The State Duma on Friday locked in the government's basic
spending parameters for 2004, passing a draft budget in the first of four
required readings by a comfortable margin.
Lawmakers passed the $88.6 billion spending bill, which envisions a
surplus for the fifth consecutive year, by a vote of 246 to 180, 20 more
than the simple majority needed in the 450-seat chamber.
"We need stability in society, and this document can ensure it,"
Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov was quoted as telling deputies in a surprise
appearance ahead of the vote.
The bill was supported by all four pro-Kremlin factions, the Agrarians
and the LDPR, while the Communists, the Union of Right Forces, or SPS,
and Yabloko voted against it for different reasons.
"This is the budget of a police state," Communist leader Gennady
Zyuganov said. "Defense and law enforcement spending will grow while
spending on science, agriculture, transport and the social sphere will
be cut."
SPS leader Boris Nemtsov said his party voted against the budget because
part of the defense budget is "black" or classified, while Yabloko
called it a "budget of stagnation."
More than a quarter of all government spending next year will go to
defense (411.4 billion rubles, or $13.1 billion at the projected average
ruble-dollar rate of 31.30) and law enforcement and security (310.5 billion
rubles).
But Kasyanov called it "a budget of social progress" and pro-middle
class because it is aimed at further reducing the tax burden and over-reliance
on natural resources. The 5 percent national sales tax will be scrapped
next year and value added tax will drop to 18 percent from 20 percent.
The budget forecasts economic growth of 5.2 percent, slightly off this
year's expected 6 percent, and lowers the tax burden by 1 percent of gross
domestic product.
Kasyanov said lower taxes would boost economic growth and help achieve
President Vladimir Putin's goal of doubling GDP within a decade, which
is "the panacea in our struggle with poverty."
Revenues are expected to hit $91.4 billion, bringing a surplus of nearly
$3 billion. But that will all depend on the price of oil, the nation's
major export. Spending is based on the assumption that Urals crude will
average $20 a barrel in 2004, while projected revenues are based on $22.
Urals currently trades at around $24.50.
To guard against an unexpected drop in the price of crude, the government
is pushing through a bill alongside the draft budget that will create
a stabilization fund to hold windfall revenues.
Finance Minster Alexei Kudrin told lawmakers that creating the fund
is crucial because it "forever secures us from situations ... like
default."
The draft budget puts inflation at between 8 percent and 10 percent,
which would be the lowest in post-Soviet Russian history and down from
an expected 12 percent this year.
The crucial second reading is scheduled for Oct. 17. The government
wants the bill to pass all four readings in the lower house of parliament
and win the approval of the Federation Council so that it can be signed
by the president ahead of the Dec. 7 parliamentary elections.
See also:
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Budget-2004
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