Showing posts with label ROMANIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ROMANIA. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 April 2021

Pakistan’s Economy Shows Signs of a Nascent Recovery

Pakistan’s Economy Shows Signs of a Nascent Recovery


NEWS DESK


Notwithstanding, the recent rise in COVID cases, Pakistan has been showing signs of a fragile economic recovery with a gradual resumption of economic dynamism, according to a new World Bank report.

Pakistan’s economic growth is expected to reach 1.3 percent in FY2021 and strengthen to an average of 2.7 percent for FY2022-23, according to the Pakistan Development Update released. The baseline economic growth forecast, however, is highly uncertain, especially given the third and more-contagious wave of the pandemic currently circulating in the country.

Private consumption is estimated to have picked up over July to December 2020, in part due to the record increase in remittances inflows, social assistance support from the Ehsaas program, the government’s construction package, and a return to pre-COVID mobility levels from September 2020. Investment is also estimated to be recovering, as machinery imports and cement sales both recorded double-digit growth rates during this period.

“It is crucial to sustain the positive reform momentum to continue to boost the competitiveness of Pakistan’s economy and lay a strong foundation for a more robust, inclusive and sustainable recovery,” said Najy Benhassine, World Bank Country Director for Pakistan. “Increasing competitiveness and stimulating private investment and exports will require continued macroeconomic stability, maintenance of a market-determined exchange rate, and improving the business environment to enable all firms, particularly SMEs, to access markets and compete openly in a leveled playing field. The potential for a strong recovery and a growth acceleration is there. Reforms to make it happen need to be further sustained.”

Given the scope and magnitude of the COVID-19 crisis, understanding how the pandemic affected Pakistan’s private sector will be key to informing the design of new policy measures or refining existing ones to prevent widespread long-term firm closures and job losses.

This edition of the Pakistan Development Update also presents the findings of two waves of World Bank Business Pulse Surveys and suggests several key policy measures to further support the recovery of the private sector and the Pakistani economy.

“Despite some recovery in the private sector, many firms remain vulnerable and require support to prevent closures and further job losses. Policy measures that prevent permanent firm closures and further job losses will contribute significantly to sustaining the recovery,” said Derek H. C. Chen, World Bank Senior Economist for Pakistan.

The policy measures that can be considered include enhancing private sector access to formal finance, in particular for Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises, streamlining regulatory and administrative requirements to ease compliance costs, and providing support to firms in digitizing and establishing an online presence.

The Pakistan Development Update is a companion piece to the South Asia Economic Focus, a twice-a-year World Bank report that examines economic developments and prospects in the South Asia region and analyzes policy challenges faced by countries. The Spring 2021 edition titled South Asia Vaccinates, launched on March 31, 2021, shows that economic activity in South Asia is bouncing back, but growth is uneven, recovery remains fragile, and the economic outlook is precarious. The report also focuses on the different dimensions of vaccine deployment and provides a cost-benefit analysis of vaccination in the region.

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Friday, 9 April 2021

ROMANIA IN ACTION: Romania to launch mobile COVID-19 vaccination centers this month

ROMANIA IN ACTION: Romania to launch mobile COVID-19 vaccination centers this month


BUCHAREST, APR 9: Romanian officials plan to launch the first mobile COVID-19 vaccination centers this month in an effort to boost rural access to the vaccine. Valeriu Gheorghita, the coordinator of the national vaccination campaign, said that vaccination in such centers could start on April 20.

“On April 20, we want to start vaccinations at mobile centers; about 20 mobile centers will be set up in a first stage, they will be distributed nationwide, and will be coordinated by the County Committee for Management and Coordination of Intervention in cooperation with military hospitals because all these 20 centers operate with human resources from the Ministry of Defense,” Gheoghita said in a press conference on Tuesday, April 6, according to News.ro.

These mobile centers will go to rural localities where the population doesn’t have access to vaccination centers or family doctors, and will mainly use the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Valeriu Gheorghita also explained.

According to Secretary of State for Health Andrei Baciu, Romania is set to receive more than 8.3 million COVID-19 vaccine doses in April and May, including the first batches of Johnson & Johnson vaccines, Digi24 reported. Currently, Romania uses the Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca vaccines.

“This week, we will receive 134,400 doses from Moderna and 110,564 doses from AstraZeneca. As for the vaccines produced by Pfizer-BioNTech, we will receive 511,000 doses a week, from the information we have for the next two weeks. 512,000 doses will arrive in the last week of April, bringing the total to 2,046,330 doses at the end of April. For Moderna, nothing has changed from the week before, we are talking about a minimum of 280,800 doses for April, and for AstraZeneca, 879,990,” Baciu said.

Romania kicked off the vaccination campaign on December 27. By April 6, more than 2.15 million people received the vaccine: 897,857 got the first dose, and over 1.25 million received both doses.

According to Valeriu Gheorghita, 780,000 people who want to receive the COVID-19 vaccine have signed up on waiting lists by Tuesday, April 6. Most of them are from Bucharest and the counties of Cluj and Prahova.

“At the moment, we have about 780,000 people on the waiting lists. By category, about 60% are people belonging to the general population, included in the third stage of the vaccination campaign, about 32% are people belonging to the vulnerable category, people with chronic diseases, people over 65, people with disabilities, and about 7.5% are individuals working in key areas,” Gheorghita said, according to News.ro.

By areas, more than 150,000 people on waiting lists are from Bucharest, almost 60,000 are from the county of Cluj, 37,000 are from Prahova county, over 29,000 are from Iasi county, and also over 29,000 are from Ilfov county, according to the data presented by Gheorghita.

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COURTESY romania-insider

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Saturday, 3 April 2021

Romania's Environmental Guard to use drones to monitor air quality, pollution levels

Romania's Environmental Guard to use drones to monitor air quality, pollution levels


BUCHAREST, APR 3: Romania's Environmental Guard intends to buy almost 50 drones equipped with state-of-the-art sensors that will be used to monitor air quality and pollution levels across the country, the institution's head Octavian Berceanu told Digi24. Data collected by the drones will also be used to create maps of risk areas.

"We need drones. We will buy drones with air quality sensors, gas sensors, thermal sensors [...], and multispectral sensors," Berceanu said.

The multispectral sensors will help the authorities determine the level of vegetation degradation, he explained.

After purchasing the drones, the Environmental Guard also plans to use the collected data to create maps of risk areas and issue pollution alerts.

Air pollution is a major issue in Bucharest and other big cities in Romania. In mid-March, for example, the capital has recorded worrying air pollution levels, with many of the sensors of an independent air quality monitoring network showing high particulate matter PM 2.5 and PM 10 pollution levels across the city. At that time, Environmental Guard representatives said the main cause of the spike in air pollution was the illegal burning of used car tires in localities around Bucharest.

According to a report released in October 2020, pollution costs EUR 166 billion per year in Europe. In Bucharest, the annual cost of air pollution is EUR 6.3 billion - the second-highest after London (EUR 11.4 billion). The per capita cost in the Romanian capital is slightly over EUR 3,000.

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COURTESY romania-insider.com

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Romanian art exhibition opens at Bucharest's airport

Romanian art exhibition opens at Bucharest's airport


BUCHAREST, APR 3: An exhibition dedicated to Romanian art opened in the boarding area of Bucharest's Henri Coanda International Airport (also known as the Otopeni Airport).

The exhibition, which will stay open until September 30, is part of the Art Safari Airport Museum - a joint initiative of Art Safari and the Bucharest Airports National Company aimed at promoting Romanian art.

"Following the model of the world's major airports - San Francisco, Istanbul, Amsterdam or Shanghai - whose terminals host exhibits representative for the history and art of the host country, the exhibition showcases at the Bucharest airport will help reveal the national identity through visual art while making the travelers' experience more pleasant,".

The first exhibition hosted by Art Safari Airport Museum is organized in partnership with the Museum of Bucharest. It features paintings by Alexandru Ciucurencu, Vasile Grigore, Ion Musceleanu, Spiru Vergulescu, Ion Grigore, and Zamfir Dumitrescu, as well as contemporary works of art signed by artists such as Sami Briss, Georges Mazilu, Ana Ruxandra Ilfoveanu, Petre Velicu, and Felix Aftene.

