Despite record-high inflation, Orbán’s popularity remains high in Hungary
The Hungarian inflation is still the highest in the European Union, but that does not harm the popularity of PM Viktor Orbán and his Fidesz party.
Based on a Republikon survey conducted between 14 and 25 July, Fidesz’s popularity is 28 percent of the total population. Former PM Ferenc Gyurcsány’s DK follows them with only 13 percent. Among the party voters, that rate reaches 46 percent, while DK’s is only 18 percent. DK is strengthening, and Fidesz is weakening, but the difference is still astonishing and would mean a comfortable majority for Orbán, provided the elections were this Sunday. Jobbik, the Socialists, Párbeszéd, and LMP – Hungary’s green party – would not cross the parliamentary threshold, Telex wrote.
Think-tank: US politician Kari Lake ‘stands by Hungary’
American politician Kari Lake, who was the big draw at this year’s CPAC Hungary conference, is supporting Hungary in connection with “foul” visa sanctions the Biden administration has imposed on Hungary, the Center for Fundamental Rights, said on Tuesday. The Hungarian think-tank said in a statement that Lake was among “the most vocal American supporters of peace” and had stood by Hungary in the face of “Joe Biden’s ideologically based attacks … devoid of rationality or legal grounds”. On its Facebook page, the think-tank quoted Kari Lake as saying: “Hungary won’t help Joe Biden escalate the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, so Biden is weaponizing our visa waiver program against them.”
Inflation declines but still very high
Consumer prices in Hungary grew by an annual 17.6 percent in July, the Central Statistical Office (KSH) said on Tuesday. Inflation fell for the sixth month in a row after peaking at 25.7 percent in January. Food prices rose by 23.1 percent in July, while household energy prices increased by 35.7 percent. Prices in the category of goods that includes vehicle fuel rose by 17.2 percent, while spirits and tobacco products increased by 14.6 percent and clothing prices by 8.0 percent. Service prices increased by 14.6 percent, accelerating from a 14.4 percent rise in June.
Core inflation, which excludes volatile fuel and food prices, was 17.5 percent. The CPI calculated with a basket of goods and services used by pensioners was 18.7 percent. In a month-on-month comparison, consumer prices edged up 0.3 percent.
Commenting on the data, Márton Nagy, the minister of economic development, insisted that government measures had been “brutally effective”, and “sanctions-fuelled” inflation may be reduced to single digits by October. Hungary had entered a period of “dynamic inflation reduction” thanks to targeted government measures such as online price monitoring, he added. He said the 0.9 percent drop, month on month, in food prices was an important component of the general decrease in inflation and food inflation had almost halved from its peak on an annual basis.
He said price monitoring had generated competition between food retailers, with prices falling in 53 of 62 product categories monitored. Lower food prices in July may have led to a 0.7 percentage point easing in general inflation, he added. Nagy also noted the competition authority’s involvement in strictly monitoring multinational retailers with a view to preventing price gouging.