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Thrifty Bulgarian PM to pay for his guests' coffee

Mon Oct 26, 2009 6:29pm IST
 
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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)

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