Romanian art exhibition opens at Bucharest's airport

The organizers said they plan to renew the exhibition with new themes and artists, most likely once every six months.

"Airports occupy an important place in our lives, being the first stop where people come into contact with another country. That is why we strive to turn the time spent in this space into a unique experience, giving them some clues about what Romania means. The Romanian art is a compelling argument, so in an extremely delicate current context, we support Romanian art by promoting it and presenting it to the public in a dedicated space at the Henri Coanda International Airport," said Cosmin Catalin Pestesan, general manager of the Bucharest Airports National Company.

Art Safari, an independent cultural operator present on the Romanian art scene, is best known for organizing the annual Bucharest Art Pavilion, whose exhibitions have been visited by approximately 195,000 people in the seven editions so far.

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COURTESY romania-insider.com

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Wednesday, 17 February 2021

ROMANIA SPECIAL REPORT: Romanian govt unveils 2021 budget, promises big reforms

 

ROMANIA SPECIAL REPORT: Romanian govt unveils 2021 budget, promises big reforms

BUCHAREST, FEB 17: Romania's Government will pursue big reforms in four areas (pensions, incomes, education, and public administration) this year, announced prime minister Florin Citu along with the publication of the 2021 budget planning, Adevarul reported.

As previously announced, the public deficit is planned to reach 7.16% of the GDP this year, down from 9.8% of GDP last year.

PM Citu assured that he would get involved personally in promoting these reforms and thoroughly evaluate each minister's performance at the middle of the year when the budget execution for the first half of the year becomes available.

He stressed that the incomes in the budgetary sector were frozen, and he expects from each minister and state-owned company a plan of reforms by mid-year.

Compressing the public payroll, pensions, and other social benefits within the legal provisions is one of the main elements supposed to support fiscal consolidation, judging from the measures outlined by PM Citu.

The bonuses and other benefits will be maintained at the level of December 2020, and the holiday-related bonuses and vouchers are waived.

The overtime will be compensated in kind. The social security expenditures - the biggest single expenditure in Romania's budget (some one third) - will increase by RON 4.4 billion (EUR 0.9 bln) to RON 143 bln (just under EUR 30 bln, or 14% of GDP) this year.

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COURTESY romania-insider

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Monday, 15 February 2021

NEW EXPERIMENT: Dogs trained in Romania to detect people infected with COVID-19

 

NEW EXPERIMENT: Dogs trained in Romania to detect people infected with COVID-19

BUCHAREST, FEB 15: The Romanian Police's Dog Center in Sibiu, in central Romania, is training dogs to detect people infected with the SARS-Cov-2 virus, interior minister Lucian Bode announced. According to him, the project started last year, and the dogs will mainly be used by the border and transport police units.

"It is an ongoing process, and I am convinced that we will soon present concrete results of our colleagues' work in this center," minister Bode said.

In the 70 years of the institution's existence, remarkable results have been obtained in the fight against drugs, in counterterrorism intervention, forensic investigation, restricting illegal migration, rescuing victims, and carrying out public order actions.

And soon, the dogs trained here will also contribute to the fight against the spread of the SARS-Cov-2 virus, the minister also said.

Interior minister Bode and defense minister Nicolae Ciuca visited the Romanian Police's Dog Center in Sibiu on Thursday, February 11.

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COURTESY romania-insider.com

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Thursday, 28 January 2021

Romania is "fully prepared" to join Schengen: Prime minister Citu

 

Romania is "fully prepared" to join Schengen: Prime minister Citu

BUCHAREST, JAN 28: Romania is "fully prepared" to join the Schengen area, 

Romanian prime minister Florin Citu told his Dutch counterpart Mark Rutte 

in a phone conversation on Monday, January 25.


"Yesterday [e.n. Monday] I had a telephone conversation with the prime minister 

of the Netherlands, Mark Rutte. We analyzed the promising prospects for 

cooperation between Romania and the Netherlands, focusing on strengthening 

economic relations and boosting political dialogue," Citu wrote in a Facebook post.


"Our legitimate goal of joining the Schengen area was one of the key points 

reached in the discussion with prime minister Rutte, to whom I told that Romania 

is, without a doubt, fully prepared to enter the Schengen area," the Romanian 

PM added.


