Hungary European leader in culture spending, says minister

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Hungary spends more per GDP on culture than any other European country, Miklós Kásler, the human resources minister, said at his annual hearing in parliament’s cultural committee on Tuesday.

The government spent 472 billion forints (EUR 1.3bn) on culture in 2019, 91 billion more than the previous year, Kásler said, adding that local councils had allocated 181 billion forints towards cultural projects.

Special attention has been devoted to the upgrade of cultural institutions, the minister said. Over the last ten years, the government has invested 530 billion forints in 100 culture-related projects, he said, adding that it had another 440 billion set aside for such purposes.

Public employees working in the cultural sector have been given employment status and their wages are set to increase by 6 percent, Kásler said.

The government last year created clear conditions around the funding of theatres, specifically local council-run ones, he said. By April of this year, the government reached agreements with every local council on the status of their theatres, Kásler said, adding that under the deals,

eight Budapest-based theatres and 30 outside the capital had been reorganised to operate under a mixed funding scheme involving both the state and the local council.

The government also devotes close attention to the research of the nation’s roots as well as the preservation of its identity, the minister said. The Institute for Hungarian Studies set up in January 2019 published several studies and organised multiple conferences and exhibitions this year, he said. It also financed archaeological and archaeogenetic work, he added.

The government spent 12.6 billion forints on relief for cultural institutions during the pandemic,

Kásler said.

As regards education, the minister said Hungary’s amended national curriculum puts greater emphasis on value-based education while also containing the most modern teaching methods and giving teachers a greater level of flexibility.

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2 Comments

  1. This is simply untrue: it uses direct government spending a figure. In many other countries, cultural spending is achieved through other, indirect funding. More government propaganda poppycock at best.

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