Future of euro adoption

Published: 26 February 2004 y., Thursday
Hungary will probably postpone euro adoption from 2008 to 2010 because of high inflation and budget deficits, Finance Minister Tibor Draskovics said. The National Bank of Hungary (MNB) has argued for faster adoption, saying it will boost growth. Draskovics detailed some proposed cuts in state expenditure. Plans include reducing the number of higher civil servants, such as government advisors and state secretaries; the number of state-run foundations; and support for ethnic Hungarians abroad. January inflation was higher than the Finance Ministry expected, at 6.6% yr/yr and 2.1% month-on-month. It expects annual inflation in 2004 to be near the higher end of its 6%–6.5% target band. The February budget deficit is anticipated to be about Ft 180 billion (Ђ684 million), boosted by interest payments, Finance Ministry sources said. The estimated February gap would push the two-month figure to Ft 399 billion, or 43% of the full-year target. Industrial output grew 6.4% in 2003, after a 2.8% increase in 2002, the Central Statistics Office (KSH) said. In December output fell 0.8% month-on-month. Real wages rose by 9.2% in 2003, as the result of a 14.3% rise in average net wages and twelve-month consumer price inflation of 4.7%, the KSH announced. The government wants to raise R&D spending to 1.8%–1.9% of GDP by 2006, and to 3% by 2010, Prime Minister Pйter Medgyessy said. Last year the figure was barely above 1%. The number of operating businesses in Hungary rose 2.6%, to a total of 969,559 in 2003, including not-for-profit and budget-funded businesses, the KSH said.
Šaltinis: bbj.hu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Wincor Nixdorf sales up 4% despite slower biz growth

Wincor Nixdorf AG closed the first six months of fiscal year 2008/2009 with a 4 percent increase in net sales and a 2 percent increase in operating profit (EBITA). more »

Raiffeisen Bank in Poland launches mobile banking in Europe

Raiffeisen Bank Polska SA, a subsidiary of Raiffeisen International, a leading financial corporation in Central and Eastern Europe, has deployed "VIP Mobile," a next-generation mobile banking solution. more »

SOS for EU fishing – save our stocks

Commission calls for help with reforming EU fishing. more »

IFC and Lithuania’s SEB Bank Launch Transaction to Help Businesses Adopt Renewable Energy

IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, and SEB Bank today launched an innovative transaction that will support lending of around €50 million to help small and medium enterprises in Lithuania switch to renewable sources of energy. more »

MEPs to debate the 2007 budget discharge

Is your money well spent at EU level? Every year, in April, the EP concludes its examination of EU spending for the financial year closed 16 months previously. more »

Shake-up of gas and electricity market debated Tuesday

The right to compensation for poor service, the right to change gas and electricity suppliers and comparable prices are just three aspects of the proposed “third energy package” being debated today by MEPs. more »

Banks in India halt ATM expansion, consolidate tellers

As access to ATMs became free from April 1, many banks are expected to consider consolidating their teller operations instead of aggressively expanding ATM network. more »

“Smart Security” industry withstands crisis

Crisis or no crisis, secure identity cards will still be needed to cross borders… more »

UniCredit gives 1 million euro to help Abruzzo

A fund-raising initiative has been launched among 170,000 employees in all 22 countries where the Group operates more »

Bank SNORAS Klaipėda branch is among the top ten leaders of „Excellent service” month

This year AB Bank SNORAS also joined the promotional event "Praise excellent service!" which is held in March every year. more »