Thrifty Bulgarian PM to pay for his guests' coffee
SOFIA (Reuters) - Bulgaria's new prime minister, Boiko Borisov, on Monday banned entertainment allowances at the council of ministers and told employees to pay for their guests' coffee as part of cost-cutting measures.
Dinners and lunches for visiting delegations will be the only exception, the government's press office said.
It said the government's office had been spending 7,000 levs ($5,372) a month on flowers and refreshments, which will now be saved as the Balkan country struggles to avoid a budget deficit.
"We will set a personal example," media quoted Borisov as saying on Sunday.
"My understanding is that when you have a guest, you go and pay yourself just like I pay for my own coffee. If one is very dear to me, I will treat them, if not, I will not treat them."
The order to cut entertainment allowances is likely to be extended to all ministries and regional governors' offices and is expected to save 1 million levs ($769,200) a year, government spokesman Nikolai Boev said.
The European Union's poorest nation has been hard hit by the global crisis which put an end to 12 years of economic growth.
Borisov's centre-right government won a parliamentary election in July on a promise to crack down on rampant corruption and fight the recession.
It has already cut public spending by 15 percent to avoid an end-year deficit that could put pressure on Bulgaria's lev currency peg to the euro.
(Reporting by Irina Ivanova)
© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved
India Investment Summit 2009
Top executives and bankers discuss their own plans and the broader opportunities and challenges for India during the Reuters India Investment Summit in Mumbai and Bangalore. Full Coverage | Blog
Back from the Dead
Reuters correspondent Sourav Mishra recounts the night of Nov. 26 at Leopold Cafe. Full Article | Full Coverage














