PM Orbán talked about compulsory vaccination and possible restrictions in his morning interview

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Viktor Orbán, in an interview to public radio on Friday, said the government was “fighting” to restore 13th month pensions as fast as possible so that rather than phasing it in over several years it would be reintroduced in one go next year. Meanwhile, Orbán said any further lockdowns due to Covid would be unfair to the 6 million people who had got jabbed, but if any restrictions were to be introduced, the immunity certificate would have a role to play, he added.

The prime minister said he characterised the goal as a fight because wages and pensions should only be raised if the economy can provide the basis to do so, as wage hikes should not be financed by borrowing. “I’m fighting … so that I can stand before the people at the next election and say we’ve given back every last cent that the Gyurcsány-Bajnai government took from pensioners,” he said, referring to the former Socialist-Liberal prime ministers Ferenc Gyurcsány and Gordon Bajnai.

He said that “by correcting the mistakes” of the previous government, at least one month’s salary and pension would be returned, while “a 20 percent hike in the minimum wage” planned for next year would be “unprecedented” in modern western European economies. These increases will be offset by tax cuts for small and medium-sized enterprises, he added. The minimum wage from Jan. 1 will be higher than the average wage in the Gyurcsany-Bajnai era, he said.

Gyurcsány said economic growth was likely to top 5.5 percent,

and on that basis personal income tax may be returned to families raising children. The prime minister also noted the government was doing all it could to ensure that starting a family carried economic benefits so that families with a child have a better standard of living than those without.

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3 Comments

  1. Nothing unusual about election goodies. In Canada, the Trudeau government sent a $500 cheques. The bottom line is money should be spent by the citizens rather than by the government. Good move, Mr. Orban.

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