Vietnam's
government exceeds spending limit again
Discussions on weak fiscal
discipline began to pop up again after new data revealed that the government
in 2014 did not just spend more than it had, but also broke an overspending
cap imposed by legislators.
At a meeting with the Standing Committee of the
National Assembly on Wednesday, Finance Minister Dinh Tien Dung reported a
state budget deficit of more than VND260.14 trillion (US$11.5 billion) in
2014, or 6.61 percent of the country's gross domestic product, local media
said.
That
was an increase of 16.1 percent from the maximum deficit level approved by the National Assembly that year.
Legislators wanted the deficit to stay below 5.7 percent of GDP.
Explaining
the higher-than-allowed spending,
Dung said many infrastructure projects had to be sped up and the government
had to borrow more.
He urged the legislature to approve the
spending figures so that the government can wrap up accounting work for the
year 2014.
This
practice of breaching expenditure limits is not rare in Vietnam. But this
time, many top legislators demanded the government present a detailed report
on its spending, otherwise official fiscal figures will not be
accepted.
"Our
finances are not transparent with many unaccounted expenses," Phan Trung
Ly, chairman of the National Assembly's legal committee, was quoted as saying
at the meeting.
"We
need to abide by laws; there must be no leniency," he said, calling on
the legislature to carefully consider the figures.
In 2013, the state budget deficit amounted to
more than VND236.76 trillion, or 6.6 percent of GDP, exceeding the 5.3
percent cap set by the National Assembly.
Under
existing rules, the government is allowed to borrow money to make up for its
deficit. This year, for instance, it plans to borrow VND254 trillion ($11.23
billion).
Latest
figures released by the government last month showed Vietnam's public debt
was equivalent to 62.2 percent of GDP.
It
will rise to 63.8 percent at the end of this year, and then 64.7 percent in
2018, or slightly lower than the threshold of 65 percent, according to the
World Bank's projections.
|
Thứ Năm, 16 tháng 6, 2016
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét