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How does the Commission intend to pay for unforeseen expenditure?
There is no question here of unforeseen expenditure.
The flexibility instrument is meant to cover unforeseen expenditure.
The regularity of the last-minute request for unforeseen expenditure is relentless.
They dreaded the unanticipated bill or unforeseen expenditure.
On the other hand, individual savers (both households and firms) may have sudden, unpredictable needs for cash, due to unforeseen expenditures.
These questions demonstrate that the EU's budget planning must be flexible enough to cope with unforeseen expenditure.
The Contingency Fund of India exists for disasters and related unforeseen expenditures.
No unforeseen expenditures..." He fell silent, looking hopefully at Jasmina.
He can also make advances out of the Contingency Fund of the State to meet any unforeseen expenditure.
One reported that any renovation of the Hocutt House would ". . . involve extensive and unforeseen expenditures."
Saddled with millions of dollars worth of debt from earlier unforeseen expenditures during the theater's restoration, the Playhouse's operators struggled with balancing interest and loan repayments with increasing running costs.
As regards financial precautions, as I have already pointed out we are still below the own resources ceiling, which means we have a quite considerable financial margin of 0.14 % of the EU gross national product to provide for unforeseen expenditure.
My Group believes that the key to better value lies in a modest budget increase, leaving a safe margin for unforeseen expenditure, linked to reform, less waste and more intelligent investment. Not promises of smarter spending from Member States with no will to deliver it.
In the first reading of the Budget for the year 2000, the Council of Ministers proposed a 10 per cent linear reduction in category four. This made it possible to finance the unforeseen expenditure on Kosovo, Turkey and East Timor.
Although intended to further curtail local government expenditure - by requiring authorities to meet any unforeseen expenditure from existing budgets - the effect may well have been to persuade local authorities to set high initial rates (to provide adequate balances to meet unexpected contingencies or loss of income).
I do not know whether the continuation of the House of European History can be considered as unforeseen expenditure, but I listened carefully to Marta Andreasen, who pointed out to us when the programme was approved that the costs stated in the report for the House of European History are substantially underestimated.