A roundup of domestic and international news
ANALYSIS - President Klaus Iohannis is today chairing a meeting aimed at analyzing and presenting public safety and order measures in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Taking part are Prime Minister Ludovic Orban, Interior Minister Marcel Vela, Defense Minister Nicolae Ciuca and State Secretary with the Interior Ministry, Police Chief Bogdan Despescu. Authorities report 2,245 infections with the new coronavirus and 85 deaths. 220 people have recovered. Prosecutors have launched a criminal investigation into several irregularities reported at the Suceava County Hospital in Suceava, the only county where total quarantine has been declared and where a large number of medical staff and patients have tested positive for COVID-19. A third of the total number of people who died to the virus were from Suceava.
UNEMPLOYMENT - Businesses, self-employed people and other types of employees can apply for technical unemployment starting today. Labor Minister Violeta Alexandru made a series of declarations regarding the two decrees regulation this field. The state will thus pay 75% of the average gross salary, namely no more than 475 euros. The measure is in place only during the state of emergency. Athletes are also eligible for this type of unemployment benefits. All the related documents will be filed online.
LOAN - The Finance Ministry has taken out a new loan worth 415 million euros on the local markets. Finance Minister Florin Citu says the money will be used to pay salaries, pensions, social welfare benefits and VAT refunds. Financial institutions have provided the state with funds after a period when cash withdrawals, from both the population and businesses, have doubled compared to December 2019. The National Bank says this represents the peak of financial tensions caused by the coronavirus crisis.
INDUSTRY - The Romanian pharmaceutical industry will report a record high turnover in 2020, an estimated 14 billion euros, in the context of the growing demand of medication and sanitary equipment generated by the coronavirus pandemic, reads a recent study conducted by KeysFin, one of the country's top business information providers. According to estimates, the economy will drop in 2020 by as much as 7%. Still, the pharmaceutical industry, which has been reporting constant growth in the last 10 years, will be one of the privileged sectors in the current context, alongside the food, IT&C and agriculture industries, as well as energy, natural gas and water supply providers. Some 170 manufacturers of medicine and pharmaceutical gear are certified in Romania, in addition to 6,500 retailers and wholesalers trading these types of products.
CORONAVIRUS IN EUROPE - The COVID-19 pandemic has killed over 30,000 people in Europe, of which two thirds in Italy and Spain, France Press quotes information released by national authorities. France is the country with the third-largest number of victims. Europe is the continent most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. The European Commission has proposed the disbursement of an additional 75 million euros to support operations aimed at repatriating European citizens and increasing the reserve budget for the purchase of medical equipment. The Commission is considering an adjustment of the said budget. Since the start of the pandemic, some 2,300 EU citizens have been repatriated from China, Japan, the United States, Morocco, Tunisia, Georgia, the Philippines and Cape Verde. Another 80 similar flights are scheduled for the coming days.
STUDY - Isolation and other measures adopted to avert the COVID-19 pandemic from spreading have saved the lives of some 59,000 people in 11 European countries, researchers with the Imperial College in London have revealed. The measures taken under advisement are quarantine for the sick, the closing-down of schools and universities, banning public gatherings, social distancing measures and general isolation. Italy, the first country to introduce strict measures and where the pandemic has reached its peak, some 38,000 lives were saved due to the decision to impose total quarantine, the study reveals. Next on the list is Spain with 16,000 lives saved, followed by France with 2,500 lives saved, Belgium with 560, Germany with 550, the UK with 370, Switzerland with 340, Austria with 140, Sweden with 82, Denmark with 69 and Norway with 10 lives saved. Researchers say that "any more deaths will be averted by keeping interventions in place until transmission drops to low levels".
(Translated by V. Palcu)
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