The evolution of the pandemic and the vaccination process in the two states 

were two other topics discussed, Florin Citu also said. 


Romania's accession to the Schengen area since 2011, according to G4media.ro. 

In May 2019, during the EU summit in Sibiu, the Dutch prime minister said that 

Romania would be ready for admission to the Schengen area "when it complies 

with the rule of law and democracy."


In December 2018, the European Parliament adopted a report supporting the 

Schengen membership for Bulgaria and Romania.

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COURTESY romania-insider

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Friday, 18 December 2020

Romania ready to launch COVID vaccination on Dec 27, along with other EU countries

 

Romania ready to launch COVID vaccination on Dec 27, along with other EU countries

BUCHAREST, DEC 2020 - Romania is ready to start vaccination against COVID on December 27, along with other EU countries, the first to be vaccinated will be the medical staff from the 10 hospitals that were involved from the beginning in treating patients with COVID-19, authorities say. Vaccinated persons will receive a certificate containing data on the batch and series of the vaccine.


The declared vaccine acceptance rate is different between COVID and non-COVID hospitals. In COVID hospitals, it is over 95%, while in the rest of the hospitals the acceptance rate is 70% for those with higher education and around 50% for those with secondary education.

There is also a degree of acceptance of vaccination of about 80% among family physicians.

In anticipation of the start of vaccination on December 27, for the medical staff at the forefront of the fight against the virus, the Cantacuzino Institute is already ready to receive vaccines, with a capacity of 1.5 million doses to be distributed to county centers, and the chain distribution will be supported by the Ministry of National Defense, the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Health, News.ro reports .

The vaccination campaign will involve 1,500 to 2,000 doctors, 4,500 nurses and 2,000 registrars , who would be paid, and discussions on this topic are ongoing.

The second stage of vaccination is expected to start in February.

Medical authorities say there is no need for pre-vaccination testing, with the argument that about 10% of volunteers involved in the vaccine testing phase went through the disease and did not know it, as did people who had the active virus and had a very good answer.

According to the same authorities, even those who are vaccinated will have to wear a mask until an immunity rate of over 60-70% is reached. Each vaccinated person will receive a vaccination certificate and will be contacted the day before to report for the booster.

The vaccination certificate will be written in both Romanian and English, and will contain mentions regarding the batch and the series of the vaccine, being a forensic document.

According to the authorities, most of those who are reluctant to get vaccinated say they do not have enough information, which is why information campaigns will be launched.

The Minister of Health, Nelu Tătaru, announced on Wednesday that the first 10,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine, with which 5,000 people will be vaccinated, will arrive in the country between Christmas and New Year and will be distributed to the medical staff working in infectious disease departments.

"On December 21, it is expected to have the approval for this vaccine of the European Medicines Agency. From then on, they can reach each of the 27 member countries. Between Christmas and New Year's Eve, there will be a first symbolic tranche of 10,000 doses, which means vaccination and booster for 5,000 people, which we will direct to the wards. infectious diseases ", declared Nelu Tătaru on Wednesday afternoon, at Digi 24.

Minister Tătaru mentioned that, starting with January, Romania will receive, in stages, monthly, other vaccines, so that until the beginning of next summer, the categories provided in the vaccination plan will be vaccinated in turn.

Regarding the transport of the vaccine, it will be done by the manufacturer, in "special transports", with freezers that can ensure temperatures of minus 80 - minus 90 degrees Celsius.

Each container contains five doses of vaccine that can be five days at two degrees, Tataru said.

On Wednesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the 27 EU states would be able to "start the same day" their anti-Covid vaccination campaigns after the approval of the vaccine developed by Pfizer-BioNTech. 

The European Union could officially approve the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech to fight the new coronavirus as early as December 23, just two days after the possible agreement of the regulatory authority, a European Commission official said on Wednesday, quoted by Reuters .

According to EU regulations, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) recommends the approval of new medicines and vaccines, but the final decision on their marketing is taken by the European Commission, after consultation with EU governments.

The agency announced on Tuesday that it could issue a recommendation on the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech on December 21.

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COURTESY universul.net

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