Hungary's budget

Orbán cabinet miscalculated by EUR 3.1 billion, budget deficit has become brutal in 2023

PM Orbán

Hungary’s cash-flow-based budget deficit came to 4,593.4 billion forints at the end of December, the Finance Ministry confirmed in a detailed reading of data published Monday.

The central budget deficit was 4,293.3 billion forints at the end of the month and the social security funds were 412.3 billion in the red. Separate state funds posted a 112.3 billion surplus.

The general government deficit widened from 4,074.3 billion forints at the end of November, but the ministry noted that the full-year gap was below 4,672.1 billion forints the previous year.

The ministry said the war, the energy crisis resulting from sanctions policies, and the high-risk global economic environment had put the budget under “significant pressure”. In spite of the unfavourable circumstances, the budget ensured the preservation of the value of pensions, and the continuation of family subsidies and the regulated utilities price scheme for households, it added.

The ministry noted that expenditures related to the regulated utilities price scheme for households came to 1,373.5 billion forints in the full year, close to double the 699.2 billion in 2022.

read also:

  • Experts’ grim prognosis for Hungarian forint: 450/EUR on the horizon?
  • New Ministry of Economy is powerful, and has immediately identified the priority sectors – details HERE

Spending on European Union funded programmes came to 2,812.2 billion forints in the full year, while transfers from Brussels were worth 2,229.2 billion.

The ministry said revenue from taxes and contributions was up 15.2 percent from the base period.

The finance ministry earlier estimated the accrual-based ESA general government deficit reached 5.9 percent of GDP last year.

Orbán cabinet planning unprecedented austerity for local governments?

Viktor Orbán China

K-Monitor, an NGO campaigning for transparency in the use of public funds and the fight against corruption, writes on its blog that the Orbán government is planning to make more severe cuts than ever in the funding of the local government sector.

Unprecedented austerity to come?

The NGO extracted this unpleasant news from the Ministry of Finance’s Macroeconomic and Fiscal Forecast 2023-2027, published on 30 December, Telex writes.

According to K-Monitor, the document reveals that the budget support provided by the government to finance the functions of the local government sector will not only fail to keep pace with inflation until 2027, but would also decrease in numbers. Meanwhile, the “solidarity tax” on municipalities with higher own tax revenues will continue to increase.

Funding to local governments to fall sharply

This would reduce net funding from the central budget to the local government system to an unprecedented low. By 2027, the net expenditure of the budget on the operation of local governments is projected to fall from HUF 850 billion (EUR 2.25 billion) in 2023 to below HUF 700 billion (EUR 1.85 billion). Meanwhile, local government costs have risen sharply due to high inflation, wages and soaring energy prices.

What will follow austerity measures?

According to K-Monitor, this could lead to a disruption in the viability of municipalities. For the government, however, this austerity is politically advantageous. On the one hand, local mayors can be blamed for the problems that follow the decrease in funds. On the other hand, the government can arbitrarily differentiate between municipalities by supporting those in favour and further worsening the situation of those against it.

Lots of money, but not for the right purposes

K-Monitor finds it worth noting that local governments have the right to subsidies under the Fundamental Law (Alaptörvény) to carry out their basic statutory tasks. According to the NGO, instead of subsidising private companies (of those close to the government), propaganda campaigns and prestige investment, the Orbán cabinet should spend those billions of forints on the operation of cemeteries, kindergartens, schools and the state of roads.

For other purposes, however, the government plans to spend a lot more. For example, the expenditure of the Defence Fund is projected by the Finance Ministry to rise from HUF 850.7 billion in 2023 to nearly HUF 1,560 billion in 2027.

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Hungary’s public finance deficit narrows from 2022

Hungary budget forint game

Hungary’s public finance deficit narrowed in 2023 from 2022, Finance Minister Mihaly Varga said on Tuesday, after receiving the first aggregates of budget data from last year.

Varga also hailed that revenues in corporate tax totalled HUF 1,013 billion (EUR 2.6 billion), over the target, which he said was “another sign of favourable changes in economic trends”.

State debt relative to GDP continued to decline, Varga said, adding that data from the Central Statistical Office were to be received to determine the final figure.

“In 2024, we will continue to reduce the deficit and state debt with the start of stronger economic growth,” he said.

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Defence minister: 2024 budget guarantees security of Hungarians

Hungarian army Slovakia

Hungary’s 2024 central budget allocations will ensure the continuation of the armed forces’ reform and “appreciation for soldiers”, the defence minister said in a statement on Tuesday.

