Tag: mobility

  • The status of real-estate property in Romania

    The status of real-estate property in Romania

    The information, albeit incomplete, is
    interesting with respect to lodgings, as it was revealed by the population
    Census carried in 2021. Such pieces of information carve out an image of our
    country caught between two extremes: at the lower end of the scale, a great
    many localities are abandoned, especially in the countryside, where the houses outnumber
    the inhabitants proper, while at the upper end of the scale we have the urban, extremely
    crowded areas, and where we have fewer lodgings as compared to the number of citizens.
    Concurrently, even though Romania has probably the greatest number of real estate
    property owners across Europe, it fares poorly with the respect to the quality of
    lodging. The concentration of the population in the big cities and on their outskirts
    can be explained by the employment opportunities, educations and ways of
    spending the leisure time the urban areas offer to those interested. As for the
    depopulation of villages, it can also be explained through the demographic
    decline but also through peoples’ migration to regions capable of offering, potentially
    at least, a better life. Or at least that is the conclusion of the Associate Professor
    with the Geography Faculty Bogdan Suditu, who is also the president of Bucharest
    Municipality’s Technical Town-Planning Commission.


    It is a trend that has been
    on the rise after 1990 and even more, after 2000. The rural regions lose
    population or the population is ageing, while many villages do not have any
    population at all, any longer. Furthermore, there is this trend of youngsters
    to migrate to the cities that, on one hand, have employment opportunities and,
    on the other hand, education-related or professional training opportunities. I
    also used the data provided by the census and the situation is quite worrying. I
    should like to point to the fact that of 3,181 administrative-territorial
    units, a mere 77 of them have more than 25,000 inhabitants, which is very
    little. Meaning that 2.4% of the administrative-territorial
    units
    have a reported number of inhabitants exceeding 25,000. But I will also
    hit the other extreme. We have 2,501
    administrative-territorial units, that is 78% of Romania’s administrative-territorial
    units with less than 5,000 inhabitants. We sometimes have situations where the
    number of employees in the municipality is not greater than the active
    population of those commune. Indeed, we have hit upon two extremes where, on
    one hand, the population is concentrated in the big cities, Bucharest, Constanța, Timișoara, Iași,
    Craiova, Cluj and the metropolitan area of those cities is developing, while on
    the other hand we have a great many administrative-territorial
    units that stand to lose. We have, in Romania, a commune with 88 inhabitants. We’re
    speaking about Batrana in Hunedoara County.


    There is nothing
    new about the situation reported for 2021; similar facts had also been reported
    ten years ago, at the previous census. For instance, in 2011 they found out 129 villages had zero inhabitants and, following a calculation
    system where, for the reported figure they took into account the overall number
    of rural localities, the conclusion was that 2,000 villages had less than 100
    inhabitants. Waiting for the complete data, we presume that in 2021, the phenomenon
    has been more intense. What
    can be done to improve the condition of the people living in those deserted
    areas, but also that of those living in the over-crowded neighborhoods?

    Bogdan
    Suditu:


    There
    is a National Lodging Strategy which was officially approved last year and that
    is a very good thing. Its targets mainly consider the vulnerable groups and
    equally the improvement of access mechanisms to a decent lodging, whether we
    speak about a rented place or about private property. Obviously, it is a national
    strategy focusing on what the Government can do, yet it
    also sets the framework for the cooperation with the public local authorities. The scourge of the demographic decline has not
    hit Romania alone. There are many other countries facing similar problems. The
    mechanism the Government has come up with, the ensuing strategy, target the improvement
    of mechanisms, so much so that, on one hand, in the big cities and in the
    crowded areas, the lodgings stock should develop, while, on the other hand, it
    is obvious that lodgings can also be built in the rural regions, but there we
    still need to see for whom exactly that can be implemented. If Romania draws population,
    or migrants, they’re highly unlikely to head for the rural regions. So what can
    we do? We need to improve, meaning we need to use the existing resources more
    efficiently. For instance, instead of having five schools in a rural area hit
    by depopulation, one such school will just do, a school with good teachers,
    where children from remote villages can be fetched with a school bus made
    available by the town hall. It is one of the solutions that can be implemented and
    it really is implemented, in some cases, so that people’s living standards can
    be improved and they do not have to leave any more.


