Tag: prime minister’s hour

  • Romania’s economy – as seen by the government and the opposition

    Romania’s economy – as seen by the government and the opposition

    Following the
    implementation of two measures with a strong economic and social impact, the
    cut in the VAT rate for food products and doubling the amount of child
    benefits, prime minister Victor Ponta on Tuesday presented Parliament with the
    situation of the economy as part of a new practice called the Prime Minister’s
    hour, based on Britain’s Questions to the Prime Minister.




    Victor Ponta
    told MPs that three years after recession, Romania now has the highest economic
    growth rate in the European Union. The GDP grew by 4.2% in the first quarter of
    the year and the country’s foreign debt has almost entirely been paid back. The
    fact that the economy is performing so well is no accident, said Ponta:




    This growth is
    not based on circumstantial factors, but on domestic consumption, exports, the
    growth of the industrial sector and services, and most importantly this year,
    also a growth in the building sector, which we should continue to encourage.
    2015 began with a significant growth in the amount of direct foreign
    investment. We paid back almost the entire loan contracted and spent by our
    colleagues from the Liberal Democratic Party in the opposition. We have met
    each of the deficit targets established together with our international
    partners.




    The prime
    minister thanked Parliament for the support given to his cabinet to implement
    two important measures for Romania’s economy: the cut in VAT rates for food
    products and non-alcoholic drinks to reach 9% and doubling the amount of child
    benefits. He called for further support to pass the new Fiscal Code bill, the
    Transport Master Plan and the new public procurement bill. Unimpressed with
    the figures presented by the prime minister, the Liberal opposition said the
    number of businesses that have been declared insolvent in recent years has
    increased dramatically, while family incomes have dropped. Liberal MP Ludovic
    Orban:




    During your
    term as prime minister, more than 370,000 businesses have closed and almost
    80,000 have begun insolvency procedures. Over 450 businesses have gone bust.
    How can we support the development of domestic capital when public investment
    has been systematically reduced?




    The Liberals
    also quoted a European Commission report that denounces, among others, the
    unpredictability of Romania’s fiscal measures and the adoption of an
    unsustainable investment strategy. The conclusion of the opposition was that
    the government has no credibility left and the little progress seen by the
    economy came in spite of the Social Democratic rule and not because of it.