Slovak Finance Minister Proposes 105 Million Euro Anti-Fraud System While Keeping Study Secret
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Slovak Finance Minister Samuel Migaľ wants to spend 105 million euros on an anti-fraud system inspired by a Hungarian model that cost only 28 million euros. The minister is keeping the feasibility study that allegedly demonstrates the investment's advantages classified from public scrutiny. The proposed system would be designed to prevent fraud, following Hungary's example, but the Slovak version would cost nearly four times more than its Hungarian counterpart. The secrecy surrounding the study raises questions about transparency in government spending decisions, particularly given the significant cost difference between the two systems.