Hungary will continue to work towards fulfilling its objective to build a top-notch, technically advanced military force, Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky said in a statement. It will remain for the Hungarian government a national strategic goal to build a capable, innovative and high-tech defence force that can effectively respond to challenges, he said.

Allocations in this year’s budget will ensure the participation of Hungarian troops in NATO missions and international military exercises and guarantee maintaining a 2 percent of GDP defence spending, he added.

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Hungary’s EU funding for the 2014-2020 projects under completion

european union eu flag hungary

Fully 95 percent of Hungary’s EU funding for the 2014-2020 budget period has been tapped so far, financing 52,000 projects, Tibor Navracsics, the regional development minister, told parliament’s economic affairs committee at a hearing on Monday.

Hungary is a top performer in terms of successfully utilising funds, he said.

In the last funding period, Hungary had 11.5 billion euros in resources, and, taking domestic co-financing into account, the EU framework amounted to 27 billion, he said.

In addition, Hungary has been able to tap an additional 2.1 billion euros in aid up to 2025.

Financial period 2021-2027

The 2021-2027 EU funding period is also under way, he noted, and talks on cohesion funds and the support and loan parts of recovery funds started last year.

Last December, the European Commission endorsed the Hungarian operational programmes and the Council approved the use of the support part of the national reconstruction plan, he added.

Hungary and EC concluded the partnership agreement, ensuring cooperation for the financial period 2021-2027, paving the way for the utilisation and withdrawal of cohesion funds, the minister said.

On Dec 8, the EU economy and finance ministers approved Hungary’s plan, freeing up the loan part of the recovery fund, Navracsics said.

In May, parliament adopted the legislative amendment in connection with EC concerns over the rule of law, and the EC asked the government to further clarify various issues in two rounds. The minister said he trusted the EC would acknowledge the answers and it would be possible to move forward and access the funds.

As the EC has adopted Hungary’s operative programmes and projects to be financed from the recovery fund during the period, the country “has managed to avoid losing funds and implementation of the operative programmes has started,” he said.

But concluding talks with the EC did not mean “an automatic access” to community funds “even if the political conditions have been settled”. The EU has frozen 55 percent of the funding for three operative programmes “until the Hungarian government comes up with solutions that the EU finds reassuring,” he said.

The EU “came up with further questions and concerns” about six months ago, which “the government is trying to manage, but an agreement has not been reached yet,” he said.

Cohesion and recovery funds were crucial, he said, for the country to narrow existing disparities, and the goal was to make optimum use of those funds to that end. The government will continue to use EU funds to “reduce the development differences” between various regions of Hungary, he said.

When it comes to university foundations and related EU funds, he noted the matter has been on the agenda since February, and the EC had come up with new demands. Hungarian students can participate in the Erasmus programme until September 2024. It was likely, he added, that an agreement may be reached ensuring that Hungarian students take part in mobility programmes thereafter, too.

Navracsics said the European Parliament was putting political pressure on the EC, which complicated negotiations.

Meanwhile, he said Hungary had begun tapping EU funds for the 2021-2027 period, and was outperforming other member states in drawing down the money.

Addressing tasks ahead after Jan 1, Navracsics said state administration and local government tasks will be transferred to the public administration and regional development ministry. Read details HERE: Orbán government creates a new ministry

As we said before, as unexpected turn of events, EC sends Hungary EUR 1 billion.

Hungarian finance minister: EU, US should strive for equal relations – Eurogroup meeting

eurogroup meeting

Economic ties between Europe and the US will be effective only if they are built on an equal relationship, and the European Union acts on its own interests, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said after a Eurogroup meeting in Luxembourg.

The minister said after the meeting held with the attendance of US Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen in Luxembourg that the crisis brought on by the war in Ukraine and the related sanctions is contributing to the EU losing ground economically and to weakening competitiveness while the US economy’s performance exceeds expectations.

Skyrocketing prices at the beginning of the war in Ukraine hit Europe harder, as it is dependent on external energy resources, he said. The US, a net exporter of energy, is performing better, he said.

The US Inflation Reduction Act, adopted last year, has also hit the EU’s car manufacturing industry, he said. “That is concerning,” Varga added.

A robust, growing European economy is key to dynamic Hungarian growth, Varga said. At the same time, Hungary’s economy is open to all markets, and Europe should be the same, towards China and others, he said.

As we reported, Romania has already overtaken Hungary in terms of GDP. It seems that not only Romania but also Bulgaria will do better than Hungary this year, details HERE.

Also we wrote before, Hungarian forint loser of the past decade

Breaking: Hungarian government raises budget deficit target

parliament budget deficit

Due to the need to increase spending to protect key programmes in the budget amid the current crisis situation, the government has decided to raise the budget deficit target to 5.2% of GDP, which is 1 percentage point lower than the shortfall last year, but 1.3 percentage points higher than this year’s original target.

