Mojmir Mrak of the Ljubljana Economics Faculty: Budget Restructuring Will Be Hard

Maribor, 21 January

"Without changing legislation, it will be impossible to create the conditions facilitating a rise in investments. The rise is necessary for economic growth, which will also be propelled by an effective drawing of EU budgetary funds, stressed Mojmir Mrak of the Ljubljana Economics Faculty.

How do you see Budget Restructuring?

The country will have to do three things to be able to fully use the funds from the EU.
Firstly, it will have to restructure its budget expenditure; secondly, it will have to work out good-quality projects which must facilitate development; and thirdly, secure an effective infrastructure for a smooth flow between the domestic and EU budgets. Budget restructuring, however, will be "politically and economically a rather difficult task". Given that the situation in Slovenia is not dramatic, it will be very difficult to persuade people to tighten their belt.
It will be by no means a disaster for Slovenia if we do not use budgetary funds from Brussels. However, it would be very hard to exceed the trend of 3-4% annual economic growth rates in this case.

Does restructuring budget expenditures mean a nominal cut in expenditures?

Not necessarily. Whether certain groups of expenditure have to be cut nominally, depends primarily on economic growth rates. The higher the growth, the less radical the cuts.
Without changing legislation, it will be impossible to create the conditions facilitating a rise in investments. The rise is necessary for economic growth, which will also be propelled by an effective drawing of EU budgetary funds.
If talks on the EU's next financial perspective close with the figures advocated by the European Commission, Slovenia could count on getting two or three times more from the EU budget after 2007 than in the 2004-2006 period. This means that the volume of Slovenian funds needed for co-financing will have to increase too.

More articles from this issue:

Interview
Mojmir Mrak of the Ljubljana Economics Faculty: Budget Restructuring Will Be Hard
Maribor, 21 January
Politics
Government Quickens to Fulfil Conditions for Adoption of Euro
Ljubljana, 24 January
Foreign Policy
Jansa to Meet EU and NATO Officials Today
Brussels, 25 January
Bilateral Cooperation
Jansa and Sanader Discuss Approaches to Solving Open Issues
Mokrice, 21 January
Kukan and Rupel Praise Good Bilateral Relations
Ljubljana, 21 January
Government
Govt Forms Local Self-Government and Regional Policy Office
Ljubljana, 20 January
NGOs and the Govt Establishing a Dialogue
Ljubljana, 21 January
Parliament
Strategy for Slovenians Abroad Concerned with Language Issues
Cooperation between Parliament and MEPs to Be Strengthened
Brussels, 21 January
EU Constitution Discussed in Parliament
Ljubljana, 21 January
Economy
Slovenia Advocates Minor Changes to Stability and Growth Pact
Brussels, 18 January
Economic Growth Relies Heavily on Exports, Says Report
Ljubljana, 20 January
Statistics
Human Trafficking Most Common Organised Crime in Slovenia
Ljubljana 21 January
Slovenia's GDP per Capita Just Over 75% of EU 25 Average
Brussels, 25 January
Agriculture
VURS Director Deems Slovenian Food Safety Controls Adequate
Ljubljana, 23 January
Technology
Slovenian Internet Content Expanding Rapidly
Ljubljana, 18 January
Transport
Transport Minister Discusses 5th Transport Route with Commissioner Barrot
Brussels, 20 January
People
Charities Busy Receiving Donations for Tsunami Relief
Sport
Golden Fox: Maze Wins Third G-Slalom of the Season
Maribor, 22 January
Calendar of Events
Schedule of Events

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