OECD ECONOMIC SURVEY OF HUNGARY
Budapest, 6 March 2024
oe.cd/hungary
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Budapest, 6 March 2024
oe.cd/hungary
Note: Harmonised index of consumer prices (HICP) inflation.
Source: Eurostat.
Note: Inflation is calculated according to the national Consumer Price Index (CPI).
Source: Hungarian Central Statistical Office (HCSO), OECD projections.
Governement balance (% of GDP)
Structural primary government balance (% of potential GDP)
Note: The primary government balance is the government balance before accounting for debt servicing costs. The structural primary government balance is the primary government balance adjusted for business cycle fluctuations.
Source: Hungarian Central Statistical Office (HCSO), OECD projections.
No pension reform
No primary deficit from 2024 onwards
Primary surplus of 1.3% of GDP from 2024 onwards
Note: The primary government surplus/deficit is the government balance before accounting for debt servicing costs. Scenario 1 (No pension reform) adds expected ageingrelated costs on top of Scenario 2 in which there is no structural primary deficit from 2024 onwards. A structural primary surplus of 1.3% of GDP from 2024 onwards is considered in scenario 3.
Source: OECD estimates.
Note: Labour productivity is defined as value added divided by total hours worked by employees and self-employed workers based on the total economy.
Constant prices and 2015 Purchasing Power Parities (PPPs) are used to compare labour productivity across countries and time.
Source: OECD Database on productivity statistics.
1 (most concentrated) to 7 (least concentrated), 2019
Note: A lower score indicates that markets are more concentrated.
Source: World Economic Forum - The Global Competitiveness Index 4.0 2019 dataset.
Note: In Hungary, 64% of firms with 10 or more persons employed have a very low Digital Intensity Index, compared to 44% on average in the EU.
Source: EU Digital Intensity Index, Eurostat Database on Digital Economy and Society.
The new anti-corruption framework should be fully implemented
Note: The OECD average is an unweighted average of the corruption perception indices of all OECD countries.
Source: Transparency International.
Share of transfers going to different income quintiles, 2021 or latest
Note: Transfers from public social security include accident and disability benefits, old-age cash benefits, unemployment benefits, maternity allowance, child and/or family allowance, housing benefits, and other means-tested benefits. All transfers are measured at the household level and adjusted for household size.
Source: OECD Income distribution database.
Note: Hungarian official statistics put the proportion of children under 3 in formal childcare at 18.1% in 2022, above the 12.9% Eurostat figure based on the EU-SILC survey.
Source: Eurostat.
Source: OECD (2018): “A broken social elevator? How to promote social mobility ”. Data are available for 24 OECD countries.
Note: Greenhouse gases (CO2, N2O, CH4, HFC, PFC, SF6, and NF3) are expressed in CO2 equivalent. The chart refers to gross emissions and therefore excludes absorptions from land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF). The 2050 target is consistent with net zero emissions (accounting for LULUCF absorptions) by 2050. The 2030 target is a 50% reduction of gross emissions compared to 1990, as set in Hungary’s National Energy and Climate Plan and in line with EU objectives.
Source: EU Statistical Pocketbook, OECD calculations.
Note: Net effective carbon rates consist of emission trading prices, carbon taxes, and fuel excise taxes minus fossil fuel subsidies. The OECD average is an unweighted average of net effective carbon rates across OECD countries.
Source: OECD (2022): “Pricing greenhouse gas emissions. Turning climate targets into climate action.”
Note: For each country, energy consumption is corrected for changes in meteorological conditions across years.
Source: Odysee-Mure, https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/
Note: Mtoe = Million tonnes of oil equivalent. Fossil fuels include coal, crude oil and natural gas. Other renewables include solar, wind, hydro and geothermal energy sources. Due to data limitations, imported electricity cannot be broken down into primary energy inputs. Fossil fuels may be used directly or first transformed into electricity.
Source: International Energy Agency, World energy balances, OECD calculations.
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