PM Orbán’s political director: ‘Hungary must represent a policy of economic neutrality’
Change language:
Hungary has to endorse a policy of economic neutrality amid a transformation on a global level which is going with the emergence of economic blocs, the prime minister’s political director told public radio on Sunday.
PM’s political director talks about Hungary’s economic neutrality
Hungary must be on alert to respond with the appropriate strategy in the ongoing enormous global transformation, Balázs Orbán said on Kossuth radio.
He said that certain “western liberal players” aimed to respond to the transformation by limiting the scope of action of their allies in political, military, economic, cultural and other aspects “because they want to prevent them from maintaining ties with countries outside the alliance,” he said. “The emergence of such blocs in the western world would mean for Hungary to come under the control of a bloc, lose its sovereignty which would result in the country’s losing the opportunity to develop,” the political director said, adding that “this must be avoided by all means”.
“We do not want confrontation between the blocs, we reject the policy of the formation of blocs as we also reject the regime of sanctions and ideology or geopolitics driven trade relations,” he said, adding that such an approach “will take Hungary into a situation that allows a dynamic economic growth and development in the coming decades”.
The political director said that Hungary had to defend itself against “the social pressure mounted by the West with the aim to enforce upon us a liberal, universalist western culture in which nation, family, religious and social communities are no longer valued”.
He said Hungary’s modernisation had to continue, insisting that without well-developed infrastructure and industry branches, and advancements in education and talent support the country “will lag behind and will not be able to further strengthen”.
The political director called maintaining Hungary’s sovereignty and broadening the country’s foreign ties important tasks for the next several years.
The political director said that competition was enormous not only for Chinese but for other investments as well. “Hungary performs well in this competition because, among other things, it communicates openly, addresses other countries with respect, openly states what its interests are, what its opportunities are, while others cannot succeed as they want to give a kind of ideological or geopolitical guise to building trade relations, he said.







Lack of competition ends in high prices and second-class products.