Hungarian FM: W Europeans want to undermine CEE’s competitive edge
Western Europeans are mounting legal and political attacks in an attempt to undermine central Europe’s competitive edge, Páter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, said in Brussels on Tuesday, insisting they were envious of CEE countries’ ability to attract investments from the East.
“Security threats largely undermine free trade, while political and ideological attacks threaten the free flow of investments”, affecting export economies like Hungary’s, Szijjártó told a press conference after a European Union Council meeting on trade affairs.
He said Hungary supported a global investment facilitation agreement to be adopted by the World Trade Organisation at its next meeting. This would undercut political and ideological obstacles in the way of the free flow of investments, he added.
Szijjártó reiterated Hungary’s objection to de-risking — essentially separating the Chinese and European economies — saying this was “an artificial political intervention” which went against Europe’s economic interests.
Read also:
- Hungarians to have easier access to New York, Beijing – UPDATED
- Minister Nagy: Europe slow at adapting to new trends
Dressed up in bureaucratic language, “they want to … security screen investments from … China,” he said.
The minister said Hungary did not want to be forced to return to artificial interventions in the economy redolent of the communist era.
The next decade, he said, would be “a decade of Eastern investments in Europe”. Most investments in Hungary in the past four years came from South Korea and China, respectively, nudging Germany and the US out of first place, he added.
He said central Europe was more competitive than Western Europe in attracting investments, “and we Hungarians are the main driver of central Europe’s success”.
“The global automotive revolution is essentially based on German-Chinese cooperation, and Hungary has become the European hub for all this,” he said.
Hungary, Szijjártó added, did not take the nationality of a company’s owners into consideration, only that it should comply with Hungarian laws.
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Slovak PM Fico may sacrifice his good relations with PM Orbán to keep his governing coalition
Orbán cabinet: Hungary can receive 6.61 billion euros from the EU in 2025
Experience the magic of Zagreb’s Christmas market with a special train from Hungary!
PHOTOS: Amazing Roman Catholic parish house inaugurated in Transylvania
PM Orbán: Patriots in majority in the Western world with Trump, left unable to govern
Big change ahead: Hungarian government bans alcohol from shop windows
1 Comment
Mr. Szijjártó may have missed that Hungary in a European Union context is still qualified as a “developing country”, which among others means companies setting up shop here may be eligible for legal state aid. Look at all that (EU) money on the table! And again, we are a TAKER, it is those Western Europeans who are the Contributors to the EU:
https://www.pwc.com/c1/en/cee-in-the-spotlight/the-energy-transition-in-cee-balancing-energy-security-growth-and-the-green-agenda.html
And – for years to come:
https://www2.deloitte.com/hu/en/pages/operations/articles/european-commission-approved-regional-aid-map-for-hungary.html
All the various advisors advocate the EU money pot. EY even hired the former CEO of the Hungarian Investment Promotion Agency (HIPA) to better explain the “icing on the cake”:
https://www.ey.com/en_hu/news/2022/10/robert-esik-will-further-support-companies-as-a-partner-at-ey
And Hungary is an EU Member – free trade and all that. Without this – well. Not so great, right?