The finance ministry’s statement cited the “dangerous international situation” which had put the budget under extraordinary strain.

It cited the high cost of protecting subsidised household utility bills, while national defence spending hit 2% of GDP this year with the added pressures of the war in Ukraine.

The ministry noted that for years Hungary had asked the European Commission to reimburse the cost of protecting the EU’s external border, by now a bill of HUF 650 billion (EUR 1.68 billion). The deficit would be almost 1 percentage point lower if it did so, the statement added.

Also, it would make a big difference to budget flexibility if EU payments which Hungary is owed were unblocked, it added.

The ministry said that the “stable foundations of the Hungarian economy” meant that the country’s future outlook was positive, with employment still “extremely high” and exports at record levels.

The statement underlined that inflation would fall to single digits by the end of the year, while the current account balance was improving steadily. Hungary, it added, would return to a growth path by year-end.

The government is committed to improving the balance indicators and lowering the budget deficit and public debt each year, the statement said.

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Hungary’s budget deficit reaches EUR 7.6bn in June

Daily News Hungary Logo Új

Hungary’s cash flow-based budget balance reached 2,896 billion forints (EUR 7.6bn) at the end of June, the finance ministry confirmed in a detailed release of data on Monday.

The central budget deficit reached 2,908.3 billion forints at the end of June and the social security funds were 78.1 billion in the red. Separate state funds had a 90.4 billion forint surplus.

Alone in the month of June, the deficit was at 132.7 billion, the narrowest June gap in eight years, the ministry said.

The ministry noted that expenditures related to the regulated utilities price scheme for households came to 969.2 billion forints by the end of June.

Expenditures on home subsidies reached 330.7 billion forints in January-June, up by 60.2 billion from the base period.

As we wrote two weeks ago, the Hungarian parliament passes the 2024 budget, opposition slams it, details HERE.

Parliament passes 2024 budget, opposition slams it

Extraordinary Plenary Session of Parliament

Hungary’s parliament approved the government’s 2024 budget in a final vote on Friday. Opposition parties slammed the budget.

The budget was passed with 121 votes in favour and 44 against.

In the general debate, Finance Minister Mihály Varga qualified the budget as a “defence budget”, saying that in times of war Hungary must guarantee its security, protect families, pensions, jobs and maintain low utility costs.

The budget assumes a GDP growth rate of 4 percent, an annual average inflation rate of 6 percent and targets a fiscal deficit of 2.9 percent of GDP.

Central reserves amount to HUF 220 billion (EUR 573.1 million), and the cabinet aims to spend any additional revenues generated by higher than expected economic growth towards further reducing the public debt.

The budget targets a year-end public debt-to-GDP ratio of 66.7 percent.

It targets revenue of HUF 38,240 billion and expenditures of HUF 40,755 billion. The deficit target is HUF 2,514 billion.

The operating budget will have revenue and expenditures of HUF 34,150 billion.

The budget targets expenditures related to EU-funded developments of HUF 3,605 billion, while transfers from Brussels for those programmes are set to reach HUF 2,479 billion, with a deficit of HUF 1,125 billion.

Expenditures on debt servicing are targeted at HUF 3,144 billion, up from HUF 2,541 billion in the 2023 budget.

The budget allocates HUF 1,340 billion for the utilities protection fund as against this year’s HUF 2,579 billion, with HUF 917 billion to be earmarked for keeping household utility prices low. Central budget support for the fund is set at HUF 483 billion, while payments, contributions and windfall profit taxes from companies in the energy, mining, telecommunications, airline and pharmaceutical sectors will cover the rest of the fund’s expenditures.

The budget earmarks HUF 1,309 billion for the defence fund, up from this year’s HUF 842 billion, increasing Hungary’s total defence spending to more than NATO’s required 2 percent of GDP.

After submitting the draft budget to parliament, Varga said more than HUF 3,300 billion will be channeled to support families. More than HUF 3,430 billion are allocated for education and over HUF 6,500 billion are set aside for pensions.

A total of HUF 226 billion are allocated towards prenatal baby support compared with this year’s HUF 178 billion. A total of HUF 449 billion  will be available for the payment of 13th monthly pensions and an additional HUF 20.5 billion will be released for the pension premium.

More than HUF 4,423 billion are allocated for the health insurance fund, with HUF 2,550 billion earmarked for curative and preventive care.

The budget allocates HUF 1,049 billion in support for local councils compared with HUF 968 billion this year, while their solidarity contributions will rise to HUF 307 billion from HUF 237 billion.

