SHIFRATS: How did Kurti promise to be weaker prime minister than Haradinaj, Mustafa and Thaci?

Radical budgetary division has promised Mr. Albin Kurti was voted in as the new prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo. This implies that there will be immediate efforts in the government to compile the 2020 budget, as set deadlines are running out. But what will Kosovo budget look like after four [...]
Kurti announced a series of measures that would be taken based on the agreement for co-governance with the LDK and where part of the government programme was located at thick points.
Kurti promised Kosovo budget at the end of mandate would be V Last 3 billion euros in the exhibition before being voted prime minister.
In 2019, Kosovo's budget reached the figure of 2 billion euros in spite of unwarranted spending, luxury spending, growing social schemes, and especially capital projects such as billions of highways and other infrastructure projects, writes Periscope.
This means that the Haradinaj II government had increased the budget for 13.05 per cent, since Kosovo's budget in 2017 under Government Mustafa had been 2 billion.
This increase has been achieved for only two years, and by conveying the pace it had taken, if Government Haradinaj II lasted four years, it would increase the budget of 26.10 percent.
Meanwhile, Kurti government, with its growth of 3 billion in last year's mandate, has practically promised that budget would only increase 23.33 percent: From 2.3 to 2019 to 3 in 2024.
This implies that even Mr. The budget growth rate is smaller than the growth that Haradinaj II Government had made.
But back in time. The government had promised that it would manage to bring Kosovo's budget to 2 billion euros, and that was accomplished.
In 2014, Kosovo's budget was 1 billion of 590m euros. The increase in 2 billion makes Government Mustafa even more successful than the Haradinaj Government. The budgetary growth had been 20.5 per cent for two and a half years.
What did Thaci and Thaci 2 governments do?
Thaci I government that began operating in January 2008 found the country with a single budget 815m euros. Of the 815 million, the budget had become 1 billion and 590 million in 2014, which was the last for Thaci Government.
This means that during the two Thaci governments, the increase in Kosovo's budget has gone to 48.7 per cent. Yet, these two governments had lasted for six years. To match previous comparisons, it turns out that the Thaci Government has grown by an average of 16.23 percent every two years. In comparison with Kurti Government's promise, Thaci governments have also had greater growth with 32.47 percent compared to the Kurti Government that promised budget growth for 23,33 percent.
It is not known why Kurti and Mustafa promised only 3 billion euros in budgets at the end of the ruling mandate despite the non-recognition of capital projects, the promise of savings and fighting corruption.
Taking into account all the measures promoted, it has been expected that the growth of the budget would be markedly greater. /Periscope












