Romania should be competitive in three sectors, namely goods, industrial products and services, but to get there, the priorities should be clearly established, declared Valentin Lazea, chief economist at the National Bank of Romania, on Friday."One is in which sectors we are already competitive and have an advantage and where we should strive to be competitive. We must emphasize European integration. This means that we must be a player within Europe that supplies and benefits from certain countries that are also useful to other European partners. And I would divide these sectors where we should become competitive into three parts: goods, industrial products and services," Lazea said at the "Smart Development, European Competitiveness" summit, organized by the Concordia Employers' Confederation, specifying that he speaks on his own behalf.The economist emphasized that, in terms of goods, we should be competitive in energy, food, and the export, but also the processing, of rare earths."Today we have an external deficit in both energy and food. I have no idea how we are doing with rare earths," said Valentin Lazea.Regarding the second component, industrial products, he mentioned that we are doing well in automobiles, we can do well in medicines, and we are nowhere in military equipment.On the services side, he added, we are already good at transportation and IT services, but things are not the same when it comes to tourism and cultural and recreational services."This is a wishlist. But, to get there, the Government must clearly establish its priorities, because until now everything has been a priority. In order not to upset anyone, two pieces of something have been allocated to each. And when everything is a priority, nothing is a priority. Let's make a list of priorities, saying 'no, we're sorry' to everyone else and upsetting everyone else. But who has the courage to say 'no' to everyone else? That's Romania's problem. Nobody has the courage to say 'no' to everyone who is not a priority," the economist pointed out, when asked which sectors we should focus on in the coming years.