Government working to keep local councils functioning, says official

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Helping Hungary’s local councils stay operational is in everyone’s interest, Balazs Orbán, a state secretary of the Hungarian Prime Minister’s Office, wrote in a letter to György Gémesi, head of the alliance of local governments MOSZ, on Monday.
As we wrote before, Budapest Mayor Gergely Karácsony and 37 mayors of Budapest districts and cities around Hungary demanded in a joint statement that the government withdraw a decision on halving the local business tax. (Read more: The final blow? Mayors call on Orbán to withdraw decision halving local business tax)
Municipalities with fewer than 25,000 residents will be automatically compensated for lost revenues, Orbán wrote, adding that the government was open to negotiations with larger cities. Also, Hungary’s permanent representative office in Brussels is prepared to help local council leaders whose cities are in need of financial support from the European Union, the state secretary added.
Orbán noted that Gémesi in the past had criticised the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic on multiple occasions, particularly its financing of local councils. The state secretary said the burdens that come with Hungary’s response to the pandemic were being shared fairly by the whole of Hungarian society.
Due to the pandemic and its effects on the economy, Hungary’s GDP is projected to contract by 6.4 percent in 2020 compared with expectations of a 4 percent growth rate at the beginning of last year, Orbán said.
And in a situation like this, he added, “hardly anything can be more important . than protecting jobs”. The key to this is to reduce the burdens on Hungarian small and medium-sized businesses, such as the business tax, he said, arguing that SMEs employed the most people in the country.





