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FINMIN: CURBING INFLATION GOVT'S TOP ECONOMIC POLICY GOAL

 

Hungary’s government, in agreement with the central bank, considers curbing inflation its most important economic policy goal, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said on Thursday. In a roundtable discussion at the opening day of the 61st Itinerant Conference of Economists in Eger, in north-eastern Hungary, Varga said the government’s measures to reduce inflationary risks were successful. This is also reflected in the analyses of the major credit rating agencies, which are full of positive findings, he added. Monetary and fiscal policy were kept particularly loose in Hungary in recent years, until the pandemic created a new situation for the government’s economic policy with the primary need to save jobs, keep the economy afloat and ensure that workers in the sectors hit hardest by the crisis were not left without income, the minister said. He said the budget deficit would continue to decline this year, too, and would fall to the 2.9%-of-GDP target in the 2024 budget bill next year. He noted that a number of big state investments had been postponed at the end of 2021, and said projects underway now could also be delayed, if necessary. He said the government could weigh tax measures to boost budget revenue if banks book record profits this year. The cabinet could also consider delaying acquisitions of equipment by the Defence Ministry and undertake a review of subsidised credit programmes, he added.
Opposition DK’s group spokesperson Olga Kálmán said Varga had “admitted that the budget is in trouble”. “He suggested that further austerity might be on its way and pointed fingers at bank’s profits,” she added. Kálmán said the forint exchange rate plummeted “at the news of further austerity”. Hungarian families and businesses cannot tolerate further austerity, she said. The consequences of past austerity measures cannot be handled with further austerity, she added.