Gov’t priorities lacks systemic reforms for business
Plans call for cutting corporate tax, scrapping tax licenses, but balanced budget postponed.
Plans call for cutting corporate tax, scrapping tax licenses, but balanced budget postponed.
Rumours that the US Steel will change hands resurface.
Tips for events around Slovakia between March 25 and April 3, including live, jazz, folklore and classical music, easter market, party, wine tasting, dance, opera, exhibitions and more.
The Slovak Economy Ministry is currently in negotiations with two automotive players, one of them being the US company Tesla.
Among Slovak police, fear prevails, according to a former investigator involved in a vast VAT refund scandal.
Slovak Easter traditions may survive, as well as awareness of where they stem from, but not on a mass scale, says ethnologist Katarína Nádaská.
A summer training programme is being prepared for teachers to instruct them on how to tackle the issue of the Holocaust.
All nineteen parliamentary committees now have their leaders, as elected in a secret ballot on March 23. However, the division of posts in committees caused disputes between opposition and coalition, to be resolved by a panel of legislators.
Voters who elect extremists allege they do not decide due to media coverage; but rather due to posts and information from social networks.
New Business Leaders Forum head on ethics, diversity, transparency.
Slovak president Andrej Kiska has received the resignation of the outgoing government and appointed a new one which has to file its programme statement within a month.
The Slovak University of Technology Bratislava (STU) was placed 401-450th in the Computer Sciences and Information Systems category of the QS World University Rankings.
Despite more activities and travelling taking place during the Easter holidays, fewer accidents happen in Slovakia on Easter Monday than on any normal Monday.
HAD the general election had taken place in mid-March, it would have been won by Smer with 27.5 percent of the vote, while the coalition party Sieť would not have made it into parliament – with only 3.6 percent.