133
Hungary GDP is projected to expand by 6.9% in 2021, before growth slows to 5% in 2022 and 3% in 2023. The recovery will be driven mainly by domestic demand. Private consumption will continue to benefit from higher real incomes. Investment will rebound on the back of increasing industrial capacity constraints and inflows of EU funds. Headline inflation will remain high, reflecting supply-side constraints and a tight labour market. A significant risk is that stronger wage growth and prolonged supply shortages could intensify inflation pressures. Fiscal policy will remain expansionary in 2022, before gradually consolidating in 2023. In contrast, the central bank began a tightening cycle in early summer, which has seen the policy base rate increase by 1½ percentage points to 2.1%. A better-balanced policy mix would help to contain inflation expectations. Moreover, structural reforms should focus on raising potential growth. Labour taxes should be further lowered to help address labour shortages, financed by lower spending and increased consumption, property and environmental taxation. Economic activity has now surpassed its pre-pandemic level The initially fast vaccination rollout has slowed and as of November 2021, only about 60% of the population was fully vaccinated. Nonetheless, fewer restrictions and stronger international demand have allowed economic activity to surpass its pre-pandemic level in the second quarter of 2021. Since then, domestic demand has become the main driver of growth, as reflected in the strong expansion of retail sales and domestic orders over the summer, sustaining economic growth of 0.7% in the third quarter. By contrast, external demand is weighed down by supply chain disruptions. Industrial production contracted for the fourth consecutive month in September 2021, while exports and new export orders remain volatile. The resurgence of COVID cases and hospitalisations led the government to introduce new restrictions in mid-November, including the mandatory use of masks in-door, although no new lockdown measures were announced.
Hungary The tightening labour market is pushing inflation up % of labour force 5
Domestic demand has become the main growth driver
Y-o-y % changes 7
Index 2019 = 100, 3-month m.a. 140
120 4
5 100
80 3
New export orders
3
New domestic orders
60
← Unemployment rate Consumer price inflation →
2 Jan 19
Jun 19
Nov 19
Apr 20
Sep 20
Feb 21
Jul 21
1
0 Jan 20 Apr 20
Jul 20
Oct 20 Jan 21 Apr 21
Jul 21
40
Source: OECD Labour database; OECD Main Economic Indicators database; Hungarian Central Statistical Office; and OECD calculations. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/9rd3b5
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2021 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2021