Opposition doesn’t agree

LMP deputy group leader Antal Csárdi told a press conference ahead of the vote that the bill had been submitted too early and its projections would be impossible to fulfil. He said the greatest problem was that it cemented the government’s energy policy which he described as ill-conceived. Debt servicing is to increase by HUF 1,777 billion (EUR 4.7 billion) from 2021 and the country’s energy bill will increase by HUF 8,000 billion, he added.

He said that ruling Fidesz-KDNP was planning to handle problems by austerity and debt increase, which would result in exhausting the resources needed for the future. He called for stopping “excessive support” to multinationals and using renewable energy instead of importing fossil fuels.

Párbeszéd co-leader Rebeka Szabó told an online press conference that the party group would vote against the bill because it involved austerity for people who are already in a difficult situation. At the same time, she said the bill failed to promote the “green transition” needed to enable Hungary to cope with the challenges caused by the climate crisis and the decrease in natural areas.

Majority of Hungarians say hospitals are in a catastrophic state, government says all is well

péterfy hospital Budapest Hungarian health care system

The Pulzus Media Research poll, conducted by 24.hu, shows a devastating picture of what people think about hospitals.

According to this survey:

  • 37 percent of people think that patients are treated in unworthy conditions in most hospitals, while another 15 percent believe that the conditions in most hospitals are disastrous, both in terms of the hospital building and its technical equipment.
  • 74 percent are dissatisfied with the cleanliness of hospitals, 54 percent say that bathrooms and toilets are dirty and worn, with no toilet seats or paper, soap or hand towels. 32 and 25 percent respectively said that common hospital rooms were not cleaned properly. 14 percent had encountered insects (cockroaches, spiders, bloodsuckers) during their hospital stay.
  • 88 per cent are dissatisfied with the hygiene of hospitals. 50 percent know or have heard of someone who has contracted an infection in hospital.
  • 56% are either very (41%) or very (15%) afraid that either they or a relative cared for in hospital will get an infection.
  • 91 per cent see a clear link between the professional quality of patient care and hospital conditions, i.e. that hygiene deficiencies and the resulting hospital-acquired infections can endanger the health and lives of patients.
  • 69% of them think that hospitals should receive more money to improve the operation and maintenance of hospital buildings.

The government says all is well

The government is committed to improving Hungary’s healthcare system, Bence Rétvári, interior ministry parliamentary state secretary, said on Monday, noting that next year the health budget will be boosted by 425 billion forints (EUR 1.13bn) compared with last year.

Healthcare spending has grown from 1,100 billion forints to 3,200 billion in the past decade, Rétvári said at an awards ceremony held marking Semmelweis Day, adding that the number of doctors had also risen appreciably, with 1,000-1,500 graduating from medical universities each year, 1.5 times more than ten years ago.

While in 2010, there were close to 34,000 doctors, this has risen to more than 40,000, while those applying to work abroad has fallen to one-third, he said.

Retvari noted the positive effects on the ban on so-called gratuity payments to doctors which had distorted the health-care system for around 70 years, adding that at the end of last year only 1 percent of Hungarians saw gratuity as a problem.

Hungarian healthcare workers to get a long-awaited pay rise in July, details HERE.

Government: Hungarian families have the cheapest gas in Europe

Natural gas burner

In preparation for the next heating season, domestic gas storage facilities have been filled continuously since April; the amount of gas reserves has now reached 3.9 billion cubic metres, or the level of the full-year retail consumption in 2021, the last year before the energy crisis, the energy ministry told MTI on Friday.

Compared with last year’s figures, the picture is even more favourable as households used 3.4 billion cubic metres of gas in 2022, the ministry said.

Hungarian families continue to have the cheapest access to natural gas in Europe thanks to price subsidies guaranteed in the 2024 central budget, the ministry said. Citing the energy crisis caused by the war and the sanctions imposed in response, the government has raised the amount of the protected state gas reserves by 50 percent to 1.9 billion cubic metres in order to guarantee secure energy supply, they added.

Including economic players, gas consumption fell by 17 percent in 2022, partly due to milder weather and partly to savings.

Hungary’s 2024 budget is a defence budget, finance minister says

Hungarian government parliament crisis Hungarian House Speaker

Addressing the debate of the 2024 budget in parliament on Tuesday, Finance Minister Mihály Varga qualified the budget as “a defence budget”, saying that in times of war Hungary must guarantee its security, protect families, pensions, jobs and maintain low utility costs.

