The growth of Romania's GDP in the first quarter of this year, eagerly awaited by the Government, was dependent on only one thing, the increase in sales of the Dacia Duster SUV in the first three months of this year.
In the first quarter of this year, the Dacia SUV, the most expensive model ever produced in the Mioveni plant, has come to account for half of the output of the local manufacturer, according to statistics of the Romanian association of Automotive Manufacturers and Importers (APIA).
Dacia's overall exports in the first quarter amounted to around EUR1 billion, i.e. around 10% of Romania's total exports. With exports set to account for around 30-35% of the Gross Domestic Product, around 1 to 1.5% of GDP will be accounted for by the Duster SUV.
The Romanian economy is currently over-reliant on just a few sectors, with its growth being tightly connected to the growth of sectors such as the auto sector and of companies such as Automobile Dacia and Petrom, the biggest company on the Romanian market.
The tight connection between the progression of Automobile Dacia and the local economy has led to a growth of the economy at this time, but in 2009, when the Mioveni carmaker suspended production both in Romania and in Western Europe, before the launch of car scrappage schemes, it brought about a decline of the economy.
According to data from the Romanian statistics institute (INS), cars and equipment accounted for nearly 43% of the overall EUR11 billion exports in the first quarter, i.e. the equivalent of EUR4.7 billion. The second-biggest exports were manufactured products, with nearly 33%. Chemical products and mineral fuels each accounted for around 6%.
Nicolaie Alexandru-Chideşciuc, chief economist of ING Bank, says the automotive sector, which was more reliant on exports, had the biggest contribution to the economic re