OECD Economic Outlook November 2019 Country Note, Hungary

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Hungary The strong recovery is projected to slow in line with external demand to slightly above 3% in the next two years. Private consumption will continue to drive growth on the back of strong gains in real incomes. Public investment will decelerate along with declining disbursements from EU structural funds. Capacity constraints will bolster business investment and imports. The tightening labour market continues to push up wage and price inflation. Fiscal policy will remain supportive as social security contributions are further reduced and public spending, including on wages, is increased. The central bank is expected to continue its loose monetary policy stance. However, counter-cyclical policies should address signs of overheating and contain inflation expectations. Policies to bolster geographical labour mobility and labour supply, including expansion of early childhood care, would prolong the recovery. Domestic demand is the main driver of growth Household demand remains strong, driven by continued solid gains in employment and real wages, an alltime high consumer confidence, housing investment support schemes and very accommodative monetary policy. Other investments are underpinned by large disbursements of EU structural funds, the demanddriven expansion of production capacity and FDI in the export-oriented automotive sector as well as supportive monetary policy. Exports have slowed in line with foreign demand, while imports continue to expand in response to strong domestic demand.

Hungary The currency depreciates as interest rates fall % 14

← Short-term interest rate

Inflationary pressures remain high

Forint per EUR 260

Headline inflation

← Long-term interest rate Exchange rate (inverted scale)¹ →

12

Y-o-y % changes 16 14

Core inflation²

280

Wages

12

10

300

8

320

8

6

340

6

4

360

2

380

10

4 2

0

2010

2012

2014

2016

2018

400

0 0

2010

2012

2014

2016

2018

-2

1. Higher values indicate that the currency depreciates, while lower values that it appreciates. 2. Core inflation excludes food products and fuels. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 106 database; OECD Main Economic Indicators database; and IMF International Financial Statistics database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934045449

OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019


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