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The Hungarian Investment Environment and Incentive System Ministry of Economy and Transport Republic of Hungary December 2004 Hungary: a New Member of the European Union Land: 93,030 km² Population: 10,116,000 people GDP (2003): USD 82,757million HUNGARY: the Reliable Partner No political risk No strikes No social conflicts No institutional risk Early deregulation EU compatible institutions Creditworthiness YES to Investments No financial risk Moderate income policy Sound & transparent fiscal policy Stable monetary policy … 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 .. On an investment and export driven growth path together with the EU since the 1990s The New Vision of HUNGARY Connecting the most developed and the fastest developing countries Ideal geographic location Modern economic structure 4 Pan-European Corridors Rapid liberalisation Gate to South East Europe Sound stabilisation Direct access to the EU Radical privatisation A BRIDGE binding West with East, North with South in Europe Hungarian Economy: Improving Macroeconomic Figures GDP • Rate of growth reached 4,1% in H1 2004 Consumption • Consumption dynamics high but on a declining trend Volume of investments grew by 13,5% in H1 2004 Investments • • • • Industrial boom since Q4 2003; 10.4% y-to-y growth in H1 2004 • Industrial export growth exceeded 20% in H1 2004 Output Investments in manufacturing grew by 25,3%! Employment and • wages Low unemployment (5,9%) compared to EU-average in H1 2004, and moderating wage dynamics • Annual inflation at 4,7% in 2003, speeding temporary up in 2004 due to VAT-regulation Inflation Hungarian GDP Growth Follows the Trend of the EU change on the same quarter of previous year, per cent 7 6 Quarterly GDP growth rates Hungary EU-15 5 4 3 2 1 0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Source: Central Statistical Office, Eurostat Short Term Economic Effects of the EU Accession* Growth rate Foreign direct investments Industrial production • an 0.8 percentage point increase in the GDP growth rate • • • • phasing out of tariff free zones state subsidy system in line with EU regulations increased business confidence regional hub role (the bridge between the EU and Eastern Europe) • a 1.0 percentage point increase in the rate of industrial output growth due to higher export sales dynamics stronger competition and drive for innovation increase competitiveness use of EU funds will boost the construction industry • • Infrastructural investments • transport infrastructural investments may reach EUR 10-11 billion until 2010 * based on a joint study of three economic research institutes Outlook for EMU Membership Target date • Date of possible entry in 2010 • • Lower real interest rates boost investment Fixed exchange rate risk eliminates conversion costs and exchange rate risk Expanding foreign trade supports economic growth The single currency could increase the rate of economic growth by 0.6-0.9 percentage points annually. Advantages • • Possible disadvantage • Giving up independent monetary and exchange rate policy as an instrument for managing asymmetric shocks • Government deficit (appr. 5.1-5.3% in 2004) and inflation (appr. 6.7-6.8% in 2004) significantly exceed the Maastricht threshold Meeting the Maastricht convergence criteria has a short-run cost Challenges to face • Hungary has been attracting a continuously high inflow of foreign direct investment 3 439 3 165 3 500 3 068 2 381 2 489 2 645 2 575 2 143 924 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 *Excluding other capital, including reinvested earnings 2001 2002 2003 jan-apr 3 900 3 600 3 300 3 000 2 700 2 400 2 100 1 800 1 500 1 200 900 600 300 0 GKM-projection euro million Annual FDI inflow* to Hungary 2004 Source: National Bank of Hungary FDI Inflow by Countries 1989-2004 June Austria 11,1% Other 34,8% The Netherlands 14,7% USA 10,8% United Kingdom 4,4% Japan 6,2% Germany 18,0% Cumulative FDI inflows to Hungary reached EUR 45 billion (more than 40% of GDP) from 1989 by June 2004. EU Conform Regulation on FDI From 1st January, 2003 EU-conform regulation in force Implementation • Direct Incentive for Investments 1. Economic Competitiveness Operative Program (ECOP) 2. Special incentive package for strategic investors 3. Subsidy for employment creation and training • Indirect Incentives 1. Tax-related Incentives 2. Offset programs Access to EU Structural Funds: Tender applications co-financed by the European Union I. Economic Competitiveness Operative Program The ECOP is one of the five operative programmes through which the National Development Plan (NDP) 2004-2006 will be implemented in Hungary. The overall objective of the NDP is to reduce the income gap relative to the EU average. Within