Tag: public sector pay

  • 1 July, 2017 UPDATE

    1 July, 2017 UPDATE

    Weather. After a hot day, yellow and orange
    code alerts for storm have been issued in Romania. Torrential rain, hail and
    thunderstorms are expected in the south-west, centre and east of the country
    and in the mountains. The weather will become even more unstable on Sunday
    evening, when a yellow code alert will be in place in the south and south-east
    of the country. In some areas, the lows will not drop below 20 degrees Celsius,
    while the highs will reach 34 degrees.




    Protests. Fresh anti-government protests have been
    announced on Sunday in Bucharest, three days after the investiture of a
    government formed by the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals
    and Democrats and led by the Social Democrat Mihai Tudose. The civic
    organisations initiating the protest blame the government for the slow pace of the
    anti-corruption fight, in particular at top level. We recall that five months
    ago, hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets in Bucharest, across
    the country and in the diaspora to protest against plans by the previous
    government to ease criminal laws via an emergency order. The move was seen as
    an attempt to exempt influential figures from the political scene and the
    administration from accountability.




    UK-Romania. Great Britain and Romania have a special
    partnership, which they wish to develop and strengthen, said the British
    ambassador to Bucharest Paul Brummel at a conference on the consequences of the
    UK’s leaving the European Union. He emphasised that bilateral trade exchanges
    have reached record levels, at around 4 billion euros a year. Earlier, Brummel
    said 2017 is the most intense year in recent years with respect to
    Romanian-British military partnership. He said the Romanians who live, work and
    study in Great Britain are welcome, adding that he was delighted with the
    quality of Romanian doctors working in his country.




    Law. The public
    sector pay law came into force on the 1st of July, after being
    signed by president Klaus Iohannis this week. The law will, however, be applied
    starting next year. It provides for a gradual increase in public sector
    salaries within the next five years, by more than 50% on average. The pension
    index also went up by 9% on 1st of July. At the same time, however,
    the price of electricity for domestic users went up by 8%, according to the
    liberalisation timetable. A full liberalisation is expected on 1st
    of January 2018, when the electricity price will be established by the stock
    market.




    Defence.
    The Romanian president Klaus Iohannis has called a meeting of the Country’s
    Supreme Defence Council on Tuesday to discuss the army’s equipping plan for the
    2016-2026 period. This year, Romania has allocated 2% of its GDP to defence
    spending. The meeting on Tuesday will also look at the activity of the Romanian
    Intelligence Service in 2016. According to the president’s office, the
    Country’s Supreme Defence Council will also discuss about the number of troops
    that may be made available by Romania for international missions and operations
    in 2018.




    EU. On Saturday, Estonia took over the EU rotating
    presidency for the first time since joining the bloc in 2004. One of its
    priorities will be to consolidate cooperation with the countries in Africa and
    the Middle East to manage the migration problem. Another important goal,
    according to the country’s prime minister Juri Ratas, is the digitalisation of
    Europe and the free movement of data. The president of the European Commission
    Jean-Claude Juncker, who travelled to Tallin on Friday, welcomed the intentions
    of the Estonian government.




    Festival. In July, Bucharest is playing host to
    the International Street Theatre Festival, which brings together hundreds of
    participants from Romania, France, Columbia, Italy, Germany, Holland, Austria
    and Spain. Every week-end from Friday to Sunday, the streets of Bucharest will
    host performances on stilts, magic shows, street dance performances and living
    statues. Acrobatics, light shows, juggling with torches and tango and cabaret
    performances will be held in the evening.




    Tennis.
    World no. 2 Simona Halep of Romania will play Marina Erakovic of New Zealand on
    Monday in the first round at Wimbledon, the third Grand Slam tournament of the
    year. Last year, Halep reached the quarterfinals at Wimbledon and was a
    semifinalist in 2014. Also in the first round of the women’s draw, Romania’s
    Monica Niculescu, world no. 51, will face Slovakia’s Magdalena Rybarikova;
    Sorana Cirstea, world no. 62, plays Dutch player Kiki Bartens; while Irina
    Begu, world no. 69, faces the British player Naomi Broady. Ana Bogdan, world
    no. 114, who makes her Grand Slam debut, will face the Chinese player Ying-Ying
    Duan. In the men’s draw, Romania’s Marius Copil, world no. 85, will face the
    German player Peter Gojowczyk in the first round.

  • The Week in Review: 24 June-1 July

    The Week in Review: 24 June-1 July

    Romania has a new government


    The new Romanian
    Government, headed by Mihai Tudose, was endorsed by Parliament and then sworn
    in on Thursday. Romania needs an alert government, focused on performance, and
    the new team will have to make up for the delays caused by the previous
    Government, so that the goals set in the governing programme are reached, the
    new Prime Minister Mihai Tudose has stated:




    Romania is
    currently in a good economic situation. The economy has been growing, we have a
    well-developed industry, and both incomes and consumption have also grown. What
    we still lack is a serious growth in investments and revenues to the budget.




    Romania’s
    President Klaus Iohannis has been harsh on the ruling coalition, which, unhappy
    with its former Cabinet, removed it under a no-confidence motion only after six
    months after investiture, blaming it for failing to implement the governing
    programme that brought victory to the Social Democrats in December 2016. The
    head of state stressed the fact that, along with appointing a new Government,
    the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats,
    supported by the Union of Ethnic Hungarians, have changed the governing
    programme too. Klaus Iohannis:


    In six months,
    we have passed from tax lowering to levying new taxes, from pay rises to
    solidarity taxes. Such a behavior is by no means characterized by
    fiscal-budgetary predictability. Dear members of the Social Democratic Party
    and of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, on behalf of all Romanians I
    urge you to stop this hop on-hop off.




    The president signs public sector pay
    law


    The recent
    political crisis in Bucharest has raised fears that the public sector salary
    law will be left aside for a while and its implementation delayed. Moreover,
    the removal of the Social-Democratic Cabinet headed by Sorin Grindeanu, who
    initiated the bill in the first place, and the prospects of its being replaced
    by a government of a different political colour had the pessimists believe that
    the law, benefiting a large part of the population, would be forgotten.
    However, everybody’s fears were dispelled when it was announced that president
    Iohannis promulgated the law.




    A communiqué
    issued by the Presidential Administration reads that the head of state supports
    the need for a sustainable increase in the salaries of public employees, in
    order for their living standard to increase. The president has also stressed
    the fact that it is the responsibility of the Social Democratic Party and the
    Alliance of Liberals and Democrats to ensure a balanced growth and to harmonise
    the income growth objective with that of maintaining Romania’s macro-economic
    and budgetary stability. The public salary law stipulates that over the coming
    five years, state employees’ salaries will grow by more than 50% on average.
    However, the law has come under criticism from employers associations and trade
    unions.




    The investigation into the 2009
    presidential elections is closed


    The Prosecutor
    General’s Office on Tuesday closed the investigation into the presidential
    elections of December 2009, having failed to discover any illegal acts of abuse
    of office and forgery of documents and electoral records. An inquiry began
    following allegations by the journalist and political advisor Dan Andronic that
    a number of high-ranking officials, including Romania’s former Prosecutor
    General Laura Codruta Kovesi and the former Romanian Intelligence Service
    general Florian Coldea were at the home of the former deputy prime minister
    Gabriel Oprea on the evening before the second round of the presidential
    elections and helped Traian Basescu win the elections. The latter won a second
    term defeating his rival Mircea Geoana by a narrow margin.




    A number of
    politicians holding public offices in 2009 were heard by the prosecutors as
    part of the case. Investigators also requested documents from state
    institutions such as the Permanent Electoral Authority and the Special
    Telecommunications Service. A parliamentary committee is also looking into the
    2009 presidential elections.




    Romania faces extreme heat


    Many countries
    in Europe, including Romania have been faced with a heat wave starting last
    week. A yellow code alert for heat and thermal discomfort was first issued on
    Wednesday in 12 counties in the west, south and centre, where temperatures
    reached 33 to 36 degrees Celsius. On Thursday, the colour code alert was raised
    to orange, as temperatures went up to 40 degrees. For Saturday, the authorities
    even issued a red code alert in some areas, where temperatures are expected to
    reach 44 degrees Celsius in the shade.




    More than 800
    ambulance cars and almost 300 special vehicles belonging to the Mobile Emergency Service
    for Resuscitation and Extrication (SMURD) have been made
    available and are ready to intervene in case of an emergency. The heat wave has
    also affected the capital Bucharest. Just like last year, the local authorities
    have put in place 20 air-conditioned tents with medical staff ready to provide
    assistance, water and medicines to passers-by in need of help.