144
Hungary The economic expansion is projected to slow, but GDP will still grow at 3.9% in 2019 and 3% in 2020. Private consumption will be underpinned by income gains from strong real wage and employment growth. Investment will be supported by the business sector’s need to expand capacity, government housing support and disbursements of EU structural funds. A tight labour market is pushing up inflation and increasingly tight capacity constraints are reducing GDP growth, with expanding demand being increasingly satisfied via higher imports. Fiscal policy remains expansionary as further cuts in social security contributions are combined with higher spending, particularly on public sector wages. Tighter fiscal policies are required to counter signs of economic overheating. Higher monetary policy rates are needed to limit rises in inflation expectations and contain inflation within the central bank’s 3+/-1% inflation target band. Measures to expand labour resources, including faster reduction of public work schemes and greater supply of early childhood care, would prolong the recovery. Domestic demand is driving strong growth Strong private consumption is driven by rising real incomes, high consumer confidence, and supportive macroeconomic policies. Buoyant investment growth reflects disbursements of EU structural funds, generous housing support schemes and the need to expand production capacity, including foreign direct investment in the export-oriented automotive industry. Solid export growth dipped in the second half of 2018 in line with external demand. Rising imports are lowering the current account surplus.
Hungary Available capacity is being exhausted % 90
Wage growth is feeding into price inflation % 100
Y-o-y % changes 16 Headline inflation
Labour shortage indicator¹ → ← Capacity utilisation
86
80
82
60
Core inflation²
14
Wages
12 10 8
0 78
6
40
4 74
2
20
0 70
2010
2012
2014
2016
2018
0
2010
2012
2014
2016
2018
-2
1. Percentage of manufacturing firms pointing to labour shortages as a factor limiting production. 2. Core inflation excludes food products and fuels. Source: Eurostat Industry database; and OECD Main Economic Indicators database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888933934451
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019