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From: Vali <[email protected]>
To: Vali <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, June 12, 2010 10:58:27 AM
Subject: [romania_eu_list] Key political risks to watch in Romania

  
http://www.iii. co.uk/news/ ?type=afxnews&articleid=7939130&action=article
 
(AFX UK Focus) 2010-06-11 13:10
FACTBOX-Key political risks to watch in Romania
By Sam Cage
 
BUCHAREST, June 11 (Reuters) - Recession-hit Romania, the European Union's 
second-poorest member, is having to take increasingly tough measures to stick 
within strict International Monetary Fund requirements for an economic bailout 
package.

The southeast European country offered the fastest economic growth rates in the 
EU until a real estate and credit bubble burst in 2008. It now faces rising 
unemployment and social unrest against painful spending cuts.

Its economy, which contracted more than 7 percent last year, is still mired in 
recession and dependent on a 20 billion euro, IMF-led rescue package requiring 
strict control of spending and the budget deficit.
Below are the main political risks for Romania :
 
IMF FUNDING

The IMF has put the latest tranche of aid for Romania on hold pending spending 
cuts that will be tough to push through but are needed to meet this year's 
fiscal gap target of 6.8 percent of gross domestic product.

The government is proposing slashing public wages by 25 percent and pensions 
and unemployment benefits by 15 percent.

Demand for Romania 's debt plummeted and the cost of insuring it rose when the 
IMF deal was put on hold due to a political crisis in 2009. The leu currency 
also fell, indicating how sensitive markets are to any hold-up in the payments.

Romania is again struggling to sell debt at yields it is willing to pay, a 
reminder that last year's slide in markets is likely to be repeated if there is 
any further delay or suspension in aid disbursement.

What to watch:
-- Can the government force through drastic cuts or will it give in to pressure 
and water them down? Uncertainty over its ability to implement restraint has 
knocked some 2 percent off the leu in the last two weeks.
-- Will it succeed in bringing the budget deficit within the IMF target for 
2010?
-- Can it get debt auctions moving? After failing to shift one-, three- and 
five-year paper since May 6, it is trying to auction six-month paper on Monday.
 
GOVERNMENT STABILITY

President Traian Basescu was re-elected in a close and disputed election in 
December. He named centrist Emil Boc as prime minister. Boc is backed by ethnic 
Hungarians and independents, whose support he needs for a majority in 
parliament.

That ended a three-month long political crisis and led to resumption of the 
international aid deal, boosting the leu and reducing the cost of insuring 
Romania 's sovereign debt.

Greater political stability also gave the central bank room to cut interest 
rates to a record low in a bid to kickstart the economy, but Boc's majority is 
still fragile and he is vulnerable to defections from his own party and its 
allies.

What to watch:
-- The government faces a no-confidence vote on June 15 over its planned cuts, 
which it seems likely to win. A defeat would cause a full-blown political 
crisis and probably send markets into freefall.
-- Coalition partners, particularly independents, could withdraw support for 
Boc, meaning he would have to negotiate legislation -- including badly-needed 
judicial reforms -- on a bill-by-bill basis. 
-- Basescu could replace Boc, whose unpopularity is growing because of the 
proposed austerity measures. But any new prime minister would be likely to have 
the same difficulties commanding a functioning majority.
 
PROTESTS AND STRIKES

Some 30,000 people rallied in central Bucharest on May 19 over deep government 
spending cuts, casting doubt on its ability and willingness to force the 
measures through.

The leu and blue-chip stocks fell on the protest, and the cost of insuring 
Romania 's sovereign debt rose.

Trade unions have promised more action -- including a general strike on June 
15, the same day as the no-confidence vote -- to try to force the government to 
abandon its plans.

In dozens of protests around Romania over the past two months, protesters have 
chanted "Down with the government", but unions have so far not publicly backed 
this demand.

What to watch:
-- Can unions can gain enough backing to extend general strikes beyond one day? 
Short-term action is unlikely to have a significant impact on markets but a 
prolonged national strike would increase pressure on the government and 
finances and eventually dent asset prices.
-- Feelings on the street are running high, and many protesters say the 
demonstrations could grow and turn violent, which would increase the impact on 
foreign investors.
 
STALLING RECOVERY

The economy is still in recession after shrinking 0.3 percent in the first 
quarter from the prior three months. The government, international 
organisations and economists have all cut their forecasts and most now expect 
flat GDP in 2010, at best.

Prospects of recovery are undermined by a lack of foreign direct investment, 
which halved in the first quarter, and a collapse in property prices, which 
economists say have not yet hit bottom.

Investors are also concerned about the possible impact of Greece 's debt 
crisis, which could mean Greek banks pulling funding for their Romanian 
subsidiaries.

What to watch:
-- Will Romania finally pull out of recession in the second quarter?
-- Any sign of Greek banks pulling in their horns to shore up their own balance 
sheets. Romania has borrowed some $19 billion from Greek banks, equivalent to 
some 14 percent of total 2009 gross domestic product.
-- Central bank interventions in currency markets to prevent the leu rising or 
falling too much.
 
CORRUPTION

Romania shares the top spot in the EU corruption rankings and its failure to 
fight graft poses a risk to austerity measures and the IMF aid deal, both vital 
to economic recovery and investor confidence.

Bucharest has yet to convict a minister for corruption and has failed to adopt 
new criminal and civil procedure codes that should smooth prosecution and speed 
up court decisions.

It has not only failed to make any progress since an EU report in March but has 
gone backwards -- passing legislation that made a Brussels-backed anti-graft 
body which checks politicians' wealth virtually impotent.

What to watch:
-- A fresh EU report on Romania 's judicial progress is due in July and is 
likely to be critical. The harshest punishment the commission could enforce 
would be a temporary stop to recognition of Romanian court decisions in the EU, 
which could be a further deterrent to investors.
-- Will prosecutors convict a top-level official for corruption, thus sending 
an important signal that graft will no longer be tolerated? This would probably 
not move asset prices in the short term but would send an important signal that 
Romania is becoming an easier place to do business.
 
(Editing by Kevin Liffey) 
 
($1=3.505 Lei) Keywords: ROMANIA RISKS/ (sam.c...@thomsonreu ters.com; +40 (0) 
21 305 5266; Reuters Messaging: sam.cage.reuters. c...@reuters. net; 
www.twitter. com/samcage) 
 
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2010
 
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