Government Approves Slovenia’s Budget for 2019

By , 23 Nov 2018, 11:50 AM Politics
Government Approves Slovenia’s Budget for 2019 Montage: JL Flanner

Share this:

STA, 22 November 2018 - The government approved on Thursday a budget deal for 2019, securing extra funding for pensions and municipalities, according to an official tweet. The detailed contents of the changes to the budget implementation act for 2018 and 2019 is not known yet.

The changes are needed because of the additional costs envisaged for next year. The government will also need to prepare a supplementary budget for 2019. "It (the supplementary budget) will be discussed next year, but talks will start now," Prime Minister Marjan Šarec said after the session.

The costs for next year rose following an agreement with municipalities on higher funding, which will cost an additional EUR 32.5m, and a pensions raise in the autumn, which will cost EUR 7m.

The budget expenditure will rise by another EUR 6m because of the setting up of a new budget fund promoting the development of NGOs.

Pensions remain a sore point

The government also endorsed today the proposal drawn up by Finance Minister Andrej Bertoncelj under which EUR 140m would be allocated for the annual bonus for pensioners, which means additional EUR 18m in cost for the state.

The proposal was endorsed unanimously although the Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) had demanded that the government fully honour the commitments from the coalition agreement regarding pensioners, which would cost EUR 178m.

Šarec stressed today the amount of money available was limited. "I personally believe that people deserve a decent living, but ministries will need to work hard and prepare certain structural measures," he said.

Commenting on the tensions between the Pensioners' Party (DeSUS) and the SAB over their demands concerning pensioners, he said that all members of the government must work for the benefit of all social groups and that it made no sense to claim that just one party advocates for pensioners.

To balance the budget, the government plans to cut budget spending by EUR 80m. Some EUR 16m are to be saved by leaving transfers to individuals and households level in 2019 and another EUR 60m by keeping restrictions on the paying out of bonuses for increased workload to public sector employees.

Photo galleries and videos

This websie uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies.