Hungary’s central bank: Coordinated fiscal, monetary policy needed to tackle inflation
Fiscal and monetary policy will have to be coordinated to bring down inflation, and the government should focus on the spending side to restore balance to the budget, Barnabás Virág, deputy governor of Hungary’s central bank (NBH), told a conference on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, further hikes will have to be made to bring about positive real interest rates, he told the Lending 2022 – Portfolio conference.
Virag said inflation would peak in the third quarter, averaging an annual 9-10 percent. Monetary policy must concentrate on breaking second-round inflationary effects, he added, so the strict tightening cycle will continue in the coming period.
He noted that
high inflation was a global problem, and it could complicate Hungarian economic policymaking unless it is resolved.
The central banker noted the high budget deficit and public debt levels, intensifying competition for skilled labour putting upward pressure on wages, as well as lax market competition in several segments of the economy.
He said
Hungary would not be able to avoid double-digit inflation in the coming months as was already the case in the region.
The National Bank of Hungary has raised the base rate by 480 basis points since last June, to 5.4 percent.
As we wrote today, Hungary’s GDP grew by an annual 8.2 percent in the first quarter, albeit from a low base, details HERE.
- read also: Hungary to be buried in state debt?
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Meteorologists predict snow across multiple Hungarian regions next week
Steven Bartlett at SIBF 2024: From business success to fatherhood dreams
Ukrainian county inhabited by Hungarians, Transcarpathia, under Russian attack!
Hungary’s universities break through in 2024 Shanghai Rankings—Which ones are top 200?
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
1 Comment
Inflation as of 10 May is now 10.3%. Can’t think this is its peak though.