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Budapest Stock Exchange Roadshow June 2002, London MR. CSABA LÁSZLÓ MINISTER OF FINANCE REPUBLIC OF HUNGARY MINISTRY OF FINANCE 1 Where Are We Now? Growth process bottoming out Fiscal positions External balance MINISTRY OF FINANCE 2 Main Policy Principles Predictability Focusing on competitiveness Increasing transparency MINISTRY OF FINANCE 3 Towards the European Union Negotiations to be finished in 2002 Judgement of Hungary’s performance should not depend on others Expected entry in 2004 MINISTRY OF FINANCE 4 Annual GDP Growth Rate 5,5 Percent 5,0 4,5 4,0 3,5 3,0 1998 1999 2000 2001 MINISTRY OF FINANCE 2002 2003 5 2004 General Government Deficit (in % of GDP, ESA95 standard) Percent 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 MINISTRY OF FINANCE 2003 6 2004 Current Account Balance (in % of GDP) 0 Percent -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 MINISTRY OF FINANCE 2003 7 2004 Monetary Conditions Inflation targeting Substantial deceleration of inflation Declining base rate Towards the Eurozone MINISTRY OF FINANCE 8 Consumer Price Index 120 118,3 118,4 115 114,3 band: +/- 15% from May 2001 110 110,3 110,0 111,2 109,8 110,1 109,2 106,8 105,7 105 105,3 104,5 103,9 100 1997 1998 1999 2000 MINISTRY OF FINANCE 2001 2002 9 2003 Short-Term Policy Goals Back to the growth potential Substantially declining fiscal deficit from 2003 Further decreasing inflation MINISTRY OF FINANCE 10 Short-Term Policy Steps Fiscal policy: Reduction of tax burden Entrepreneur-friendly tax administration Strengthening of tax enforcement More efficient use of government resources MINISTRY OF FINANCE 11 Short-Term Policy Steps Structural policy: Supporting SMEs Shrinking gap between regions Promoting R&D activities Investor-friendly environment MINISTRY OF FINANCE 12 Short-Term Policy Steps Income policy: Balanced income distribution Operative framework for interest reconciliation among economic actors MINISTRY OF FINANCE 13 Policy Coordination Greater role of fiscal policy in demand management Avoid substantial further appreciation in real exchange rate of HUF Policy rates declining in line with inflation MINISTRY OF FINANCE 14 Reinventing the Budapest Stock Exchange Supporting local investor demand for shares Providing attractive supply on the BSE MINISTRY OF FINANCE 15 Supporting Demand Towards a mature savings structure The role of private pension funds Creating liquidity MINISTRY OF FINANCE 16 Savings Structure Developments Gross financial assets of households below 50% of GDP 9% of assets in investment funds, 2.5% in shares Increasing role of life assurance and pension funds (15% of assets) MINISTRY OF FINANCE 17 The Role of Pension Funds Dynamic growth helped by continuing reform Contribution to be increased to 8% of gross wages Compulsory participation to be reintroduced Less than 10% of portfolio in BSE traded shares MINISTRY OF FINANCE 18 Where is the Liquidity? Liquidity suffers globally in bear markets 60% drop on BSE is comparable to regional experience Elimination of capital gains tax may help MINISTRY OF FINANCE 19 Creating Supply Re-starting privatisation via the BSE Encourage private companies to list shares MINISTRY OF FINANCE 20 The Last Wave of Privatisation Government is committed to privatisation Few evident short-term candidates for listing Regulatory risk is considerable MINISTRY OF FINANCE 21 Private Companies: A Special Situation Privatisation and greenfield FDI brought domination of strategic investors 2/3 of top 200 companies unlikely to be listed How to make the BSE more representative of the economy? MINISTRY OF FINANCE 22 Encouraging Private Listings Analysing reasons is important Government to ease the burden of listing Psychological barriers hard to break MINISTRY OF FINANCE 23 Where Do We Go? Impressive performance in the past 5 years Present minor anomalies to be corrected Return to long-term sustainabe growth path Convergence to European Union standards MINISTRY OF FINANCE 24