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LP: – Mr. Minister, what is the share of culture in Moldova’s GDP and what…

State participation in the financial and banking sector became a serious research topic for me back in 2008-2009, when the state owned a controlling stake in one of the largest banks in the country – “Banca de Economii”. And a decade later, in 2019, my colleagues and I in the Collective Action Party – Civic Congress included this complex problem, as an element of political-economic tools, in the party’s program documents and started a public discussion.

The United Nations estimates the total cost of Ukraine’s post-war recovery and reconstruction at $524 billion over the next decade. These figures are up to date as of the end of 2024, with the cost estimates increasing every year. New figures are expected by the end of this year.

Prime Minister Alexandru Munteanu’s visit to Brussels was memorable not only for the traditional statements about the unchanged course of European integration. The head of the cabinet also made some more remarkable remarks – in particular, he announced the discussion of a certain plan for Moldova’s reintegration.

The Moldovan market of household appliances is entering a period of active changes: the conjuncture, retail and product policy are changing. What factors influence demand and how international players adapt to local requirements – in an exclusive Logos Press interview with Serghei Maximov, representative of BSH Bosch & Siemens Home Appliances on the Moldovan and Ukrainian market.

Interview with Ines Rocha, Director of the European Department of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, to the INFOTAG agency.

The Foreign Investors Association (FIA) proposes to establish by law a permanent mechanism for consultation with the business community before approving innovations related to economic activity. The proposal was made in connection with the announcement of the beginning of the development of fiscal and customs policy for 2026.

In 1991-1992, the economy of the Moldavian SSR was abolished and the economy of the Republic of Moldova was never created, because there was no project according to which the system of national economy of RM would be built.

In recent years, the process of changing the global economic paradigm has accelerated: neoliberalism, imposed by the global financial oligarchy as a system for extracting all possible resources from all the world’s economies for its benefit, has exhausted its institutional capacity. Financial imperialism has long understood (or at least understood from the start) that the time will come when it will have to abandon this paradigm, which grants it monopoly control over the global economy, and replace it with a different paradigm that will also ensure the same monopoly control over the global economy.

The eighth attempt to approve the capital’s budget for 2025 failed. Chisinau will continue to work on last year’s budget. It is not yet clear if and when another attempt will be made. But if the muncipal council fails to do so by the end of this year, the story will become a precedent that happens for the first time in the capital.

The National Bank of Moldova (NBM) takes inflationary measures when inflation is high. The law stipulates that the regulator’s main task is to keep inflation within a specified range. For many decades, this range has been within the limits set for countries with developing economies: 5% per annum ±1.5 percentage points, i.e., between 3.5% and 6.5% per annum.

“The prospects for the development of the Moldovan economy remain uncertain due to the presence of many constraints and the lack of multilateral and well-thought-out plans for progressive development.” This was stated by Marin Ciobanu, chairman of the Association of Employers of the Manufacturing Industry (APIP), at a meeting of the Economic Press Club on September 23.

During the period of pre-election battles, there are many initiatives and proposals on the topic “How we should settle Moldova”. Among them there are outright populist, initially unrealistic and unrealizable. But there are also quite a number of well-considered solutions to the most pressing problems for the country. Which should be solved not because some political force wants it, but because of the obviousness and necessity for the country. And any political force that seeks to come to power not for the sake of personal or party interests, but for the sake of the country’s development should pay attention to them. And not just to pay attention, but to make the implementation of such initiatives one of the priorities of their activities in the administration of the state. Because it is necessary for people and the country.

The minimum consumer basket (MCB) is not just a set of products and services. It is an economic “mirror” that should reflect the real standard of living and the minimum human needs for survival. In Moldova, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the MPC is used to determine the subsistence minimum. However, its composition, methodology of calculation and, as a consequence, its final value raise more and more questions. Is the MPC in Moldova an adequate reflection of reality or is it an outdated anachronism that prevents adequate assessment of poverty and well-being?

The land use regime in Moldova is not functioning properly, with costs that limit the economic potential and revenues of local budgets. An external compliance audit of the management and assessment of land owned by administrative-territorial units assessed the process of delineation of state land assets as inefficient.

The area of financial control tops the ranking of the country’s readiness for the EU accession process, while public procurement and freedom of expression continue to face significant challenges.

The progress of preparations for European integration was assessed at 3 points. The evaluation of the second independent report on monitoring Moldova’s implementation of the European Commission’s recommendations was carried out by the independent analytical center Expert-Grup. The pain points are everywhere, we present some of them.

Moldova has been in a state of protracted reforms without a clear perspective for decades. The incomplete transition from the Soviet past, constant political crisis, growing social inequality, high level of corruption and lack of strategic thinking create an unstable institutional environment. Systemic contradictions have engulfed all spheres of life and intensify institutional fragmentation and polarization of society. But most importantly, they impede sustainable development. And here in Moldova, for the first time, they started talking about a new, real and working vision of economic revival. At its center is the quality of public administration as a basis from which all other directions of modernization are naturally built: from the economy to the social sphere.

Last week marked 33 years since the end of the war on the Dniester: On July 29, 1992, the Joint Peacekeeping Forces were established and the peacekeeping operation in the Security Zone began. An unrecognized territory – the Transdniestrian Moldovan Republic – appeared.

With heightened uncertainty, policymakers in emerging economies will be forced to make difficult trade-offs between high debt, slowing growth and new spending needs, the IMF said in a blog on economic policy adjustment.