That is why the focus of the budget is to strengthen the scheme to keep utility costs low and boost national defence, the finance minister said, adding that Hungary faced challenges on several fronts such as the protracted war and “failed Brussels sanctions” that had resulted in a serious energy crisis in Europe. The additional burdens in energy prices are costing the country more than HUF 1,000 billion (EUR 2.7 billion), he said.

Varga said protecting the country’s results achieved so far was the government’s primary task, adding that financial stability was essential for security. A strong economy combined with budgetary discipline were needed in this regard, he added.

The government is committed to reducing inflation to single digits by the end of this year, and inflation is targeted at 6 percent next year, while the economy is expected to grow by 4 percent in 2024, the minister said. The public debt as a percentage of GDP will be reduced to 69.7 percent this year and 66.7 percent next year, he said, adding that a deficit target of 2.9 percent of GDP was slated.

László Windisch, head of the State Audit Office, called the budget draft “well-founded” and said its targets were realistic. He added, however, that the excise tax revenues may end up amounting to HUF 53 billion less than planned.

Windisch also said meeting the budget targets was conditional on the accuracy of the government’s macroeconomic forecasts, adding that the draft “requires institutions of the central budget and municipalities to take further measures of economy”.

He also said the central budget faced payment obligations of an expected HUF 430 billion connected with central bank losses in 2023.

Orbán: Brussels proposes that we destroy Hungarian families

orbán in the radio

Brussels is calling for austerity and proposing that Hungary “ruin its economy, people, families and pensioners”, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said on Friday.

He said Brussels did not want Hungary to take banks’ and corporations’ extra profits away, and wanted pensioners and families to have to pay full energy prices.

“They’re asking for something that we’ve been fighting against for over 13 years,” the prime minister said, underlining that the government was “fighting this fight with the support of an overwhelming majority of Hungarians”. Support for the government on this issue “greatly transcends political affiliations”, he said.

Even a left-wing pensioner agrees that they do not want to pay HUF 180,000 (EUR 485) more a month, but that is what would happen if Hungary did what Brussels wanted, Orbán said.

Hungary must stand up for its own interests, the prime minister said. The country should accept the proposals that are good but reject everything that points towards austerity and make it clear that the drafting of the budget is a national competency, he added.

When it comes to the budget, Hungary’s only two obligations to the EU concern the budget deficit and the public debt, the prime minister said. The 2024 budget targets a public debt below 70 percent of GDP and a falling deficit, he said, adding that fiscal discipline was vital in times of war.

“If there were no war, next year’s budget would be a much happier one,” Orbán said, adding, however, that “we will protect all that is important for us in 2024 even despite the war”.

He said it was “the energy of war” that had caused inflation to rise, arguing that the war had driven up energy prices worldwide.

He noted the government’s commitment to push inflation into the single digits by the end of the year “no matter what”, adding that it expected an average inflation rate of 6 percent next year.

The prime minister said the government would not be able to promote economic growth unless inflation was reduced, expressing hope that inflation was currently below 22 percent.

If there were no war and if the European Union and the West saw reason and admitted “that we’re on the wrong path”, and if there were a ceasefire and peace talks, the economic situation would suddenly improve and inflation would fall to between 1-3 percent at a much faster pace, Orbán said.

He praised Finance Minister Mihály Varga, saying he had “got everything possible out of the budget”.

Meanwhile, Orbán said that Hungary could “sit back” if it had completed the expansion of the Paks nuclear power plant. But because of the way Brussels has been holding things up at the initiative of the left, the project is behind schedule, he added.

Orbán said the war had entered a “very brutal phase”, adding that “when leftist politicians at home say that we’re at war with Russia, they don’t know what they’re talking about, they’ve lost their minds.”

“The statement ‘we are at war with Russia’ is one that no sane person would make since the second world war,” Orbán said, referring to a recent comment by Budapest’s mayor.

He said the only morally acceptable position was to be pro-peace. “Hungary is not and will not be at war with Russia, certainly not as long as this government is in power, so it’s observing the war more calmly and has a more realistic view of it,” he added.

Orbán said everything possible needed to be done before the start of Ukraine’s counteroffensive to convince the warring sides of the need for a ceasefire and peace talks, because “otherwise we will lose a lot of lives”.

The prime minister also said that the time was close when “Europe accepts Hungary’s pro-peace position”.

He said Western leaders had “led themselves to believe that the war in Ukraine could be won through the Ukrainians fighting and the West supplying money and weapons to such an extent that it will be very difficult to come off that war path”.

“But this is not our business; we are on the correct path morally and politically,” Orbán said, adding that “in many Western states people will sooner or later enforce peace through elections and replace governments promoting war”.

