Government of the Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria
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Strategy for the digital transformation of the Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria
In August 2021, the Chairman of the Government of the Kabardino-Balkarian Republic, Aliy Musukov, approved the Strategy for the digital transformation of sectors of the economy, social sphere and public administration of the Kabardino-Balkarian Republic for 2022-2024 years. You can get acquainted with the document by clicking on the link.
2018: Debt on loans from the federal budget
In February 2018, a rating was published that analyzed the dynamics of the debt of regional budgets on loans provided to them by the federal budget to the federal budget according to Rosstat for the period from 2007 to 2017.
Most of the regions have a dynamics worse than the national average. Only one region has a declining budget. This is Kabardino-Balkaria. But to believe that the CBD is an exemplary republic in the situation with debts would be wrong. Debts there are very high relative to GRP, high even by North Caucasian standards. The reduction in the debt burden there took place at the end of the zero - beginning of the tenth, mainly due to the fact that the republic practically crushed the entire market for inexpensive vodka[1].
But after the Rosalkogolregulirovanie was established in 2010, which harshly took up the "Catalan" vodka, the legal market for Kabardino-Balkarian vodka began to have problems. It would seem that counterfeit products that created competition for legal producers were over, the market was cleared. But it turned out that legal products also for the most part did not comply with the standards. The "golden period" of debt payments to the budget is over.
In 2013, republican vodka workers began to receive subsidies, up to 70% of excise taxes received by the regional budget were returned to them. Production has increased, and republican debt has decreased. But in 2015, Rosalkogolregulirovanie began to close liquor plants in the CBD in a row. Debts began to grow immediately. At the end of 2017, the CBD expects an increase in debts by 25-30%.