Government proposes revoking law on Sunday work restrictions – UPDATE

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Budapest, April 11 (MTI) – The government has proposed that parliament should revoke the law regulating Sunday working restrictions, cabinet chief Antal Rogán said on Monday, adding that the issue had proved socially divisive over the past year.

Rogán told a news conference that working and payment conditions prior to last year’s law, enacted on March 14, 2015, would be restored. This includes rules governing supplementary weekend pay.

He said that parliament would consider the motion as soon as Tuesday, and the new legislation revoking the law could be enforced as soon as the weekend.

The opposition Socialist Party recently succeeded in getting its referendum question approved by the authorities seeking to restore Sunday shopping.

Rogán insisted the government had met its original goal of boosting retail sales and employment over the past year. But he said “economic goals” were not paramount. “Six years ago we won a mandate to govern together with the people,” he said.

The cabinet concluded it would be “irresponsible” to spend billions on a referendum on this particular issue when there were more burning questions such as the one on European Union migration quotas. A referendum would have cost around 5 billion forints (EUR 16m). This and related costs could be saved by lifting the law, he added.

He said he would ask the groups of ruling Fidesz and the allied ruling Christian Democrats to support the imitative at their group meetings on Monday.

government-hungary-vargaEconomy Minister Mihály Varga told the press conference that they have conducted an assessment of the Sunday shopping restrictions and this would be published later on. Retail sales, far from being hampered, actually grew by 5.6 percent last year, he said. Employment in the retail sector was up by 3,300 at the end of 2015 compared with a year earlier, and even now there are 6,600 unfilled jobs in the sector, Varga said.

Shops exempted from the Sunday closure rule currently include ones under 200sqm that are family-run, as well as pharmacies, petrol stations, airport shops, retailers at bus and train stations, and sellers at markets or fairs. The Sunday restrictions do not apply to tourism, culture or catering businesses, to commercial accommodation, baths or businesses in areas designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

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