Teachers’ Day: infinite party promises but salaries are very low

The co-ruling Christian Democrats (KDNP) said in a statement on Sunday, Teachers’ Day, that teachers “hold Hungary’s future in their hands” and “we are grateful to all those who educate our youth in kindergartens and schools.”

Families are in the focus of KDNP’s policy, the statement signed by group leader István Simicskó said, adding that “the future of our homeland and our nation rests on the young generation raised by those families”. Teachers have a huge responsibility in “what kind of people our children and grandchildren will grow up to be,” it said.

Parties of the opposition also thanked teachers for their work, but protested low pay in schools and recent restrictions concerning the rights of teachers to strike.

The Democratic Coalition (DK) said in a statement:

“We should not forget how much we owe teachers whose efforts [Prime Minister Viktor] Orbán’s inhumane system

has rewarded with a successive curbing of their rights, humiliatingly low salaries, an incredible workload and degrading Teachers’ Day benefits in the past 12 years”.

The Párbeszéd party demanded an instant pay rise and benefits for teachers. In a statement, the party noted the high rate of teachers quitting their jobs, and insisted it was “the last chance to reverse the drastic deterioration of the quality of public education”. Párbeszéd will appeal to the Constitutional Court against recent legislation seen as “shockingly” curbing teachers’ right to strike, the statement said.

Green LMP said a pay rise to compensate teachers for inflation could no longer be delayed, and insisted that the salaries of young teachers was higher in every other European Union member state except Bulgaria. In their statement, LMP co-leaders Erzsébet Schmuck and Máté Kanász-Nagy demanded a pay hike immediately, as well as the restoration of teachers’ right to strike.

The Socialist Party said it would also appeal to the top court concerning the strike law, and demanded that teachers should get a “radical” increase of at least 50 percent of their salaries, and

each teacher should receive a voucher worth 100,000 forints (EUR 255) as a Teachers’ Day bonus.

Conservative Jobbik MP Koloman Brenner said on Facebook his party was working to ensure that teachers are properly rewarded for their work “morally and financially”.

Semmelweis University
Read alsoHungary is home to almost 35,600 international students

Source: MTI

2 Comments

  1. What else could the teachers expect from the Orbán Government? A verbal pat on the back for doing a great job, and NOTHING ELSE, – apart from trampling on their human rights and making sure that they never go on strike in order to get a pay rise to make ends meet. 🙁

    If I were PM Orbán, I would be ashamed to face my fellow EU heads of state knowing all too well how deplorable all Hungarian educators’ salaries were.

    It’s common knowledge that if you pay very low wages, you will only attract incompetent or unskilled people.

    …I think it was here where I read that only a handful of university students chose to teach physics. Why am I not surprised?

  2. Our Politicians harp on and on about the importance of Family, Children and Education – it is just our Politicians refuse to pay for it … #haveyourcakeandeatit

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *