
The agricultural advisory system in Romania
In December 2022 we conducted an extensive research on the needs assessment, but also on the access of small and…
In December 2022 we conducted an extensive research on the needs assessment, but also on the access of small and…
What participatory budgeting looks like in Romania – Analysis of county capitals, December 2022 Authors: Alexandru Damian, Dragoș Ile Only…
CRPE Policy Memo 38, March 2013 by Cristian Ghinea, Bianca Toma The Romanian Center for European Policies launches the report…
The Romanian Center for European Policies and the Institute of World Policy (Ukraine) are launching the report “A new framework…
by Oana-Maria Georgescu The Banking Union has been widely debated as the panacea for breaking the vicious link between…
Policy Memo, No.31 December 2011 Author: Tudor Cojocariu, Bianca Toma Romanian Center for European Policies and the Institute of World…
Romanian Center for European Policies (RCEP) has published a detailed analysis of the possibilities and expectations Romania has from the results of the current negotiations on the future multiannual financial framework - EU’s budget (2014-2020).
The French Prime Minister Jean Marc-Ayrault, recently stated that the Roma people are a problem at the European level and a common approach together with the governments of Romania and Bulgaria, the main origin countries of Roma migrants, is optimal.
Disentangling the political from the economic causes of the Leu depreciation is not a trivial task and is subject to some degree of uncertainty. Our results clarify the ongoing political debate on whether the external environment - the effects of the economic crisis in the region - are to be blamed for the depreciation of the Leu or whether the main cause is the internal political turmoil generated by the impeachment of the President.
Romania is Moldova’s most important partner for commercial trade and, for the first time in history, it overreached Russia in the volume of direct investments in Moldova. At least this is what the official statistics show, even though many Russian businessmen prefer to lead their businesses from more convenient tax systems like Cyprus and the Netherlands.