Sustainable development of Romania within the process of European integration.
Toba, Elena
Structure and development within economic theory
The increase in national wealth, in macroeconomic results per
assembly and per inhabitant constitutes one of the preoccupations of
decision factors from different countries and the main object of
theoretic investigations and controversies.
Within the actual economic judgment there are expressed different
opinions connected to economic increase and development (1). Considering
these facts, the economic increase is defined as the process of increase
in the dimensions of economic results determined by the combination and
use of production factors and underlined by macroeconomic
indicators--the gross domestic product, gross national product and
national income in real terms, not only per total, but also per
inhabitant.
The notions of economic increase and economic development should
not be opposed one to another, nor do they superpose either. The two
notions have some common elements: both processes are evolutional; they
are based on the cooperation and use of the same factors; the social
finality of both processes is represented by the improvement in the
quality of people's lives. At the same time, the two notions
contain elements that delimitate them. Thus, they have a different
comprehension sphere. The economic increase supposes the quantitative
increase in national economic dimensions, in the macroeconomic results
per assembly and per inhabitant (GDP, GNP, NI). Synthetically, the
economic increase is expressed through the rhythm of GDP, GNP, NI
increase per inhabitant. Within the sphere of national economy
(technological, inter-branches, economic-social, organizational,
territorial etc), as well as the people's level of living. Any
economic development also supposes an economic increase, but not all
economic increase means economic development. The rapport between the
two concepts is as from part to whole. Economic development, besides
economic increase, associates and modifies its qualitative structures
within national economy and quality of life. The concepts of economic
increase and economic development are associated to the concept of
economic progress, which underlines the specific and sense of
development in each step, in comparison to anterior steps and
constitutes the support of an optimistic view on the perspective
evolution of society.
As a form of manifestation of macroeconomic dynamics, economic
development supposes an assembly of quantitative, structural and
qualitative changes not only in economy, but also the organizational
mechanism and structures of functioning in the way of reflection and the
behavior of human beings. Within this context, the concept of
sustainable economic development appears, concept which represents that
form of economic development within which it is wished to satisfy
present consume requirements and not to compromise or prejudice the one
of future generations.
The concept of sustainable development expresses the process of
enlargement of possibilities through which present and future
generations can fully manifest their options within any
domain--economic, social, cultural or political, man being the centre of
the development action.
Sustainable development is conceived within the visions of
reconciliation between man and nature (2), of their equilibrium and
harmony, "on a new means of development that should sustain the
human progress, not only in a few places and for a few years, but for
the whole planet and for a long future" (3). Essentially,
sustainable development is a development that satisfies present
necessities, without compromising the possibilities of future
generations of satisfying their own needs.
The general objective of sustainable development is of finding an
optimal point of interaction and compatibility of four systems:
economic, human, ambient and technological, within a dynamic and
flexible functioning process. The optimal level corresponds to that
development of long duration that can be supported by the four systems.
In order to realize a sustainable development, the minimal requirements
include: re-dimension of economic increase, taking into account the
accentuation of quantitative branches of production; elimination of
exiguity under the conditions of satisfying the essential needs--work
place, food, energy, water, house ad health; assurance of increase in
population at an acceptable level (reduction of uncontrolled demographic
increase); conservation of increase in human resources, maintenance of
diversity of ecosystems, surveillance of the impact of economic
development on the environment; technological reorienttation and control
of their risks; decentralization of the governing forms, increase in the
participation degree when taking the decisions concerning the
environment and the economy.
A. Romanian National Strategy on Sustainable Development (5)
partially reunites the requirements resulted from its quality of
European Union Member State and continually necessitates completions and
fundaments.
In the elaboration of the Romanian National Strategy on Sustainable
Development it was ascertained that at the end of the first decade of
the 21st century, after a prolonged and traumatized transition to
pluralist democracy and market economy. Romania still has to recuperate considerably towards the other Member States to the European Union,
simultaneously with the acquirement and transposition into practice of
the main principles and practices of sustainable development within the
context of globalization. In spite of all progresses realized within the
past years, it is a reality that Romania still has an economy based on
the intensive consume of resources, a society and an administration
still searching for a unitarian vision and a natural capital affected by
the risk of some deteriorations that can become irreversible.
