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    Home > Headlines > Romania's top court postpones ruling on challenges to deficit lowering measures
    Headlines

    Romania's top court postpones ruling on challenges to deficit lowering measures

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on September 24, 2025

    2 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    Romania's top court postpones ruling on challenges to deficit lowering measures - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:Fiscal consolidationpublic policyGovernment fundingfinancial stabilityeconomic growth

    Quick Summary

    Romania's Supreme Court delays ruling on deficit measures, impacting fiscal stability. Proposed changes include tax hikes and raising judicial retirement age.

    Table of Contents

    • Challenges to Romania's Budget Deficit Measures
    • Overview of Proposed Measures
    • Impact on Judicial Pensions
    • Public Reaction and Protests

    Romania's Supreme Court Delays Decision on Budget Deficit Measures

    Challenges to Romania's Budget Deficit Measures

    BUCHAREST (Reuters) -Romania's top court on Wednesday postponed ruling on challenges brought against measures to lower the largest budget deficit in the European Union, prolonging uncertainty over the stability of the broad coalition government.

    The tax hikes and state spending cuts, which the government fast-tracked through parliament, are part of wider efforts to take the fiscal shortfall to 6% of economic output next year from over 9% in 2024.

    The measures were broken down into five bills, with an overall budget impact of roughly 10.6 billion lei (2.09 billion euros). They would raise the retirement age for judges and prosecutors, cut jobs and limit remuneration for state firms and financial, telecoms and energy regulators, and introduce tax hikes from 2026.

    Overview of Proposed Measures

    The Constitutional Court upheld the bill concerning state regulators, but postponed a decision on the remaining four bills until October 8.

    Liberal Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan said this month "it is hard to assume this government will retain legitimacy to solve other injustices" should the court reject the measures.

    The broad coalition of four pro-European parties took power at the end of June, but the parties have repeatedly clashed over the deficit and have yet to agree on planned public administration job cuts.

    Impact on Judicial Pensions

    Among measures the Court has postponed ruling on until Oct. 8, the most divisive are changes to judicial pensions.

    Judges and prosecutors retire on average at 48-49 with an average pension of up to 5,000 euros monthly. In contrast, the average Romanian pension stands at 600 euros per month.

    The government wants to raise the retirement age of the judiciary to the standard 65 over a transitional 10-year period, and cap pensions to 70% of their final salary. The top court has struck down previous attempts to change judicial pensions.

    The measures alongside tax hikes approved earlier this year were enough for ratings agencies to maintain Romania on the last rung of investment grade for now.

    Public Reaction and Protests

    They came at a steep cost, triggering public sector protests, fuelling inflation and bolstering the opposition far right in opinion surveys.

    (1 euro = 5.0768 lei)

    (Reporting by Luiza Ilie, editing by Ed Osmond)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Romania's Supreme Court postponed a decision on deficit measures.
    • •Proposed measures aim to reduce deficit from over 9% to 6%.
    • •Changes include tax hikes and raising judicial retirement age.
    • •Public protests and inflation have followed the proposals.
    • •The court will rule on the remaining measures on October 8.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Romania's top court postpones ruling on challenges to deficit lowering measures

    1What are judicial pensions?

    Judicial pensions are retirement benefits provided to judges and prosecutors, often calculated based on their final salary and years of service.

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