    As for overcrowding, in
    2020, 45% of Romanians lived in overcrowded lodgings,
    with the reported such percentage being the highest in the EU. It is, obviously,
    an average percentage, Bogdan Suditu explained. He went on to say the
    phenomenon is typical for the big cities, but also for the smaller ones. It
    mainly takes into account the stock of lodgings built during the communist era
    and where, as we speak, lodgers of several generations bundle in. Bodgan Suditu:


    There are
    still very many people, in Romania, who are very close to retirement or who have
    just retired, who still live in the apartment they moved into 30-40 years ago, where they raised their children, but the latter
    are gone, while the elderly stayed. So such a situation is a reality of the big
    cities and we should be concerned about that, we need to find solutions
    tailored to the new circumstances, as the elderly inhabiting such very big lodgings,
    that does not mean they have a better living standard, since the maintenance
    costs for such lodgings are very high. And obviously, for some, they have a
    large and fine lodging, yet it is very costly as compared to a retired person’s
    incomes.


    Paradoxically, Romania
    is also the European country with a great number of real estate property owners, the Romanians
    opting for buying their own house or flat rather than paying a rent for their
    lodging. But what are the consequences of that? Bogdan
    Suditu attempts an answer:


    We become owners at a very,
    very high cost. The idea of ownership and the safety ownership brings with it, that
    is a very good thing. Unfortunately, the idea of owning a lodging, apart from
    the costs we’ve spoken about, it comes with very many barriers related to mobility. The moment you purchased the apartment on loan, it is all too clear you are not
    going to move out very easily, even if you may find out after a month, or a year,
    that your neighborhood falls short of certain utilities, After one, two or
    three years, when you have children and you find out there is no nursery school
    in the neighborhood you moved into, it is going to be pretty hard, since you
    contracted a real estate loan and therefore you have no choice other than living in
    a neighborhood on the outskirts of
    Bucharest, Cluj or Iasi, it will be difficult for you to find someone else who
    is willing to buy it so you can find a lodging which is closer to the nursery
    school or closer to a park and suchlike.


    The need for safety provided by having a
    property of your own, that need is still great for the Romanians. Yet the stock
    is very limited of the built lodgings if such a need is to be catered for, a
    need which sometimes is in contradistinction with another one: the need for
    mobility.

  • May 10, 2023

    May 10, 2023

    EDUCATION Trade
    unions in Romanian public education organise a protest rally in Bucharest today, as a way to sound
    the alarm on the problems facing the Romanian education sector. The unions demand pay raises in the sector, as well as an
    annual increase in investments in order to improve the relevant infrastructure
    and equipment. Unionists also warn that a poll
    is under way among education staff, with respect to an all-out strike starting
    on May 22. Meanwhile, new draft
    education laws are being discussed in the Chamber of Deputies for a first vote,
    after the specialist committee introduced a number of amendments to the
    original bills, including a national plan to curb violence in schools.


    VISIT The PM of the Republic of Korea, Han
    Duck-Soo, is on a visit to Bucharest today, and is scheduled to have meetings
    with president Klaus Iohannis and with PM Nicolae Ciucă. The 2 prime ministers
    are to sign a Memorandum of Understanding between the Romanian Maritime Port
    Authority and the Busan Port Authority. The Korean official is also scheduled
    to have a meeting with the Chamber of Deputies speaker, Marcel Ciolacu.


    DEFENCE The Romanian chief of defence,
    general Daniel Petrescu, is taking part today and tomorrow in the meetings of
    the NATO Military Committee and the EU Military Committee, respectively. Defence
    chiefs from the 31 Allied states, with the Swedish chief of defence as a guest,
    will look at the dynamics of the war in Ukraine. Talks will focus on analysing
    the implementation of measures aimed at strengthening NATO’s defence and deterrence
    posture, ahead of the decisions to be made at the NATO Summit in Vilnius. The
    participants will also look at ways to continue supporting Ukraine. Another
    major topic of the meeting is the analysis of member and partner states’
    participation in EU missions and operations.


    INDEPENDENCE Romania celebrates its
    National Independence Day today. On May 10, 1877, Prince Carol I, who would
    subsequently become the first king of Romania, signed the country’s
    Proclamation of Independence from the Ottoman Empire. The document had been
    read in Parliament the day before by the foreign minister Mihail Kogălniceanu, and
    endorsed by Parliament’s two chambers. The occasion is celebrated in Bucharest
    with a ceremony at the Heroes Monument in front of the National Defence
    University, while military and religious ceremonies are also held in cities
    across the country.


    EUROPE In a message on Europe Day, celebrated on May
    9, president Klaus Iohannis said Romania is a mature and responsible member
    state, with a solid and credible European profile, recognised and appreciated
    by our partners. In turn, PM Nicolae Ciucă said Romania is part of the
    solution to the security challenges that the EU is facing, and that now is the
    time for Romania to be acknowledged as a full Schengen member.




