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OECD: Robust growth is returning to Hungary

The OECD’s director of country studies said Hungary was showing signs of strong economic growth despite the economy having taken a hit from the pandemic.

In a new country report released by the OECD, it states that robust growth is returning to Hungary.

Speaking at an online press conference presenting the Economic Survey of Hungary 2021, Alvaro Pereira, the OECD’s director of country studies, said Hungary was showing signs of strong economic growth despite the economy having taken a hit from the pandemic. This spring, inflation in Hungary surpassed the 3 percent target and inflation pressure remains high, he said. The country’s aging population is leading to a shrinking workforce, and in turn, rising pension expenditures, he added.

According to MTI, Pereira said that though Hungary’s unemployment rate increased in 2020, its rise was still below the European Union average. Wage growth is expected to remain stable in 2021, he said, adding that it should be accompanied by productivity growth. Employment in Hungary’s poorer eastern and south-western regions is significantly lower than in other parts of the country and overall regional differences in the country are high, he said. Taxes on labour remain high compared with the EU and OECD averages, Pereira said, adding that the low centrally regulated prices of energy, water, wastewater and waste collection services do not incentivise investments in this area. Pereira said the adoption of advanced information and communication technology (social media, cloud computing, high-speed internet, big data analysis) was low and mobile internet prices were too high compared with the OECD average.

Addressing the online press conference, Gábor Gion, State Secretary for Financial Affairs, said it was not economic factors but a potential fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic that posed the biggest risk to Hungary’s economy. He said the current situation of Hungary’s health-care system and the development of international markets greatly influence the country’s small and open economy. “As regards the effects of the pandemic, Hungary’s economy has proven to be more shock-resistant and adaptive than expected,” Gion said, noting that the country reported an economic growth rate of around 2 percent in the second quarter of 2020, which had even surprised analysts. “The country’s economic growth might exceed 6 percent this year,” he said. Hungary’s labour market has also responded well to the economic crisis caused by the pandemic, with the unemployment rate currently standing at 4.2 percent, Gion said. “But, in a more important development, the number of people holding a job is currently close to 4.7 million,” he said, adding that the government plans to reach an 80 percent employment rate by 2030. “As regards the Hungarian minimum wage, it is on a growth path, but we still have a long way to go to reach the OECD average,” Gion said.

In an interview with Magyar Nemzet, Gion said Hungary would not comply with the OECD’s recommendation to introduce a general property tax. Gion said residential properties were mostly in private hands in Hungary. Therefore, a sweeping property tax would hit hard families whose only valuable asset is their home, he said. Gion said the OECD’s country report and Hungary “see most issues similarly”. However, the Hungarian government will not comply with the OECD’s recommendations on issues it sees differently from the body, Gion said. Next to the property tax, another such issue is the length of time jobseekers are eligible for government allowance, which the OECD sees as too short, Gion said. The Hungarian government, on the other hand, “wants to facilitate finding jobs rather than handing out aid”, he said. Data justifies the government, he said, as the number of jobholders in Hungary has never been higher.