The present Strategy establishes concrete objectives for the
passing to the model of development that generates added value,
propelled by the interest for knowledge and innovation, oriented towards
continual improvement in the quality of life and the relations among
them in harmony with the natural environment within a reasonable and
realist period of time.
As a general orientation, the paper focuses on the realization of
the following strategic objectives, in short, on a medium and long term:
Horizon 2013: Organic incorporation of the principles and practices
of sustainable development within the assembly of public programs and
policies of Romania, as E.U. Member State
Horizon 2020: Reaching the actual medium level (with reference to
the number of the year 2006) of EU--27 according to the basic indicators
of sustainable development.
Horizon 2030: Significant approach of Romania towards the medium
level from that year of the Member States of the EU from the point of
view of the indicators of sustainable development.
The text is structured in 5 parts:
Part I presents the conceptual frame, it defines the notions used,
it describes the main points of the Renewed Strategy for Sustainable
Development of EU (2006), the actual stage of the process of elaboration
of basic indicators of sustainable development and relevant measures
taken by Romania within the pre- and post-accession period.
Part II contains an evaluation of the actual situation of
Romania's natural, anthropic, human and social capital. This
approach is according to the last recommendations (May 2008) of the
combined EU Work Groups of Statistic Department (Eurostat), the UN
Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and the Organization of Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) concerning the measurement of
performances of sustainable development according to the evolution of
the four forms of capital.
Part III offers a perspective vision, establishing the precise
objectives on the three time horizons, strictly following the logic of
key challenges and inter-sector themes, as they are mentioned within the
Renewed Strategy for Sustainable Development of the EU.
Part IV analyses specific problems that Romania confronts with and
establishes targets for the acceleration of the process of passing to a
sustainable development, concomitantly with the reduction and
elimination of the existent gaps regarding the medium performance level
of the other Member States of the European Union.
Part V contains concrete recommenddations concerning the creation
and modalities of functioning of the institutional frame in order to
assure implementation, surveillance and rapport on the results of
Renewed Strategy for Sustainable Development. The proposal considers the
experience and practice from the other EU Member States and focuses on
the adoption of some innovative solutions, adapted to specific
conditions of Romania, concerning the responsibilities of public
authorities and active implication of social factors in realizing the
objectives of sustainable development.
The problem of elaboration of the Strategy for Sustainable
Development of Romania was more obvious in 2006, from the perspective of
our country's accession to the European Community. The creation of
a National Consultative Council and of regional councils of sustainable
development contributed to the intensification of the effort of
accumulation, synthesizer and partition of a huge documentary and
prevision material existent at the level of branches, sectors, basic
products and public services that compose the structure, infrastructure
and superstructure of Romanian society from the first part of the 21st
century. They took into account the other national spread documents,
including the pre-accession and post-accession strategies.
The Project of the strategy for Sustainable Development of Romania
is an integrator document, the first with such amplitude after 1989 and
it is concerned with a few essential provocations that humanity
confronts with, in the new millennium. Energy, food and environment are
considered a priority under the conditions of the disappearance of
natural resources and the alarming increase in environmental polluting
and destroying factors. The strategy establishes the development frame
on a long term, the way in which economic structures support the
established objecttives. However, it is not an economic and
environmental strategy, but a synthesis of all elements that may assure
the sustainable development of the country.
B. The elaboration of scientific documents of Romania's
development should start from the actual realities of our country.
Romania is an energofagus country, consuming more energy than the
European average: with a value of four billion dollars a year. The
85,000 flats consume circa 65% from the electrical energy of the
country, where the necessity of efficiency of the whole economic system.
The economic increase was based on consume of products, not on added
value. Concerning the use of natural resources, in Romania there does
not exist any town with the management of integrated water. Within the
urban area, the centralized drinking water system represents circa 65%.
We have an enormous deficit of specialists capable to elaborate eligible
projects for European financing.
We earn and we borrow even more, but we consume almost the whole
amount. The management and financial projections are lacking at the
level of houses, not only concerning incomes, but also concerning
expenditures and loans. Present needs dictate us the consume behavior,
and to the future we reserve the strategy "we shall live and we
shall see". The risk of living in debt could now reflect on banks,
under the conditions of diminishing the access to alternative financing
resources, internal or external.
Salaries supply over half from the total incomes of Romanian
houses, and social activities circa one fifth, during the second
trimester of the year 2008. Without some economy stimulation
instruments, the Romanians allotted their average monthly incomes
(of2,046 lei per house and 702 lei per person) in a proportion of 90% of
the consume [5].
* The Chinese earn almost one dollar per hour, from which they save
40%, and the rest is consumed. The Romanians earn better than the double
of the Chinese, but they save circa 10%.
* Others will enjoy the fact that we are situated on a better
position than the Americans who earn 24 dollars per hour and spend 25.
It is not quite so: consume credits dominate the whole part of
populations' debts.
INS also tells us that from the total consume of the households,
circa 43% are spent on food and non-alcoholic drinks, 7% on clothes and
shoes and almost the same on alcoholic drinks. Evidently, the most part
of Romanian acquisitions within the urbane area is realized within
retail store commerce. Within the rural area, 40% of food is still
assured from auto consume.
* Fulminatory actual increases--with tens of percentages--at
salaries, pensions, compensations, to which a new increase of the
minimum salary to 600 RON starting with 1st January 2009 will certainly
supply the consume as value volume.
* In real term, the prices' intensification will fuel
inflation and will diminish the buying capacity.
* The budgetary impact of all salaries and social increases within
the past year (1st October 2007-1st October 2008) reaches 3,5% from the
domestic intern product estimated for the year 2008.
The consumer behavior of Romanians has been directly influenced by
the stimulation of crediting, to the cost of saving. The difference
between active and passive interest (namely between credits and
deposits) maintained at an exaggeratedly high level for a period of 16
years. The profits of the banking system have been huge. Within the past
two years, the differrence of interest started to drop significantly.
But savings moved slowly on an ascendant scale.
The Romanians take loans to consume: over 90% for the debts of
population are represented by the consume credits.
More concretely, starting with the second half of the year 2007,
the population becomes net debtor towards the banking sector. The only
exception is represented by the region Bucharest-Ilfov.
But, per assembly, the weight of the credits offered to the
population in DIP is inferior to the countries from the euro area. Such
comparisons are less too relevant. Romanians are more indebted than
European citizens if we compare the credits at the level of incomes. The
differences are even more increased if we rapport these credits to the
level of the declared fiscal incomes to which we add a maximum of 20%,
according to the new rules of RNB.
We think that the tightening of crediting norms represents the
correct solution, but too late. Until now, both fundamental purposes of
efficient crediting norms have been missed: of reducing the
non-reimbursement risks, respectively of stimulation of productive
credits against the ones for consume. We will witness more and more
financial drowning of the crediting persons, but we still protect the
one from the surface.
Actual pressures on consume are partial reciprocally annulled. On
the one side, the available incomes are increasing. On the other side,
the interests at credits are even more costive, and the credit allowance
conditions are more restrictive. The important depreciation of the Leu is added here. The population is completely uncovered towards this
exchange risk.
Thus, Romanians find themselves in the unpleasant situation of
reimbursing a sum greater with 10% in lei for credits in Euro, to which
the increases of interest rates are added.
The optimism of the consumer, that in future years he obtains
greater incomes, and the reduced perspectives of unemployment fuel on
the other side the request for consume credits.
