    Investment priorities for Romania 2021-2027. According to a Commission
    release, Corina Cretu said Romania should direct its European funds to
    innovation, SMEs, and the transition towards a low-carbon economy, improving
    transport networks and employment and social inclusions measures.




    rescEU
    – The consolidate civil protection mechanism, rescEU, aimed at strengthening
    collective response to natural disaster across the EU, has come into force on
    Thursday, the European Commission reports. To ensure a better protection of
    citizens, the European Parliament, the EU Council and the Commission reached an
    agreement in December last year to consolidate the current civil protection
    mechanism. Under the new mechanism member states will be able to access an
    additional response capacity in case of disasters, medical emergencies,
    chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear incidents. Europe has been
    affected by scores of disasters in recent years, which left hundreds dead and
    produced damages in the billions of euros.




    MOLDOVA
    – The Moldovan Parliament has convened in its first plenary session on
    Thursday, despite the lack of a Parliament majority. Attending the meeting was
    the pro-Russian President Igor Dodon. The new Parliament comprises 35 Socialist
    MPs, 30 Democratic MPs, 26 MPs representing the ACUM pro-European alliance, 7
    MPs representative of the SOR populist party and three independent MPs.
    According to Radio Chisinau, the Democrats and Socialists have invited the ACUM
    alliance for negotiations over a Parliament majority, but the representatives
    of the opposition said they refused to side with oligarchic and anti-European
    parties.




    (Translated by D. Bilt & V. Palcu)