Kurti the most lazy of the prime ministers

With the highest budget in history, Prime Minister Albin Kurti has spent at least in the category of capital investments, along with all of his predecessors. About 2.8 billion euros has been Kosovo's approved budget for 2022 when the Kurti government proposed and approved it in the Assembly, of which 704m euros [...]
With the highest budget in history, Prime Minister Albin Kurti has spent at least in the category of capital investments, along with all of his predecessors.
About 2.8 billion euros has been Kosovo's approved budget for 2022, when government Kurti proposed and approved it in the Assembly, of which 704m euros have been planned for capital investments, while last year the country's institutions have managed to spend over 419m euros, or 59.5% of the planned budget for capital investments.
The government of former Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti has failed to spend the proposed budget and approved in the Assembly, as the country had gone to early elections in early 2021.
Hoti's predecessor, Ramush Haradinaj, had proposed in 2018 a total budget of about 2.1 billion euros, of which some 695m euros in capital investments. Of the latter, at the time Haradinaj was prime minister, over 530m euros had been spent, or 76.33%, reports Front Online.

Former Prime Minister Isa Mustafa in 2015 had proposed around 1.6 billion euros in overall budgets in the country, of which over 457m euros in capital investments. Of the latter, over 403m euros were spent, or 88.3%.

In 2009, former Prime Minister Hashim Thaci had no more than 1.4 billion euros in budgets, of which more than 408m euros were proposed capital investments, while 400.3m euros were realised, or 98%, reports Front Online.

Otherwise, Kurti at the end of 2021, at the 43rd Government Meeting, had declared that with the budget of about 2.8 billion euros, investment in education and education was spent with the construction of 50 new nests across the country, free schooling for all students, as well as sharing 2 thousand additional scholarships for the best students. Most of the promises given back then have not been realized last year.