Minister: Hungary has the lowest fuel prices in Europe

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Hungary’s government has decided to extend the price caps on basic foodstuffs and fuel, the prime minister’s chief of staff said on Saturday. The freeze on retail mortgage rates, which was set to expire on Dec. 31, will also be extended by at least six months, Gergely Gulyás told a regular press briefing.
The government is doing everything in its power to ensure that the economic situation allows for these measures to be prolonged and for utility bills to be kept low, Gulyás said, calling the measures “Europe’s biggest family support scheme”. He also said that if the war ended or if the European Union were to lift the energy sanctions on Russia, the prices of oil and gas would “go down by half the next day”.
Gulyás said the war in Ukraine and the related sanctions had led to “a brutal rise in energy prices”, which had caused inflation, particularly in the price of food products. This has in turn led to soaring fuel prices in recent months, he added. He noted that the government had introduced measures as early as last autumn to shield Hungarian families from these price increases.
He said the government had decided to extend the price caps because “as long as the sanctions are in effect, there is no realistic chance of the situation improving”. Gulyás said the mortgage rate freeze helps tens of thousands of families and that the government trusted that it could also curb the fuel price increase. Hungary has the lowest fuel prices in Europe, he added.
The caps on utility bills will also remain in place up to average consumption levels, he said. The first energy bills issued under the amended utility price cap scheme indicate that there are more households that are considered lower-than-average energy consumers than originally thought, adding that many households had also started to save energy. The utility price cap scheme saves families 150,000-180,000 forints (EUR 369-443) a month, he said.






