Comunicat de presă


Balance of payments and external debt – January 2022

16.03.2022

In January 2022p, the balance-of-payments current account posted a deficit of EUR 815 million, compared with a surplus of EUR 9 million in the same year-ago period. The breakdown shows that the deficit on trade in goods widened by EUR 868 million, the surplus on services decreased by EUR 22 million, that on primary income shrank by EUR 93 million and the secondary income balance recorded a surplus of EUR 15 million against a deficit of EUR 144 million in the same year-ago period.

Balance of payments current account (EUR million)
  January - January 2021p January - January 2022p
CREDIT DEBIT BALANCE CREDIT DEBIT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT (A+B+C) 8,703 8,694 9 10,420 11,235 -815
A. Goods and services 6,934 7,391 -457 8,557 9,904 -1,347
a. Goods 5,102 6,265 -1,163 6,363 8,394 -2,031
b. Services 1,832 1,126 706 2,194 1,510 684
- manufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others 179 16 163 200 13 187
- transport 511 221 290 610 274 336
- tourism-travel 100 190 -90 214 446 -232
- telecommunications, computer, and information services 484 212 272 551 235 316
- other 558 487 71 619 542 77
B. Primary income 1,447 837 610 1,460 943 517
C. Secondary income 322 466 -144 403 388 15

p - provisional data

Non-residents' direct investment in Romaniae totalled EUR 463 million (compared with EUR 628 million in January 2021), of which equity (including the estimated net reinvestment of earnings) and intercompany lending recorded net values of EUR 577 million and EUR -114 million, respectively.

In January 2022, total external debt increased by EUR 2,826 million, of which:

  • long-term external debt at end-January 2022 ran at EUR 99,294 million (72.4 percent of total external debt), up 2.3 percent against end-2021;
  • short-term external debt at end-January 2022 amounted to EUR 37,788 million (27.6 percent of total external debt), up 1.5 percent from end-2021.

Romania’s external debt and external debt service
  External debt External debt service, January 2022p
End-2021p End-January 2022p
1. General government 58,686 61,103 653
Currency and deposits 283 248 256
Debt securities 47,214 47,586 372
Loans 11,151 13,230 22
Trade credit and advances 34 35 3
Other debt liabilities 4 4 0
2. Central Bank 3,365 3,393 0
Currency and deposits 0 0 0
Debt securities 0 0 0
Loans 0 0 0
Allocation of SDRs 3,365 3,393 0
Other debt liabilities 0 0 0
3. Deposit taking corporations except the central bank 7,718 7,832 560
Currency and deposits 7,187 7,202 551
Debt securities 511 588 4
Loans 0 0 0
Other debt liabilities 20 42 5
4. Other sectors 25,521 25,744 1,688
Currency and deposits 0 0 0
Debt securities 1,220 1,201 5
Loans 13,353 13,453 974
Trade credit and advances 10,785 10,921 693
Other debt liabilities 163 169 16
I. EXTERNAL DEBT (1+2+3+4)* 95,290 98,072 2,901
II. DIRECT INVESTMENT: INTERCOMPANY LENDING 38,966 39,010 3,484
III. GROSS EXTERNAL DEBT (I+II)
   of which:
134,256 137,082 6,385
Short term 37,213 37,788 5,426
Long term 97,043 99,294 959

p - provisional data
* Except debt instruments related to direct investment

Long-term external debt service ratio ran at 11.2 percent in January 2022 against 16.5 percent in 2021. At end-January 2022, goods and services import cover stood at 4.9 months, as compared to 5.0 months at end-2021.

At end-January 2022, the ratio of the National Bank of Romania’s foreign exchange reserves to short-term external debt by remaining maturity came in at 86.7 percent, against 82.3 percent at end-2021.

Methodological Notes

  1. Data are updated on a monthly basis. Data for the current period together with the revised data for the base period are available under Data sets; historical monthly and quarterly data going back to 2005 are available in the Interactive database.
  2. Data from the NBR’s statistical surveys on International Trade in Services and Foreign Direct Investment may be affected by the impact of the pandemic, which, in statistical terms, consisted in the reduction of the reporting samples and the ensuing expansion of internal estimates.
  3. The international methodological standard on balance of payments compilation is ensured by the IMF’s sixth edition of the Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM6). The BPM6 methodology has been transposed into the EU legislation based on Commission Regulation (EU) No 555/2012 amending Regulation (EC) No 184/2005 of the European Parliament and of the Council on Community statistics concerning balance of payments, international trade in services and foreign direct investment, as regards the update of data requirements and definitions.
  4. In order to analyse current account data, the following aspects should be considered:
    1. 4.1. Goods (on a BOP basis): Source: National Institute of Statistics – International Trade of Goods. Imports FOB are calculated by the NBR based on the CIF/FOB conversion factor set by the NIS. The balance of payments principle consists in entering goods based on the “change in economic ownership” criterion (goods acquired by residents are included, irrespective of whether the goods cross the country border or not), while in international trade statistics goods are recorded based on the “cross-border” criterion (goods are recorded when crossing the border, irrespective of whether they belong to residents or not). In order to ensure compliance with the “change in economic ownership” criterion, the NIS data are adjusted by the NBR, therefore the values of exports and imports of goods in the BOP statistics are different from those in the statistics on the international trade of goods;
    2. 4.2. Services: Source: Quarterly Survey on International Trade in Services;
    3. 4.3. Primary income: includes compensation of employees, investment income (direct investment, portfolio investment, other investment) and other primary income (taxes, subsidies);
    4. 4.4. Secondary income: includes current private transfers and transfers of the general government.
  5. Foreign direct investment: The permanent debt between affiliated financial intermediaries (banks, NBFIs) is not treated as direct investment, but recorded under financial account/other investment.
  6. The statistical standards for the external debt breakdown by institutional sector are provided by the IMF’s manuals External Debt Statistics Guide for Compilers and Users (2014), Balance of Payments and International Investment Position, 6th edition (BPM6) and System of National Accounts 2008 (SNA).
  7. Long-term external debt service ratio is calculated as a ratio of long-term external debt service to exports of goods and services.
  8. Import cover is calculated as a ratio of international reserves (foreign exchange + gold) at the end of period to average monthly imports of goods and services for the period under review.
  9. Short-term external debt by remaining maturity refers to the short-term external debt outstanding at the end of period plus the payments related to long-term external debt due in the following 12 months.

The next monthly press release on the “Balance of payments and external debt” will be issued on 13 April 2022.