Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
IP/00/338 Brussels, 6 April 2000 Commission and Hungary sign joint assessment of medium-term economic policy priorities Mr Zsigmond Jarai, Minister of Finance of Hungary, and Mr Pedro Solbes, EU Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs, today signed the second “Joint Assessment of medium-term economic policy priorities of the Republic of Hungary” for the period up to 2004 as part of the pre-accession process. The Hungarian authorities have prepared a Joint Assessment of Hungary’s mediumterm economic policy priorities, together with the Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs of the European Commission. This is a follow-up to the first Joint Assessment signed by the Hungarian authorities and the European Commission in June 1997 which is now updated following the adoption of the Hungarian government’s “Strategy of Catching up with Europe”, envisaging the convergence of Hungary with the European Union in terms of economic performance and the welfare of its citizens. The new Joint Assessment was one of the short-term priorities identified in the Accession Partnership. It reflects the agreed view of the Hungarian Government and the European Commission on medium-term economic policies and the priorities of structural reform in Hungary. These policies should help to consolidate economic transformation whilst establishing the conditions for strong and sustainable growth of economic activity, reduction of unemployment and improvement in the living standards of the population. The macroeconomic scenario covers the period 2000 to 2004. Mr Pedro Solbes recognised that “the Joint Assessment sets out an ambitious but achievable economic programme.” He stressed that "Healthcare reform is cornerstone of the structural reform agenda". He pointed to "the importance of healthcare reform as part of future budget consolidation". The framework of the exercise The Joint Assessment is a common document of the Hungarian Government and the European Commission, and it reflects the agreed view of the Hungarian Government and the European Commission on medium-term macroeconomic policies and the priorities of structural reform in Hungary. It is a follow up to the Joint Assessment signed by the Hungarian Ministry of Finance and the Directorate-General of Economic and Financial Affairs of the European Commission in June 1997, which outlined a policy framework that would allow rapid economic development while maintaining macroeconomic stability. It meets one of the short-term priorities of the Accession Partnership and complements other documents, in particular Hungary’s National Programme for the Adoption of the Acquis, which focuses more on legal and institutional approximation. In June 1999 the government of Hungary adopted “The Strategy of Catching up with Europe”, envisaging the convergence of Hungary with the European Union in terms of economic performance and the welfare of its citizens. The Commission has already signed similar Joint Assessments with the governments of Slovenia (November 1998), Latvia (February 1999), Bulgaria (June 1999), the Czech Republic (November 1999 – IP/99/824), Poland (February 2000 – IP/00/140), Slovakia (February 2000 – IP/00/198) and Estonia (March 2000 – IP/00/300). The Commission aims to sign a similar Joint Assessment with the government of Lithuania soon. Economic policy priorities Given Hungary’s rather advanced stage of development, the new reform agenda will not be as dramatic as this of the past decade. However, there are a number of reforms which are urgently needed to ensure that the strong economic growth enjoyed in recent years continues over the medium term. This Joint Assessment focuses into three areas of reform in particular: healthcare, local government, and railways. They are addressed as part of Hungary’s more general approach on public sector reform, labour market policy and regional development. The Joint Assessments targets healthcare as a key structural reform area. The increase in medicine costs of the government budget will be contained by fixing the subsidies on the basis of the pharmaceutical content of the product rather than its name. In 2000, parliament decided that family doctor services will be privatised. Outpatient treatment will follow in stages. The government also has plans to counter the evasion of obligatory health insurance contributions and to extend the coverage of private co-payments, which in many cases are needed to obtain treatment, under voluntary and supplementary insurance schemes. At the local level, greater self-governance is established at the city and district levels, while associations of smaller communities are formed to benefit from economies of scale and reduce the overlap of local administrations. A simpler and less differentiated system of funding has been devised, which will rely more on local sources of revenue. It is clear that all this should be based on considerations of subsidiarity rather than expediency. Another area in which public service obligations play a role is railway passenger transport. The government has comprehensive plans to close down, suspend or transfer to third parties some 1,000 km of railway lines and further staff reductions will be made. An independent infrastructure company will be put in charge of state assets; Freight and passenger transportation will be split, increasing the possibilities for privatisation of freight transport. Passenger transport will continue to be subsidised by central and regional governments. Throughout the chapter on the priorities for structural change, the Joint Assessment discusses measures to make the Hungarian economy more flexible. The government is making efforts to increase the share of household income from work and to reduce the share from social benefits. It also aims to stimulate the development of small and medium-sized enterprises. Macroeconomic developments have been broadly in line with the framework set out in the 1997 Joint Assessment. Economic growth has been between 4 and 5 percent per year, and it has remained export-led. Hungary’s investment cycle has become increasingly synchronous with that of the EU economy. Inflation decreased by 8 percentage points in three years, to reach around 10 percent at the end of 1999. Although in the past two years the current account deficits have been at the higher end of the 1997 projections, the external debt indicators continued to improve and the financial system coped well with the turmoil on the international markets. General government deficit and debt ratios has decreased in accordance with the projections. 2 The macroeconomic framework for 2000-2004 which is included in this Joint Assessment assumes that the trend growth in labour participation, employment and productivity will continue to enable economic growth in the range of 5 to 6 percent per year. Real wages will not grow as fast as labour productivity. The reduction of the public borrowing requirement will help to make room for private investment, which will need to be financed primarily out of the savings of enterprises. It is assumed in the growth scenario that the investment to GDP ratio could increase from 24 percent in 2000 to 30 percent in 2004. Net foreign direct investment inflows are expected to be around 3 percent of GDP, including intracompany loans. Given the projected growth in exports, which is assumed to be high but not as spectacular as in the recent past, real domestic demand growth is expected to be at par with real GDP growth and reach approximately 6 percent in 2003-2004, assuming that EU transfers are forthcoming. The government aims to have a general government deficit of less than 3 percent by 2002. This will require a primary surplus in the range of 1.5 to 2 percent of GDP, which is smaller to the one achieved in 1999, and further structural reforms in the public sector. The government intends to maintain the priorities of the 2000 budget in the years to come: to assist families with children; to develop small and mediumsized enterprises; to strengthen the residential construction programme; and to support agricultural and regional development. Hungary’s commitments linked to NATO membership and EU accession will further limit the room for manoeuvre on the expenditure side. At present, pre-accession funds are expected to be in the order of 200-250 million euro on an annual average basis. Total government revenue is set to decline as a percentage of GDP in the medium term. The government intends to reduce the discrepancies between the tax burden on income from work and income from capital, for instance by granting tax allowances based on the number of children. Corporate tax allowances, indirect taxes and local taxes on business will be brought in line with EU regulations. The revenue of local taxes will remain at the level at which they are levied, allowing for some reallocation between municipalities. The main objective of monetary policy is price stability. It is expected that inflation will decline from 10 percent in 1999 to 3-5 percent by 2002; the government’s target for 2000 is 6-7 percent. The speed of the reduction of inflation will determine when Hungary will replace its crawling peg system by a system with a central rate fixed to the euro and a wider fluctuation band (probably +/-15 percent). It is the government's intention to do so when inflation falls below 5 percent and the differential with Hungary’s main trade partners is smaller than 3 percentage points. This is meant to prepare Hungary for participation in the ERM2 exchange rate mechanism at the time of accession. The full text of the Joint Assessment can be obtained from the office of Gerassimos Thomas, Press and Communication Service, BREY 6/92. It will also be made available in the Internet shortly at: http://europe.eu.int/comm/economy_finance/document/eesuppc/joint_assessments/i ndex_en.htm 3