Romania over the past decade turned into something of a poster child for economic development. The authorities got serious about tackling corruption, foreign investment almost doubled, and European Union money was used to build hundreds of miles of new roads. The transformation was underpinned by a recent period of stable politics after Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu and the Social Democrats formed a grand coalition with their bitter rivals, the Liberals. But as Romania heads into back-to-back presidential and parliamentary elections, the financial cost of catching up with Western Europe is looming large. The country of 19 million people has the biggest budget hole of any EU member based on the size of its economy. That’s in part due to the lingering effects of the pandemic, the war next door in Ukraine and a period of rapid inflation. Yet it’s also down to government spending on wages, pensions and infrastructure. Ciolacu is running for president and is ahead in the polls. A likely scenario is a runoff on Dec. 8 against ultra-nationalist challenger George Simion, who wants to stop military aid for Ukraine and is in second place. Ciolacu’s Social Democrats are also on course to win the most votes in the parliamentary election. Whatever the makeup of the government that will emerge or whoever wins the runoff to become head of state, everyone seems to have acknowledged that a fiscal reckoning is inevitable. With the economic dynamo now waning, companies are worried that any impending austerity will compound the impact on growth. Marcel Ciolacu, Romania's prime minister, is running for president and to return his Social Democrats to power. Photographer: Andrei Pungovschi/Bloomberg |