ECONOMY

Spending cuts for appearances

Spending cuts for appearances

State investments are being sacrificed on the altar of the government’s social profile: While the government is distributing 1.4 billion euros, the Public Investments Program (PIP) has frozen, according to the budget figures issued on Tuesday by the Finance Ministry for the January-October period.

The flash estimates published by the State General Accounting Office showed that PIP expenditure was reduced by 1.087 billion euros in the year to end-October, as instead of scheduled investments of 3.06 billion, the state only spent 1.97 billion euros.

The draft budget states that the target of 6.75 billion euros will be met by the end of the year, but the ministry had said the same thing last year when the PIP was abandoned so that a “social dividend” worth 615 million euros could be paid out. Last year’s PIP was reduced by 460 million (i.e. three-quarters of the social dividend).

The general trend of containing expenditure resulted in the primary budget surplus amounting to 5.355 billion euros in January-October, against a target of 5.239 billion.

Net revenues came to 40.6 billion euros, missing their target by 2.84 billion or 6.5 percent. The ministry says that the shortfall is due to increased rebates, which were up 1.96 billion euros on projections, and to the belated start of Single Property Tax (ENFIA) payments in September instead of August.

Besides those two reasons cited, though, the shortfall came about mainly because of taxpayers’ inability to meet their obligations: Last month alone 410,000 taxpayers were added to the list of state debtors.

State budget expenditure for the January-October period amounted to 40.43 billion euros, 2.94 billion euros below the target. In October budget spending amounted to 4.07 billion euros, which was 622 million euros less than forecast.

This year the state has spent 101 million euros less than planned on hospitals, 157 million less on the solidarity social income and 73 million euros less on main residence protection, among other cuts.

Subscribe to our Newsletters

Enter your information below to receive our weekly newsletters with the latest insights, opinion pieces and current events straight to your inbox.

By signing up you are agreeing to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.