Preparing for war? Hungary’s defence spending to increase next year

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Finance Minister Mihály Varga said the 2024 draft budget will be a “defence budget”, adding that an unstable world economic environment, a “failed European Union sanctions policy” and the protracted war in Ukraine weighed on Hungary’s economy.

“We will not allow our achievements to go to waste. These unstable times warrant a budget that guarantees the country’s physical and economic security,” Varga told a regular press briefing on Thursday.

The budget is designed to protect families, pensions, jobs, and to maintain Hungary’s “unique utility price cap system”.

Defence spending will increase next year, he said.

The family support system will be revamped but the tax cuts for families and the utility protection fund will remain, he said.

The draft budget calculates with a growth rate of 4 percent and a 2.9 percent deficit. State debt is expected to fall to 66.7 percent, and inflation to an annual 6 percent, he said.

Commenting on a statement by Johannes Hahn, the Commissioner for Budget and Administration, Gergely Gulyás, the PM’s chief of staff, said the conditionality procedure pertained to very little of the “budget resources Hungary is entitled to”. Talks with the European Commission are ongoing regarding the budget and the resilience and recovery funding, he said.

The European Council approved the Hungarian plan on spending the recovery funding last December, and Hungary amended its judiciary law to comply with the last requirement to access the funds of the 2021-2027 budgetary cycle, Gulyás said.

The conditionality procedure against Hungary involves the partial suspension of three EU programmes, he said. “That should not be conflated with the issues of the budget and the resilience fund.”

Hungary is working to close the conditionality procedure as soon as possible, Gulyás said. “If the EC didn’t set one new requirement after the other, it could have closed the procedure long ago, but sometimes, the goal seemed to be not to close it.”

Hungary has a constructive approach to the negotiations and hopes to see results quickly, he added.

Responding to a question on whether the European Parliament could stop Hungary from overtaking the European presidency in the second half of 2024, Gulyás said the EP had no way of doing that. A recent draft resolution on the matter is “part of the propaganda steaming with anti-Hungarian sentiment” regularly on display in the EP, he added.

Answering questions on the draft budget, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said the government drafted next year’s budget in spring or summer so that families and companies can prepare for next year.

“I don’t think that pushing the drafting back to September or October would make it any more accurate for 2024,” he said.

Next year’s draft calculates with a 385 HUF/EUR exchange rate, he said.

Regarding the central bank’s decision to cut the base rate, Varga said the government is expecting a substantial fall in interest rates next year, aiding private and company loans. The interest burden on budgetary spending may decrease at a slower pace, as those loans have longer terms, he said.

Central bank losses have not been calculated in the draft budget, but talks are ongoing with the Budgetary Council of which Governor Gyoörgy Matolcsy is a member, he said.

Alongside the draft budget, the government will also submit to parliament amendments to tax laws, showing the changes for 2024, he said. “This is the government of tax cuts,” he added.

Regarding this year’s GDP, the government is working to avoid recession, Varga said. The “robust foundations of the Hungarian economy” have allowed to stick to the original growth forecast, he said.

Varga said the central bank was “the government’s most important ally” in curbing inflation, and had more tools to help that process than the government did. “So we are optimistic and say that if we both make an effort, inflation may be reduced significantly by year-end,” he said.

Extra taxes on companies and sectors making excessive profits during in war-time are expected to be phased out in 2024 for the banking, energy and pharmaceutical sectors, he said.

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2 Comments

  1. Hungary is not interested in war, however, war is sometimes interested in countries that are not interested in war. Especially if those countries are not prepared for war. Hungary is not prepared for war today. The size of its military is inadequate to defend the country. Most of the weapons are out of date. There have been recent efforts to upgrade the weapons and equipment. Unfortunately, most of the new weapons are years away and inadequate in numbers. You can’t be prepared for war with 12 modern fixed wing combat planes or 30-45 tanks, most of which are from a previous century. Right now there is a serious war going on next door that could quickly spill into to Hungary. Given the small size of the country and the lack of natural barriers, especially in eastern Hungary, the country could be overrun in 48-72 hours.

  2. HU needs enough to ward off historically opportunistic neighbor states within the EU, but also ready to seize transcarpathia in this inevitable fallout.

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