ECOP non-refundable grants are available for investors up to HUF 25-150 million (USD 125-750 thousand) per project through the following investment promotion tender applications: Technological modernisation (ECOP 1.1.1.) Establishment of regional corporate centres (ECOP 1.1.2.) Strengthening of first tier suppliers (ECOP 1.1.3.) Development of industrial and innovation infrastructure (ECOP 1.2.1.) Development of logistic centres and their services (ECOP 1.2.2.) Access to EU Structural Funds: Tender applications co-financed by the European Union II. Economic Competitiveness Operative Program Non-refundable grants are available for small and medium enterprises up to HUF 1.4-25 million (USD 7-125 thousand) through the following tender applications: • Support for the development of technical and technological background of SMEs (GVOP 2.1.1.) • Support for modern management systems and techniques for SMEs (GVOP 2.1.2.) • Support for advanced level technical consultancy (GVOP 2.2.2.) • Support for the organisation of co-operation between SMEs (GVOP 2.3.1.) Special Incentive Package for Strategic Investments If the investment volume reaches • EUR 50 million by projects of the manufacturing industry or • EUR 25 million by establishing regional corporate service centres The Hungarian Government decides on granting a customized incentive package Within the customized incentive package more favorable and significant subsidy is available than through ECOP and SMART tender applications. Indirect Incentives Tax-related incentives • Corporate-tax decreased down to 16 % (from 18%), one of the lowest rates in continental Europe • For major investors, 10-year-long development tax benefit up to 80% of the due corporate tax • Corporate tax benefit up to 25% of local tax (50% from 2005) • Tax-free investment reserve • Tax allowances for corporate R&D and innovation Rapid Development of Transport Infrastructure KASSA felé V Tornyosnémeti Tisza POZSONY, PRÁGA IV felé BÉCS M15 felé A Miskolc SK Duna Győr BUDAPEST Szombathely M8 Zalaegerszeg LJUBJANA, M7 0 Bszgyörgy TRIESZT felé TornyiszmiklósNagykanizsa V M6 M7 ZÁGRÁB Letenye felé Szekszárd Kaposvár Ilocska Békéscsaba ARAD felé M56 BELGRÁD felé X/A SZARAJEVÓ felé V/C M43 Röszke YU TEMESVÁR, BUKAREST felé By 2015 • Network density to reach EU average Nagylak Baja Mohács Pécs HR ARAD, K O L O Z SV Á R felé M5 Szeged • 431 km of expressway RO M44 Kiskunfélegyháza M9 V/A M4 M8 Kecskemét Lelle M35 Szolnok IV By 2006 to be completed • 425 km under construction • Further 803 km in preparatory phase Polgár Debrecen M0 Székesfehérvár M3 Nyíregyháza M4 Dunaújváros Rábafüzes Emőd Füzesabony Tatabánya Veszprém M25 Eger M3 M1 Sopron SLO V Vác M9 GRÁC felé Salgótarján M2 Parassapuszta M30 UA LVOV, KIJEV felé IV V Helsinki corridors motorway network in 2002 Network expansion in 2003-2006: highway motorway highway under connstruction motorway under constructionm highway under preparation motorway under preparation Development of Road Infrastructure - Utilising the Transit and Logistics Centre Roles • By 2015: motorway network density reaches EU average Act on development of motorway network European Initiative for Growth • By 2006: - 431 km of motorway to be completed - Another 425 km will be under construction - Further 803 km in preparatory phase • Expected North-Southern Pan-European transport corridor along M2 and M6 motorways • M5 and M43 motorways • By-pass roads Local developments • road- and bridge reconstruction (widening to 4 lanes, strengthening the road surface, bridge modernisation, reconstructing intersections) • 13 logistics service centres are planned connecting to European networks Development of Railway and Air Transport Infrastructure • IV. corridor: Hegyeshalom –Tatabánya - Bp. – Szolnok – Development of railway lines along IV. and V. pan-European corridors Békéscsaba - Lőkösháza • V. corridor: Bajánsenye - Zalaegerszeg – Veszprém – Székesfehérvár – Bp. – Szolnok – Debrecen – Nyíregyháza – Záhony • Investments with subsidies from ISPA and Cohesion Funds • Airports of Debrecen and Sármellék becoming open for Air transport regular international transport • Infrastructure developments at the airports of Győr-Pér, Taszár, Pécs-Pogány, Zalaegerszeg-Andráshida and Jakabszállás Contacts Ministry of Economy and Transport Ábel Garamhegyi, Director-General for Investments and Economics H-1055 Budapest, Honvéd utca 13-15. Phone: (36 1) 374-2746 Fax: (36 1) 374-2726 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: www.gkm.hu The Hungarian Investment and Trade Development Agency (ITDH): “One-stop-shop” for investors Ádám Terták, Chief Executive Officer H-1061 Budapest, Andrássy út 12. Phone: (36 1) 472-8100 Fax: (36 1) 472-8101 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: www.itdh.hu