Taxes on food are the highest in Hungary, and the price of food is the highest while the minimum wage is the lowest, the leader of the opposition Tisza Party said during a visit to Poland. He also talked about how food prices could be reduced.
This is why food prices are so high in Hungary
During a visit to Katowice on Saturday, Péter Magyar saw first hand that while the Polish minimum wage was 50 percent higher than the Hungarian one, food prices were 20 percent lower, on average, than in Hungary, the Tisza Party said in a statement.
Magyar said that while minimum wages in all neighbouring countries were higher than in Hungary, the price of basic foods was lower, according to the statement. As a result of the Orbán government’s “failed economic policy decisions”, Hungary has set a European record in food price inflation, reaching 62 percent in three years, he added.
Magyar said that Orbán had introduced several taxes since 2010 that significantly increased food prices.
Hungary is currently a European champion in terms of taxes on food, with the 27 percent VAT rate boosted by a public health product fee and a 4.5 percent extra profit tax, he said. Additionally, since last year, manufacturers are affected by an extended producer responsibility (EPR) fee that is among the highest in Europe, he added.
Food inflation, high prices flatten consumtion
At the same time, profits are low, developments have been neglected, and there are problems with efficiency and competitiveness in the food industry, he said.
“Huge” taxes and food inflation have significantly set back consumption, and consequently profits in the food industry, Magyar said. This makes development and the progress of Hungary’s food industry impossible, he added.
From 2026, the Tisza Party would reduce the VAT on fruits and vegetables, and gradually on all healthy food products, to 5 percent, he said. It would also significantly reduce other taxes on food, to boost consumption and the competitiveness of Hungary’s food industry, he added.
Magyar said consumer protection would also be strengthened in order to ensure that retailers pass on the price reductions expected from tax cuts to consumers.
Read also:
- Rising food prices in Hungary spark concern, many shop abroad for groceries – read more HERE
- Food prices in Hungary will increase significantly in autumn
Featured image: depositphotos.com
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