Thousands of Romanian teachers take to streets against school restructuring
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on September 8, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 22, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on September 8, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 22, 2026

Romanian teachers protested in Bucharest against school restructuring and increased teaching hours, demanding changes from the government.
BUCHAREST (Reuters) -Thousands of Romanian teachers marched in the capital Bucharest and classes were suspended across the country at the start of the school year on Monday in protest against the restructuring of schools and an increase in weekly teaching hours.
Romania's broad coalition government is facing a public sector backlash and strong opposition to spending cuts as it tries to lower the European Union's highest budget deficit and unlock billions of euros worth of recovery funds from Brussels.
Since taking power in late June it has hiked taxes and cut spending, including in education, where it has increased average weekly teaching hours to 20 from 18 without raising pay.
The cabinet has also increased the maximum number of pupils per classroom, merged small schools and cut scholarships.
On Monday, crowds of teachers and students, whom police in the street estimated to number more than 10,000, marched in Bucharest, demanding the resignation of the education minister and the cancellation of the measures.
Some held banners saying "Higher teaching quota hurts the school" and "Education is investment".
"All these measures save very little money," said Mihai, a Bucharest high school history teacher who declined to give his family name. "Maybe cuts in the education system are not bad, but only when they come with actual reform."
Education Minister Daniel David told local TV it was unrealistic to expect the measures would be cancelled.
Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan's government is also making cuts in healthcare, state-owned firms, regulators, and public administration, arguing that the burden of slashing the budget deficit cannot depend solely on tax hikes and the private sector.
Romania, which ran a deficit of 9.3% of gross domestic product last year, when it held four rounds of elections, aims to lower the shortfall to a little over 6% by 2026.
(Reporting by Luiza Ilie; Editing by Aidan Lewis)
Romanian teachers are protesting against school restructuring and budget cuts that have increased teaching hours without raising pay.
More than 10,000 teachers and students marched in Bucharest during the protest.
The government has increased average weekly teaching hours, merged small schools, and cut scholarships as part of its budget cuts.
The Romanian government aims to reduce the budget deficit from 9.3% of GDP to a little over 6% by 2026.
Education Minister Daniel David stated that it is unrealistic to expect the measures to be cancelled despite the protests.
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