The majority of Europeans do not support war, Orbán insisted, adding that “they may support Ukraine morally, since Ukraine has been attacked and Russia is the aggressor, and they want justice … but they are divided over the question of what should be done and what can be undertaken”.

“With a few exceptions everybody is against us in the European Union … they have flown at our throat,” Orbán said, adding that “it is difficult to maintain a pro-peace stance in such a circle”.

He said it was obvious that “no better results could be achieved on the frontline than what Ukraine could have achieved before the war, through negotiations”. Decision makers “are now approaching the question what purpose the war has had at all”, he added.

Answering a question on endeavours to isolate Hungary, Orbán said “if you are Hungarian you must stand your ground” because “whenever we did not fight for our position we always lost, losing our self-esteem, our confidence and feeling ashamed”.

“But now we have a national government and it will not happen … there will always be left-wing hassle, such as the dispute around Hungary’s EU presidency … but Hungary, wherever it can, must have a loyal cooperation with the other European countries, finding a balance between cooperation and national interests,” he said.

On another subject, Orbán said he had received the reelection of Recep Tayyip Erdogan as Turkiye’s president with “great relief”. He said he had “not only kept fingers crossed but prayed a lot” for his election victory. “It would have been tragedy had he not won,” he said, insisting that if Erdogan’s opponent had won, “one, two, or three million refugees … would have appeared at the Hungarian border before the end of this summer.”

Orbán also said Hungary received its Russian gas supplies through Turkiye, and that country having a “pro-American leader or one supported by George Soros” would make it “strongly doubtful if the gas could reach Hungary or Serbia”.

Erdogan’s losing the election would have “given Turkiye a pro-war president”, the prime minister said, adding that “the ramifications would be unforeseeable”. Erdogan has a chance to mediate between Ukraine and Russia, as he earlier mediated over Ukraine’s grain exports, Orbán said.

According to the prime minister, Hungary “must always watch Berlin, Moscow, and Ankara … Hungary is in that triangle and it is in that triangle where the life of Hungarians must be managed.” He said “constellations are not equally good in those three relations but all three are stable, balanced, and could bring benefits to Hungary”. He added, however, that currently relations with Germany were “the most critical”.

Preparing for war? Hungary’s defence spending to increase next year

Hungary Defence Forces NATO ministry

Finance Minister Mihály Varga said the 2024 draft budget will be a “defence budget”, adding that an unstable world economic environment, a “failed European Union sanctions policy” and the protracted war in Ukraine weighed on Hungary’s economy.

“We will not allow our achievements to go to waste. These unstable times warrant a budget that guarantees the country’s physical and economic security,” Varga told a regular press briefing on Thursday.

The budget is designed to protect families, pensions, jobs, and to maintain Hungary’s “unique utility price cap system”.

Defence spending will increase next year, he said.

The family support system will be revamped but the tax cuts for families and the utility protection fund will remain, he said.

The draft budget calculates with a growth rate of 4 percent and a 2.9 percent deficit. State debt is expected to fall to 66.7 percent, and inflation to an annual 6 percent, he said.

Commenting on a statement by Johannes Hahn, the Commissioner for Budget and Administration, Gergely Gulyás, the PM’s chief of staff, said the conditionality procedure pertained to very little of the “budget resources Hungary is entitled to”. Talks with the European Commission are ongoing regarding the budget and the resilience and recovery funding, he said.

The European Council approved the Hungarian plan on spending the recovery funding last December, and Hungary amended its judiciary law to comply with the last requirement to access the funds of the 2021-2027 budgetary cycle, Gulyás said.

The conditionality procedure against Hungary involves the partial suspension of three EU programmes, he said. “That should not be conflated with the issues of the budget and the resilience fund.”

Hungary is working to close the conditionality procedure as soon as possible, Gulyás said. “If the EC didn’t set one new requirement after the other, it could have closed the procedure long ago, but sometimes, the goal seemed to be not to close it.”

Hungary has a constructive approach to the negotiations and hopes to see results quickly, he added.

Responding to a question on whether the European Parliament could stop Hungary from overtaking the European presidency in the second half of 2024, Gulyás said the EP had no way of doing that. A recent draft resolution on the matter is “part of the propaganda steaming with anti-Hungarian sentiment” regularly on display in the EP, he added.

Answering questions on the draft budget, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said the government drafted next year’s budget in spring or summer so that families and companies can prepare for next year.

“I don’t think that pushing the drafting back to September or October would make it any more accurate for 2024,” he said.

Next year’s draft calculates with a 385 HUF/EUR exchange rate, he said.

Regarding the central bank’s decision to cut the base rate, Varga said the government is expecting a substantial fall in interest rates next year, aiding private and company loans. The interest burden on budgetary spending may decrease at a slower pace, as those loans have longer terms, he said.

Central bank losses have not been calculated in the draft budget, but talks are ongoing with the Budgetary Council of which Governor Gyoörgy Matolcsy is a member, he said.

Alongside the draft budget, the government will also submit to parliament amendments to tax laws, showing the changes for 2024, he said. “This is the government of tax cuts,” he added.

Regarding this year’s GDP, the government is working to avoid recession, Varga said. The “robust foundations of the Hungarian economy” have allowed to stick to the original growth forecast, he said.

Varga said the central bank was “the government’s most important ally” in curbing inflation, and had more tools to help that process than the government did. “So we are optimistic and say that if we both make an effort, inflation may be reduced significantly by year-end,” he said.

Extra taxes on companies and sectors making excessive profits during in war-time are expected to be phased out in 2024 for the banking, energy and pharmaceutical sectors, he said.

Health care funding will grow next year. The exact numbers will be forthcoming at next Tuesday’s press briefing, he said.

Answering a question, Varga said the government had sufficient reserves to continue financing the Erasmus and Horizont student programmes next year, should the payment of EU funds were further withheld by Brussels. “Hungary will meet all criteria set by Brussels and can justly expect the receipt of funds it is entitled to,” he said.

Regarding education, Varga said the government had drafted next year’s budget with increased spending in all areas of the sector. The sector itself will receive 3,400 billion forints (EUR 9.1bn), including 1,200 billion on teachers’ wages, 126 billion more than this year.

Gergely Gulyás noted that teachers’ wages would be raised to 80 percent of the average salary of degree holders once Hungary has access to EU funding. Until that is the case, the government guarantees raises apace of inflation this year and at least 10 percent annually afterwards, he said. The government also pledged to give larger raises to teachers working in the most disadvantaged regions, he added.

He also called on leftist MEPs “earning 6 million in Brussels” not to hinder the wage hikes.

Asked about the introduction of the euro, Varga said the government was working on meeting its criteria, adding, however, that no target date had been set yet. The real focus is on a robust Hungarian economy, and “if introducing the euro can be a by-product of that, that’s another question,” he said.

He said chances of paying a pension bonus this year were “slim”. If economic growth exceeds 3.5 percent next year, the payment can be resumed, he said. “We have been in an alliance with the pensioners since 2010 which is why we cannot allow pensions to lose their value in real terms.”

Varga said budget deficit usually accumulated more in the first half of the year. This year’s deficit was increased by the purchase of Vodafone and the payment of a 13th month pension, he said.

Regarding the transit fee increase of deliveries via the Druzhba oil pipeline, Varga said it was understandable on the part of the suppliers “to pass on their expenses”.

Asked about a planned battery plant in Debrecen, in eastern Hungary, the finance minister said the government’s aim was to provide state funds for only the most necessary developments.

Negotiations are also ongoing on a planned vaccine plant in Debrecen, “delay due to the war-like situation and the EU’s flawed sanctions policy”. “The question is the type of vaccine that would be worthwhile to manufacture; with the pandemic gone, that will definitely not be the one for coronavirus.” The state secretary for health care is handling those talks, he added.

As regards the construction of the Hungarian vaccine plant in Debrecen, Varga said it was ongoing, though with some “. Meanwhile, Gergely Gulyás added that professional consultations were ongoing under the auspices of the health secretariat on the type of vaccines to be produced in the plant considered that fact that “the production of Covid vaccines was not worth it any longer”.

Asked about the 24 billion forint loan taken out by Budapest public transport company BKK, Varga said the decision raised eyebrows. “The city of Budapest has  record tax revenues this year, which will increase further next year as a result of increasing business taxes induced by economic growth,” he said.

In connection with the 4 billion forints worth of foreign funding received by the Hungarian left-wing opposition from the United States “for ousting the government” in last year’s parliamentary election, Gulyás said ruling Fidesz would possibly submit an amendment on campaign financing during parliament’s spring session. He called foreign financing a serious breach of Hungary’s national sovereignty which he said could not be allowed “to happen again” in next year’s municipal elections.

Hungary’s budget to be amended: here’s why

Hungarian forint state budget historic lows

The protracted war in Ukraine and the energy crisis caused by the European Union’s sanctions have “fundamentally” changed the economic environment, so the government must adjust the budget in the interest of protecting families and the economy, the finance minister said on Wednesday during a parliamentary debate on amendments to the 2023 budget.

