Markets and People

Romania’s income per capita has increased from 26 percent of the EU-28 average in 2000 to 63 percent in 2017, but this economic success rests on the wobbly foundations of unfavorable demographics, weak human capital, and ineffective institutions. Going forward, stronger competition and better human capital are critical to increasing the economy’s growth potential. Romanian manufacturing firms are exposed to domestic and international competition, ensuring the flow of resources and market shares to more efficient players. This has not been the case for services, where anticompetitive regulations and direct state control often limit efficiency gains. Romanian state-owned enterprises do not compete on an equal footing with private sector firms, distorting market outcomes and hampering the efficient allocation of resources. Removal of these restrictions would have a significant positive impact on GDP growth. Competitively neutral policies are needed to ensure that all enterprises, public or private, domestic or foreign, face the same set of rules. Romania’s human capital accumulation--proxied by the World Bank’s Human Capital Index (HCI)--is the lowest in the European Union and varies widely across counties. Disparities in education outcomes remain relevant across and within regions of Romania. Learning gaps in primary and secondary education persist. These can be seen clearly between urban and rural areas, across regions, and across social groups, requiring changes both at the systems level and at the learning-center level. In the labor market, the automation of production processes has started driving demand for higher levels of cognitive skills, while jobs involving the routine application of procedural knowledge are shrinking in number. A paradigm shift would require reforms in primary and secondary schooling, in addition to more targeted actions, to establish an effective skills development system to bolster human capital.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2020-01-30
Subjects:SKILLS, GROWTH, COMPETITION, PRODUCTIVITY, CONVERGENCE, HUMAN CAPITAL, HCI, HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX, MARKET REGULATION, COMPETITION POLICY, STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES, REGIONAL DISPARITIES, PRIMARY EDUCATION, SECONDARY EDUCATION, LEARNING GAP, SCHOOL PERFORMANCE, TEACHER RECRUITMENT, LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT, LABOR MARKET,
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/294831583173658317/markets-and-people-romania-country-economic-memorandum
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33236
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spelling dig-okr-10986332362024-07-25T17:24:47Z Markets and People Romania Country Economic Memorandum World Bank SKILLS GROWTH COMPETITION PRODUCTIVITY CONVERGENCE HUMAN CAPITAL HCI HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX MARKET REGULATION COMPETITION POLICY STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES REGIONAL DISPARITIES PRIMARY EDUCATION SECONDARY EDUCATION LEARNING GAP SCHOOL PERFORMANCE TEACHER RECRUITMENT LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT LABOR MARKET Romania’s income per capita has increased from 26 percent of the EU-28 average in 2000 to 63 percent in 2017, but this economic success rests on the wobbly foundations of unfavorable demographics, weak human capital, and ineffective institutions. Going forward, stronger competition and better human capital are critical to increasing the economy’s growth potential. Romanian manufacturing firms are exposed to domestic and international competition, ensuring the flow of resources and market shares to more efficient players. This has not been the case for services, where anticompetitive regulations and direct state control often limit efficiency gains. Romanian state-owned enterprises do not compete on an equal footing with private sector firms, distorting market outcomes and hampering the efficient allocation of resources. Removal of these restrictions would have a significant positive impact on GDP growth. Competitively neutral policies are needed to ensure that all enterprises, public or private, domestic or foreign, face the same set of rules. Romania’s human capital accumulation--proxied by the World Bank’s Human Capital Index (HCI)--is the lowest in the European Union and varies widely across counties. Disparities in education outcomes remain relevant across and within regions of Romania. Learning gaps in primary and secondary education persist. These can be seen clearly between urban and rural areas, across regions, and across social groups, requiring changes both at the systems level and at the learning-center level. In the labor market, the automation of production processes has started driving demand for higher levels of cognitive skills, while jobs involving the routine application of procedural knowledge are shrinking in number. A paradigm shift would require reforms in primary and secondary schooling, in addition to more targeted actions, to establish an effective skills development system to bolster human capital. 2020-01-23T22:19:38Z 2020-01-23T22:19:38Z 2020-01-30 Book Livre Libro https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/294831583173658317/markets-and-people-romania-country-economic-memorandum 978-1-4648-1503-4 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33236 English International Development in Focus; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
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databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic SKILLS
GROWTH
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
CONVERGENCE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HCI
HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX
MARKET REGULATION
COMPETITION POLICY
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
LEARNING GAP
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MARKET
SKILLS
GROWTH
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
CONVERGENCE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HCI
HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX
MARKET REGULATION
COMPETITION POLICY
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
LEARNING GAP
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MARKET
spellingShingle SKILLS
GROWTH
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
CONVERGENCE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HCI
HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX
MARKET REGULATION
COMPETITION POLICY
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
LEARNING GAP
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MARKET
SKILLS
GROWTH
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
CONVERGENCE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HCI
HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX
MARKET REGULATION
COMPETITION POLICY
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
LEARNING GAP
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MARKET
World Bank
Markets and People
description Romania’s income per capita has increased from 26 percent of the EU-28 average in 2000 to 63 percent in 2017, but this economic success rests on the wobbly foundations of unfavorable demographics, weak human capital, and ineffective institutions. Going forward, stronger competition and better human capital are critical to increasing the economy’s growth potential. Romanian manufacturing firms are exposed to domestic and international competition, ensuring the flow of resources and market shares to more efficient players. This has not been the case for services, where anticompetitive regulations and direct state control often limit efficiency gains. Romanian state-owned enterprises do not compete on an equal footing with private sector firms, distorting market outcomes and hampering the efficient allocation of resources. Removal of these restrictions would have a significant positive impact on GDP growth. Competitively neutral policies are needed to ensure that all enterprises, public or private, domestic or foreign, face the same set of rules. Romania’s human capital accumulation--proxied by the World Bank’s Human Capital Index (HCI)--is the lowest in the European Union and varies widely across counties. Disparities in education outcomes remain relevant across and within regions of Romania. Learning gaps in primary and secondary education persist. These can be seen clearly between urban and rural areas, across regions, and across social groups, requiring changes both at the systems level and at the learning-center level. In the labor market, the automation of production processes has started driving demand for higher levels of cognitive skills, while jobs involving the routine application of procedural knowledge are shrinking in number. A paradigm shift would require reforms in primary and secondary schooling, in addition to more targeted actions, to establish an effective skills development system to bolster human capital.
format Book
topic_facet SKILLS
GROWTH
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
CONVERGENCE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HCI
HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX
MARKET REGULATION
COMPETITION POLICY
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
LEARNING GAP
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
LABOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MARKET
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Markets and People
title_short Markets and People
title_full Markets and People
title_fullStr Markets and People
title_full_unstemmed Markets and People
title_sort markets and people
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2020-01-30
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/294831583173658317/markets-and-people-romania-country-economic-memorandum
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33236
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank marketsandpeople
AT worldbank romaniacountryeconomicmemorandum
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