The before and after of Romania's crisis

Publish date: 17-08-2009
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Sustained economic growth, a stronger national currency, and a relaxed budget: this is what the government headed by Calin Popescu Tariceanu was expecting when it approved the first budget for 2009. In Parliament, there was talk about a 50 percent increase in teacher salaries. At this same time, in the United States, Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy.

The election of Prime Minister Emil Boc's cabinet in December 2008 meant an adjustment of expectations, albeit optimistically upwards. The increase in gross domestic product (GDP) should have been 2.5 percent rather than the six percent estimated by the former government, and salary-related promises were still standing, while the National Bank of Romania (BNR) was accusing rating agencies of doing Romania wrong.

A four percent economic decline, included in the budget when the stand-by arrangement in the amount of $17.1 billion with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was signed, was the worst-case scenario. But this turned out to be an optimistic scenario, as data indicated a 6.2 percent drop in GDP in the first quarter and an 8.8 percent decline in Q2. Calculated in euro, Romania's GDP in 2009 will be 25 percent lower than initial estimates, namely €118.5 billion, instead of €161 bln. In terms of economic growth, Minister of Finance Gheorghe Pogea forecast a 2.5 percent increase in GDP for the whole of 2009 back in January. Unfortunately, according to a statement by Senate Chairman Mircea Geoana in June 2009, "Romania is living through its third recession in the past 20 years. This is the deepest of the three recessions."

The situation was quite optimistic in September 2008, when then Prime Minister Tariceanu said that "by 2014, Romania could become the seventh or eighth economic power in Europe, provided current economic trends are maintained." But the economic crisis hit the United States. And even though former Minister of Finance Varujan Vosganian said in September 2008 that "the financial and real estate crisis in the United States, Spain, and the United Kingdom will not affect Romania," reality proved him wrong. Although a loan from the IMF was out of the question at the beginning of this year, this went on to become a short-term solution for the authorities. "The last thing Romania will do is borrow money from the IMF. Romania's economy cannot fit the fund's matrix. I am convinced that we have other solutions than the IMF," said President Traian Basescu in January 2009, but on 25 March Romania was officially requesting the IMF's support, and on 4 May the IMF's Executive Board approved this request.

standard.money.ro

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