Survey assesses Hungarians’ financial health, and the results are far from encouraging
The National Bank of Hungary revealed the results of its inaugural survey on Hungarians’ financial health on Thursday.
The survey, which defined financial health as a feeling of financial security as well as the freedom to make one’s own financial decisions in the present and in planning for the future, was conducted among a representative sample of 1,500 people between the ages of 18 and 79 in August. Based on the results, the NHB rated Hungarians’ financial health on a scale of 0 to 100.
On average, Hungarians scored 53 on the NBH’s Financial Health Index, but 14pc were in the “critical” range, between 0 and 29, and 29pc were “vulnerable”, scoring between 30 and 49. The NBH noted that more than half of the households in those at-risk categories had net incomes under HUF 400,000/month. Around 35pc of Hungarians were in the “low-risk” category, scoring 50-69. Among the Financial Health Index sub-indices, Hungarians scored 48 for “ability and effort to make savings”, 56 on the gauge of material position and 49 for “financial resilience”.
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