Confidence ‘cement’ for European economy, says Orbán

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Europe’s economy rests on the confidence between its players, the Hungarian prime minister said in Bratislava/Pozsony on Friday, addressing a conference on the double quality of food products in the European Union. 

At the conference entitled Equal Quality Products For All, attended by his Visegrad Four counterparts, Viktor Orbán said that

central Europe was especially “sensitive” to such issues as double food standards due to its communist past. 

Many things which may pass as routine or pragmatic in other countries will hurt people’s sense of justice “in our world”, the prime minister said.

In his address, Orban insisted that large international companies were “deceiving” central European consumers “with a dispiriting pettiness”. Citing analyses conducted in Hungary earlier this year, Orbán said that the quality of the same products distributed in western countries was “70 percent different” from those sold in Hungary. He also said that

the problem was not specific to Hungary or central Europe,

and quoted European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker as saying that “Europe must not have second-rate consumers”.

Speaking at a press conference after the meeting, the prime minister called on EU institutions to “protect and enforce” the Schengen agreement and to respect European law.

“A few years ago, Europe’s external borders were closed and its internal borders were open. This now seems to slowly turn around”, Orbán said.

As we wrote on August, discrepancies have been revealed in about a third of 39 identically labelled food products sold in Hungary and in western Europe in the latest quality tests ordered by Farm Minister Sándor Fazekas, the ministry said.

The prime minister outlined Hungary’s position on the future of the bloc. “Hungary’s view — which is consistent with that of the V4 — is that if we want to move forward, then we shouldn’t start by taking a step backwards,” Orban said. Yet today, the EU appears to be going backwards in several areas where it has already made progress, he said. The most obvious example is the fate of the Schengen Area, Orbán added.

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