    TRANSPORT The European Commission for
    Transport, Adina Vălean, is in Romania today and tomorrow, to hand over to
    Romanian beneficiaries 2 grants for military mobility, in Constanta, in the presence of the
    Romanian transport minister Sorin Grindeanu, the European Commission announced.
    The two projects concern the design and building of the Ungheni bridge and
    upgrading the railway infrastructure in the port of Constanţa, a critical
    element of the EU – Ukraine solidarity lanes. (AMP)

  • November 23, 2019

    November 23, 2019

    ELECTIONS In Romania, the campaign for the second round of the presidential election, due on November 24, has come to a close this morning at 7 am. Competing are the incumbent president Klaus Iohannis, endorsed by the National Liberal Party now in power, and the former Social Democrat PM Viorica Dancilă. The Permanent Election Authority has announced that the Electoral Register has been updated and the total number of voters in the roll is 18,217,411. In the first round, in which 14 candidates took part, Klaus Iohannis got nearly 38% of the votes, and Viorica Dăncilă a little over 22%. The voter turnout was 51.19%. In the Romanian communities abroad, where the vote took place over 3 days, record-high turnout was reported, with over 675,000 people showing up in polling stations. For Sundays runoff as well, the 835 polling stations abroad are open for 3 days, Friday through Sunday, with the possibility for the vote to be extended until midnight on Sunday. The number of Romanians
    having voted abroad in the runoff suggests a higher turnout than in the first round. The vote rate increased in the
    past few hours, after polling stations reopened in all the countries in Europe,
    which host the largest Romanian communities in the world. First ranking are the
    Romanians in Italy, the UK, Germany, Spain and the Republic of Moldova.




    GAUDEAMUS 8,000 book stands have been put up as part of the Gaudeamus Book Fair organised in Bucharest by Radio Romania, in an edition devoted to the 30 years since the anti-communist revolution of 1989. During the 5 days of the Fair, 900 different events are scheduled, including book launches, debates and book signing sessions. Today, on the 4th day of the Fair, Prof. Thierry Wolton takes part in the launch of the second volume of his trilogy “A World History of Communism. In this volume, entitled ‘The Victims’, Thierry Wolton speaks about the tens of millions that suffered imprisonment, deportation, torture and even extermination for their anti-communist beliefs.




    COLECTIV After the Bucharest Court completed its investigations, on Monday the prosecution and the defence will present their closing statements in the case concerning the fire in Colectiv night club in Bucharest 4 years ago, in which 64 people died, one committed suicide further to the trauma and 200 others were injured. The Colectiv trial started in April 2016. After 2 years of deferrals over procedural matters, the judge assigned to the case retired, and during another year the new judge has heard the statements of scores of witnesses and victims.




    DiscoverEU Youth of over 18 years of age may enrol by November 28 in a programme called DiscoverEU, which enables them to travel free of charge in the European Union. Eligible applicants must be citizens of one of the member states and fill in an online form. This is an initiative of the European Parliament, designed to provide young people with new mobility opportunities. The selected candidates will be able to travel, especially by train, for max. 30 days between April 1 and October 31, 2020. Since the programme was launched in 2018, Romania offered nearly 2,000 such permits, out of a total of 50,000 issued in the EU.




    UN The 15 members of the UN Security Council endorsed a declaration reaffirming the ban on chemical weapons. The Council has reached a consensus long undermined by the war in Syria, and the Skripal affair in the UK or Kim Jong-nam case in Malaysia, AFP reports. The Council reaffirms that the use of chemical weapons is a violation of international law, and declares its firm opposition to it. The declaration, proposed by Great Britain, was passed unanimously. The UN Security Council urges all states that have not yet done so to sign the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons, which was signed in 1993 and came into force in 1997. Syria joined the Convention in 2013, Israel has signed it, but is yet to ratify it, whereas North Korea, Egypt and South Sudan are not yet parties to this Convention.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • March 24, 2019

    March 24, 2019

    VISIT The PM of Romania, Viorica Dăncilă, is in the USA until Tuesday, to take part in the conference of the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), at the invitation of the AIPAC president Morton Fridman, and executive director Howard Kohr. On Saturday, the PM met in Washington with representatives of American companies having invested in Romania. According to a government press release, Dancila presented the measures taken by her Cabinet to enhance the attractiveness of the Romanian business environment. The American investors appreciated the opportunities offered by Bucharest for the development of the strategic defence industry and for investments in healthcare, energy, research and innovation, IT and communications. The participants also discussed the recent changes in the public private partnership legislation, emphasising that it includes broader contractual terms and allows for more flexible financing, enabling parties to share the risks and benefits.




    MEETING EU transport ministers and state secretaries are taking part on March 26th and 27th in the informal meeting of EU transport ministers held in Bucharest under the Romanian Presidency of the Council of the EU. They will discuss, among other things, the future of mobility in the Union and means to strengthen connectivity and cohesion by means of the TEN-T network. According to the organisers, an enlarged and consolidated trans-European transport network will help improve territorial cohesion, the accessibility and connectivity of all regions in the EU, thus stimulating investments and narrowing development gaps.




