UPDATE 2-Serb parliament adopts 2013 budget, sees deficit at 3.3 pct

Sat Dec 1, 2012 6:32am EST 

* Budget pledges to cut deficit to 3.3 pct of GDP

* Govt sees 2013 growth of 2 pct, from 2 pct contraction in 2012

Dec 1 (Reuters) - Lawmakers in Serbia adopted a 2013 budget on Saturday, 
pledging to slash the deficit to 3.3 percent of national output and return the 
economy to growth of 2 percent as the government seeks new IMF funding.

The Balkan country is running a budget shortfall this year of around 6.2 
percent of gross domestic product (GDP) as seen in the revised budget, while 
public debt has ballooned to 60 percent. GDP is forecast to contract 2 percent 
in 2012.

"The modest growth in 2013 is expected on the basis of the (expected) recovery 
of the (domestic) economy and of economies which are Serbia's main foreign 
trade partners," the budget document said.

Like much of the western Balkans, Serbia has slid back into recession this year 
on declining trade and investment from the crisis-hit  
<http://www.reuters.com/subjects/euro-zone> euro zone and a harvest hit by 
drought. The country expects public debt to peak in 2013 at 65.2 percent of GDP.

The government set the 2013 consolidated deficit target, which includes 
financial statements of local communities and state funds, slightly higher, at 
3.6 percent. It also set revenues at 956.4 billion dinars ($11.12 billion) and 
spending at 1,078 billion dinars.

"This is the beginning of our struggle against the economic crisis," Finance 
Minister Mladjan Dinkic said before the budget was approved by parliament by 
138 votes to 69.

The government, a coalition of nationalists and socialists, is trying to secure 
a three-year precautionary loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), 
which froze a 1 billion euro ($1.30 billion) standby deal in January due to 
over-spending.

The IMF says Serbia's forecasts are over-optimistic, and the World Bank is 
predicting more modest growth next year. Serbia's Fiscal Council, a 
parliament-appointed watchdog, also warned the shortfall would be higher, about 
4.3 percent.

Unemployment has reached 25.5 percent, and year-on-year inflation in October 
stood at 12.9 percent.

The government has outlined cuts in public sector spending, subsidies and 
sovereign guarantees for Serbia's major state-run companies.

The country will also resort to borrowing next year, when it plans a $2 billion 
Eurobond and a 500 million euro loan from the Luxembourg-based European 
Investment Bank for investment in small and medium-sized enterprises. It has 
also sought sovereign loans from Russia and  
<http://www.reuters.com/places/china> China.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/01/serbia-budget-idUSL5E8N10ET20121201?rpc=401

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