
Eugeniu Osmokescu
This was announced by Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Economic Development and Digitalization Eugeniu Osmokescu at a meeting of the Economic Council under the Prime Minister.
He called on the private and non-associative sectors to join the process of reforming the legislative framework.
In total, it is planned to change about 60 legislative acts and 40 normative documents.
Donors and external partners, who have already supported a package of regulatory and administrative reforms, including debureaucratization, are being engaged to implement the initiatives.
“We are working sector by sector and the outcome of this work will be the ‘cherry on the cake’ before submitting the proposals to the European Commission,” Osmokescu said.
He specified that the work on the preparation and “mapping” of proposals and amendments to existing legislative acts will start on Monday, January 19.
Earlier, referring to the report “Product Market Regulations” (methodology of the World Bank and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), Osmokescu said that Moldova significantly surpasses many other countries in terms of the impact of regulatory reforms.









