Ukraine’s parliament on Friday examined the new government’s revised 2005 budget
Published:
26 March 2005 y., Saturday
Ukraine’s parliament on Friday examined the new government’s revised 2005 budget, which foresees more revenue but also a larger deficit to fund big increases in benefits and wages a year before elections.
The new administration, put in place after Viktor Yushchenko won last year’s presidential election, is grappling with huge social obligations undertaken by its predecessor.
Restoring financial discipline and passing a budget with only a modest deficit are key to investors.
Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko clearly has her eye on a March 2006 parliamentary election, with plans to raise wages, pensions and benefits to orphans, mothers and the handicapped.
Tymoshenko wanted deputies to pass the draft in a single reading. Budgets generally must pass through three readings.
With benefits aimed at the 70 per cent of Ukrainians coping with big financial difficulties, virtually no one in the 450-seat assembly openly opposed the draft.
Speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn predicted approval by the end of the day. But several members objected to sweeping government proposals to eliminate all tax breaks in order to raise revenue. Finance Minister Viktor Pynzenyk told the chamber the deficit had been raised to 6.8bn hryvnias ($1.3bn) or about 1.6 percent of GDP from about 5.5bn hryvnias deficit planned in an earlier draft.
Šaltinis:
jang-group.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
On 22 of June this year, the board of the newly established company of AB Bank SNORAS - UAB “SNORO Media Investicijos” - made a decision to invest in the shares of UAB “Lietuvos rytas” and to acquire 34 per cent of the authorised capital of the company.
more »
The Banker's Exchange is joining forces with Chicago-based Intergam Logistics as part of a global expansion initiative into the ATM support market.
more »
Lisbon treaty and financial supervision dominate debate at EU summit.
more »
In the most sweeping financial reform proposal since the Great Depression, President Barack Obama unveiled plans to overhaul the U.S. financial regulatory system, saying the events that led to the U.S. financial crisis make the proposed changes necessary.
more »
Due to the rising concerns on a possible disruption of Russian gas supplies to Europe coming through Ukraine, the Commission has chaired a meeting of the Gas Coordination Group to assure a stronger EU coordination and to secure energy supplies to European citizens.
more »
Mexico signs an agreement with Google to help revive tourism at its historical sites, after the swine flu epidemic.
more »
The recession could hit working women harder than men, an EU study warns, underscoring persistent disparities between the sexes in the European labour market.
more »
The first 4 months of 2009 saw 25 percent more FBI background checks on prospective firearm buyers compared to the same period last year in US.
more »
AS “Latvijas Krājbanka”, managed by AB Bank SNORAS, was presented with the annual prize of Deutsche Bank AG, one of the largest European banks, for the excellent quality of the outgoing payments.
more »
Danske Bankas has made another increase in the interest rate for fixed-term deposits in litas for both private and corporate clients.
more »