TUNIS (AFP) – Tunisia’s President
Moncef Marzouki announced on Friday his decision to voluntarily take a
two-thirds pay cut as the government grapples with a financial situation it has
described as “critical.”
The Tunisian economy has suffered
from the instability that followed the 2011 revolution, which toppled long-time
autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and ignited the Arab Spring.
Presidential spokesman Adnane Mansar
had said that Marzouki earned a gross monthly wage of 30,000 Tunisian dinars
(around 13,600 euros), and a net income of 20,000 dinars (9,100 euros).
Marzouki, who has been head of state
since late 2011, also said he had ordered further reductions in the expenses of
the presidency.
Some Tunisian media have criticised the perceived excesses of the presidency, with much of the country still threatened by social conflict fuelled by poverty and high unemployment.
Some Tunisian media have criticised the perceived excesses of the presidency, with much of the country still threatened by social conflict fuelled by poverty and high unemployment.
On Friday the World Bank approved a
$100 million loan (72 million euros) to help small and medium sized businesses,
seen as crucial to the economic recovery of Tunisia’s private sector.
It said there are 624,000 such
businesses in Tunisia, employing around 1.2 million people, who make up an
estimated 44 percent of the workforce in the formal private sector.
The government said last week that
the country’s public finances were in such a critical state that it had
resorted to “exceptional measures” to ensure that April wages were paid.
In January, the International
Monetary Fund released more than $500 million, part of a $1.76 billion loan to
support Tunisia, shortly after a new technocratic government was sworn in under
a deal to end months of political instability.
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