“The government is sticking to its goals of protecting families, pensioners, jobs and the Hungarian economy, as well as ensuring Hungarian security,” Mihály Varga said.

The amendment bill would serve to provide “a basis for protecting achievements in these times of hardship and danger”, he said. The bill “aims to protect Hungarian families, businesses, and jobs while at the same time improving the country’s financial balance,” he added.

forint euro bills
Read alsoPositive prospects: Hungarian forint at a ten-month high

Budget income increases thanks to the skyrocketing inflation

Hungary budget forint game

Hungary’s cash flow-based budget deficit, excluding local councils, had a 2,691.7 billion forint (EUR 6.5m) deficit at the end of September, after running a 181.0 billion forint surplus for the month, the finance ministry confirmed in a second reading of data on Friday.

The full-year cash flow-based budget deficit target is 3,152.7 billion forints. The central budget deficit reached 2,773.0 billion forints at the end of September. The social security funds were 171.3 billion forints in the red, while the separate state funds had a surplus of 252.6 billion. The ministry said the government’s “most important goal”, as the war in Ukraine and the effect of sanctions push the entire European economy into crisis, is “preserving Hungary’s stability”.

The ministry noted that the 2022 budget deficit target, calculated according to the Europeans Union’s accrual-based accounting rules, has been raised from 4.9 percent to 6.1 percent of GDP. It attributed the full increase to a top-up of the gas reserves of the Hungarian Hydrocarbon Stockpiling Association (MSZKSZ), worth some 740 billion forints.

Hungarian apple
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Hungarian Socialist MP calls for 2023 budget rethink

Hungarian-parliament-accepted-2023-budget

The Socialist head of parliament’s budgetary committee on Wednesday called on the government to submit a new budget, arguing that “pushing through” the budget as early as July had been a “mistake” in a volatile economic environment.

Zoltán Vajda told a press conference streamed on Facebook that he had invited Finance Minister Mihaly Varga to the committee’s meeting to discuss the country’s financial situation, but the committee’s Fidesz majority removed the hearing form the agenda.

Vajda called the current budget for 2023 “fictitious”, noting the law calculated with FY inflation of 5.1 percent next year, insisting that in reality it could go as high as 20 percent. While the budget forecasts a 4,2 percent GDP growth, the economy could actually dip into recession, he said. Meanwhile, the budget calculates with an exchange rate of 370 forints per euro, whereas the Hungarian currency currently hovers around 430 forints, he said.

When three such fundamental components of the budget deviate from expectations, a new budget must be passed, he said.

Read alsoHungarian forint is in a slump again: euro has risen by 30 forints in a month

European Commission’s big decision this morning: will Hungary get EUR 15.8 bn?

Hungary eur money EU

The European Commission will reveal their decision today at 10.30 AM about the budget conditionality procedure in which at least EUR 15.8 billion is at stake. Johannes Hahn, the European Commissioner for Budget and Administration, is expected to announce what the EC agreed on.

Hungary’s budget, Hungarian forint might get a boost today

According to hvg.hu, the Sunday session of the College of Commissioners, comprised of the 27 commissioners, will start at 9.30 AM. The Hungarian media outlet says that chances are meagre to end the budget conditionality procedure. In that case, Budapest could receive the billions of euros from the recovery and resilience fund (RRF). Based on a July letter, the sum is “only” 8.4 billion euros.

However, later another EC letter was leaked, saying it might reach 15.8 billion euros. Paying that sum was ceased because of fears of corruption in Hungary. It will remain frozen until the budget conditionality procedure ends. Even though the Hungarian government desperately needs that financial support.

Importantly, the European Commission will only draft a proposal for the member states. However, accepting that does not need a unanimous decision, only simple majority, hvg.hu clears.

The government did everything, they believe

Gergely Gulyás, the prime minister’s chief of staff, said yesterday that Hungary had been conducting intensive negotiations with the European Commission on the conditionality mechanism which links European Union funding to the rule of law over several months, and there are no more unresolved issues. The government has accepted several of the EC’s recommendations, Gulyás said, adding that the two sides had compromised on the proposals Hungary could not accept, MTI wrote.

The cabinet discussed and approved these proposals at its Saturday meeting and will submit them to parliament next Monday and Friday, Gulyás said. The laws in question will enter into force in November, paving the way for the end of the conditionality procedure, he said.

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The series of talks held between Hungary and the commission over the last two months can be considered “a step from mutual distrust towards mutual trust”, Gulyás said. The EC will make a statement on the matter on Sunday, he said, adding that part of the agreement was that Hungary must implement the commitments it has made to the commission. He urged lawmakers to approve the proposals so that the conditionality procedure could be concluded.