Presently, in Romania, the population consumes with 20% more than
it produces. There is no high added value at Romanian products, the
change being imposed according to economic rationalization, of
competitive finality for products and services. The main objective of
sustainable development is the increase in life quality for all social
categories. Presently, the economic increase is based on consume, not on
production, and the consume increases the imports. Although, sometime,
it was considered "Europe's barn", Romania of the 21st
century imports over 60% from agrarian products. Even salt is imported
by the country of the salt mountains! The efficiency of resources is an
essential challenge for the future decades. Agriculture remains the main
"alcove" of our sustainable development, with the 14 million
hectares of agrarian land, from which 7 million of arable land. The
cultivation of ecologic products is vital.
Ecologic agriculture, balneal therapeutic tourism and the Black Sea
connected to the Caspian Sea, both rich in hydrocarbons are considered
to be the main resources for sustainable development of Romania.
Demographic crisis and education are other priorities to which the
Romanian state should find radical solutions, under the conditions of a
decline of 1,6 million inhabitants, plus 3 million who work abroad,
within mentioning annual retirements.
C. The National Strategy of Sustainable Development of Romania
should comprise new directions in order to facilitate the EU
integration.
Among all these, more important are the following:
* Elaboration and attachment within the National Plan of
Development of a special chapter regarding the development and
modernization of industrial activities recommended by the EU.
* Elaboration of another special chapter regarding technical
endowment, increase in productivity and improvement of the crediting
system of agriculture.
* State support for the re-launching of scientific research, that
should ease the modernization of economic activities.
* Attraction of a high volume of direct foreign investments.
* Re-thought of fiscal and currency economic policies according to
the requests formulated by the EC and the IMF.
* Government surveillance that each external credit employed
directly serves the economic production objectives.
* Rationalization of expenditures from public money, by simplifying
all administrative structures at national and local level, starting with
the Parliament and local administrations.
* Reduction of commercial gap and of the current account on the
basis of modernization of industry and agriculture, as well as of the
development of energy production on the basis of regenerable resources.
* Rational correlation of the development objectives, including of
investment programs, for inter-sector and regional profile, with
potential and capacity of sustenance of material capital;
* Accelerated modernization of the systems of education and
professional training and public health, considering the unfavorable
demographic evolutions and their impact on labor market;
* Use of the best ecologic and economic available technologies in
investment decisions from public funds on national, regional and local
plans of such decisions from private capital; firm introduction of the
criteria of eco efficiency within all production or services activities;
* Anticipation of the effects of climatic changes and elaboration
of some acclimation solutions on long term and of some plans of measures
of inter sector contingency, comprising portfolios of alternative
solutions for crisis situation generated by natural or anthrophic
phenomena.
* Assurance of alimentary security and safety, including through
valorization of comparative advantages of Romania concerning organic
agriculture; correlation of the measures of quantitative and qualitative
increase in agrarian production in order to assure the food for people
and animals with the requests to increase the production of bio
combustibles, without reduction from the exigencies regarding
maintenance and increase in soil fertility, biodiversity and
environmental protection;
* Protection and valorization of the cultural and natural national
patrimony; compression to European norms and standards regarding the
quality of life together with the revitalization in modernization of
some means of traditional living, especially within mountain and wet
areas.
Notes
(1) S. Kuznets, Economic Growth and Structural. Selected Essay,
Heinemann Educational Books Ltd, London, 1966, p. 6; H.W. Arndt, The
rise and Fall of growth, H. Study in "Contemporary Thought",
Longman Chesire Pty Limited, Melbourne, 1978, p.1; Fr. Peroux, Pour une
philosophie du nouveau developpment, Les Press d'UNESCO, Paris,
1981, p.13.
(2) Brundtland Report, "Our Common future", elaborated by
the Environment and Development Independent World Commission, presented
at the UNO Conference from Rio de Janeiro, June 1992.
(3) Economia si sfidarea naturii, Economic PH., Bucharest, 1994,
p.13.
(4) Romanian Government, The project of the Strategy for
Sustainable Development of Romania, Version V from 15th May 2008.
(5) The calculus was realized based on the data delivered by the
National Institute of Statistics, Bucharest.