    TRANSPORT The Romanian Transport Operator Federation (FORT) announces in a news release that on Wednesday, March 27th they will protest in Strasbourg against the EU Mobility Package 1, alongside other employer associations from Romania and Eastern European countries. The Federation is against the obligation for drivers to return home at least every 4 weeks or, if a driver chooses the reduced weekly rest option, every 3 weeks on the road. FORT also demands a review of regular weekly rest rules and is also against applying the rules of posting to road transport.




    PROTESTS The weekly “yellow vest protest in France took place on Saturday under strict police control, following the incidents of March 16th in Paris, which had prompted President Emmanuel Macrons criticism of the police force. According to Radio Romanias correspondent in Paris, protesters access to certain parts of the city was prohibited, and the police checked thousands of people to identify individuals intent on resorting to violence. Across the country, many individuals were detained while trying to reach Paris equipped with baseball bats, projectiles, gas masks. Significant clashes between the protesters and the police were also reported in Lyon, Lille and Montpellier, but order has been restored. The so-called “yellow vest movement emerged in November as a protest against a rise in fuel prices.




    TENNIS The Romanian tennis player Simona Halep, no 3 in the world, is playing today against Slovenian Polona Hercog, in the 3rd round of the Miami tournament, which has over 9 million US dollars in total prize money. In the doubles, Simona Halep and Julia Goerges (Germany) qualified on Saturday in the 8th-finals. Another Romanian, Raluca Olaru, playing together with Croatian Darija Jurak, is also playing in the 8th-finals of the doubles tournament, against Lara Arruabarrena of Spain / Heather Watson (UK). Also today, Monica Niculescu of Romania and Abigail Spears of the USA, defeated Anna-Lena Groenefeld (Germany) / Lucie Hradecka (the Czeck Republic), 2-0, 6-3, 7-5. On Saturday, Monica Niculescu (138 WTA) lost to Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark (13 WTA) 6-4, 7-6 (4), in the 3rd round of the Miami tournament.




    FOOTBALL Romanias national football team was defeated on Saturday night, 2-1, in Sweden, in a EURO 2020 qualifier match held at the Friends Arena in Solna. On Tuesday, Romania is playing at home against Faroe. The top 2 teams in each group qualify into the final tournament. The drawing for the Euro 2020 takes place in Bucharest on November 30. The Romanian capital city will also host 4 final tournament games, 3 in the group stage and an 8th-final. Meanwhile, Romanias Under-21 team Thursday lost a friendly against Spain, and are scheduled to play on Monday against Denmark. In the 2019 European Youth Championship hosted by Italy and San Marino, Romania plays in Group C, alongside England, France and Croatia.



    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Gov’t Encourages Employment

    Gov’t Encourages Employment

    The Government of Romania has taken measures to support vulnerable categories, such as the unemployed who must move town in order to find a job or those who want to return to Romania to work, and has endorsed incentives and measures designed to create new jobs. According to Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos, this is for the first time that European and national funds are consistently earmarked so that they may have a concrete impact on markets and peoples living standards.



    Specifically, Labour Minister Dragos Paslaru has announced that the unemployed who decide to move town in order to get a job will receive a signing bonus of roughly 2,800 euros. The bonus will be paid in two instalments, the first half upon signing the employment contract and the second one after the first year on the new job. Labour Minister Dragos Paslaru:



    Dragos Paslaru: “We are introducing an activation bonus of slightly over 100 euros for any long-term unemployed person who takes up a job. The second element is what we call a ‘mobility package. We are basically introducing the concept of support for commuting in Romania. This employment bonus enables anybody in Romania who is jobless and decides to get a job more than 15 km away from home to receive a subsidy of 0.5 lei per km, with a ceiling of 55 lei per day, so that they may commute to work.



    In order to benefit from the activation bonus, a new employee must keep the same job for minimum 3 months. Employers will also receive subsidies, the Labour Minister Dragos Paslaru also says:



    Dragos Paslaru: The activation bonus and the mobility package are given to employees, not to companies. But there are also active measures, designed to encourage companies to hire people, and which are offered to employers. There is a 200-euro monthly bonus paid for 12 or 18 months to employers who hire young people, people with disabilities, single parents, elderly people or pensioners.



    These measures will come into force on December 1. Also, for the second time this year, the Government has allotted additional funds to the “First Home programme, which helps people buy their first home. The additional funding will be channelled primarily into the applications currently in various review and pre-approval stages, and not to new applications. The budget set aside for guaranteeing the loans taken up by Romanian citizens living abroad will be re-directed to the overall loan guarantee fund.

    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)