139
Hungary GDP growth is projected to slow to 4% in 2022 and 2.5% in 2023. Domestic demand will be the main growth driver. The labour market is expected to remain tight, continuing to put upward pressure on real wages. Together with high food and energy prices, this will keep headline inflation elevated until the end of 2022. Thereafter, inflation is projected to recede slowly, reflecting a slowdown in domestic demand growth as fiscal and monetary policy tighten. A major risk is that a combination of stronger wage growth and continued high energy prices could further de-anchor inflation expectations. Further monetary tightening would help to contain inflation expectations. This should happen in coordination with faster fiscal consolidation. In addition, structural reforms are needed to raise productivity growth. Additional reductions in labour taxes can help address labour shortages but need to be financed by lower spending and an increased reliance on consumption and property taxation. Economic headwinds are growing Buoyant domestic demand drove a strong recovery, which is now threatened by the war in Ukraine. Labour market performance has improved significantly, with the employment rate reaching a historic high of 74.2%, the unemployment rate falling to 3.6% and signs of labour shortages in April 2022. Wages in the private sector have risen strongly, driven by a 20% increase in the minimum wage in January 2022. Headline inflation reached a 20-year high of 9.6% in April 2022. In addition to international factors such as supply-side disruptions and rising food and energy prices, domestic price pressures have been rising since mid-2021. This has resulted in inflation becoming broad-based, as reflected in core inflation of 8.2% in April. The impact of the strong minimum wage rise on overall wage costs, and indirectly on price inflation, was offset partly by the reduction of employers’ social security contributions. In addition to regulated prices below market prices for gas and electricity supply, the government has also introduced price caps for fuel and food prices. Nevertheless, one-year inflation expectations have risen by 3 percentage points to 7%, and long-term interest rates by 4.4 percentage points to 6.6%, since early 2021.
Hungary The tightening labour market adds to inflationary pressures % of labour force 10
% 10
← Unemployment rate Consumer price inflation →
9
The war has dented consumer and business confidence Consumer confidence index Business confidence index
9
Balance, s.a. 20 10
8
8
0
7
7
-10
6
6
-20
5
5
-30
4
4
-40
3
3
-50
2
2019
2020
2021
2
0
2019
2020
2021
-60
Source: OECD Labour Statistics database; Refinitiv; and GKI. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/wi3aro
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2022 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2022