New 21 Point Economic Programme: Economic Neutrality, Peace 'Boost for Hungarian Economy'
- 24 Feb 2025 12:25 PM

Orban said that in the past, whenever Hungary had faced difficulty, the communists and later the liberals had always blamed it on global economic trends. He said they had done this to shift the blame onto others, adding, at the same time, that external influences were important.
"We put all our cards on peace this year," Orban said. "We thought that the Democrat administration will fall in the US and a Republican government led by Donald Trump would take over, which will broker peace and in turn boost the economy."
"If it hadn’t turned out this way we would’ve been in big trouble..." he added.
He said the government’s prediction had turned out to be correct and it was expecting "a strong external impact on the Hungarian economy, that it will receive a push from the outside, too. So far, Hungary has lost some 6.5-7 billion euros due to the war," he said.
Meanwhile, the government "has its own plans", and trusts that its 21 point economic programme, the philosophy of economic neutrality and peace would give "the Hungarian economy a big boost," Orban said.
"I am counting on a fantastic year," he said, adding, however, that he expected "no decision from Europe, Brussels, Paris or Berlin" that would have a positive impact on the Hungarian economy.
Orban added, at the same time, that he did not expect any decisions from Brussels, Paris or Berlin either that would have a favourable effect on the Hungarian economy.
He argued that the EU was failing to fulfil the pledge it made in Budapest last November to lower European energy prices. Hungary, he said, was keeping energy prices low prices were expected to remain high in western Europe, "which is destroying the economy".
The prime minister said Hungarians tended to be cautious, and security and predictability were the most important factors in how households managed their finances. Hungarians also tended to "think twice" about how they spent their money, he added.
But economists preferred that people consume and spend their money to have it circulating in the economy, Orban said, adding, however, that "the world’s isn’t just economics".
He said that while it was good to be cautious, extreme caution caused the economy to slow, so it was best to let people make their own decisions.
Orban said the government had its own intentions, plans, recommendations and schemes, and was asking the public to take part in them. "But then it’s up to them to decide whether they’ll take part in it, and it’s this decision that will determine the government’s economic policy," he said. "Common sense is the best counsellor".
He said people were becoming "a bit bolder after being very cautious last year". More than 10,000 people have applied for subsidised loans for employees, while subsidies disbursed via the Demjan Sandor Programme aimed at scaling up local SMEs "will be drawn down in seconds", and a housing scheme is also being launched, he said.
The prime minister said the Hungarian economy was in motion and gaining momentum this year.
He said Hungarians were "getting a lot of money now", noting that the state has made 480 billion forints (EUR 1.2bn) of interest payments on retail government securities.
"Something will happen with this money: either people will put it into another form of savings or they'll spend some of it, or even distribute it within the family," he said, noting it was important that this money enters the economy.
"If such a large sum goes from state coffers to the people, it will certainly have a beneficial effect on the functioning of the economy," he added.
Bond holders will receive another 300 billion forints in interest payments next month, he said.
A total of some 800,000 families will be receiving interest payments, Orban said, noting the minimum wage increase and the wage increases outpacing inflation.
Meanwhile, the prime minister said the most important task of the spring political season will be uncovering how American money was used to influence Hungarian public opinion while also developing defence mechanisms against such operations.
Orban noted that the new US administration has released a list of individuals and organisations who have received funding from the US budget in recent years to influence other countries. "We’re also deeply involved in this," he said, arguing that Hungarian "self-proclaimed civil organisations, media outlets, journalists and politicians" had also received donations.
He said one of the most important tasks in the spring political season would be to uncover how the system worked and how it had influenced government and potentially parliamentary decisions, public opinion and public life.
"Once we understand all of this, we’ll have to urgently develop and implement defence mechanisms," he said, adding that he did not expect any form of resistance against this because it was up to the government and the parliamentary majority.
Orban said Hungary had to follow the "well-established mechanism" of the US in not just the fact-finding stage but also in defence.
In his State of the nation speech on Saturday, Orban said he would give "outrageous but also ridiculous examples of that influence in action". He insisted that US film stars had been paid millions, "at times up to ten million euros", to travel to Kyiv and promote the war and its continuance rather than peace.
"Hungarians also received their share of that mechanism, this machine employed its techniques of manipulation from Peru to Kyrgyzstan."
In the past 10-15 years, Hungary had been fighting Brussels over migration, child protection, the protection of pensions and the utility price cuts, Orban said.
"The global financial system working in a coordinated fashion at various points of the world" had been steered from Washington and Brussels, he said. "Now the Washington branch has fallen" after the turnabout there, he said.
Using a country's funds to pay public institutions and individuals to gain influence "is the definition of political corruption", Orban said.
Political corruption also involves MEPs or lawmakers receiving monies "through hidden channels" from foundations to represent their paymasters' views, such as standing up for the support of migration, gender culture or a warring country, he said.
The US "has thrown the skeletons out of the closet, and now we're outraged by the mysterious, coordinated manipulation against our national interests," Orban said.
"But those involved are not apologising; rather, 63 international organisations, Hungarians among them, have written a letter to Brussels."
Orban said the organisations involved were now asking Brussels to pay the support they had been receiving from the US.
At the same time, the European Union budget was paid by member states, he said. "Brussels has no money of its own; the money is collected from the countries these organisations want to stand up against."
"There were rolling dollars, now there are rolling euros," the prime minister said.
"Hungarian and European citizens are being cheated twice here: they don't know that those seen as independent people representing their own opinions in the public eye are actually mercenaries bought and paid for and influenced; also, they don't know that they had been paid to manipulate [European citizens] with their money," Orban said.
He said he expected the dispute between the European Union and "truly sovereign and patriotic nation states" to strengthen.
Orban warned against underestimating the EU: "Brussels has a lot of money, power and influence, so we will need to use the defence mechanisms we are taking over from the US over the spring against them too."
The voice of Europeans, including Hungarians, cannot be ignored in Brussels, "so we will vanquish them", he said.
He said fact-finding must be conducted in Brussels as it is being done in Washington. "That work has started, although it lags behind the US."
Citing an Italian survey, Orban said much EU funding had flown to organisations "pretending to be NGOs at home and in Europe which continue to argue for ceding national competencies to Brussels."
According to that investigative material, an organisation of Guy Verhofstadt, who often attacked Hungary in the European Parliament, had received monies to the tune of 6 billion forints from the European Commission "to badmouth us", he said.
The EU is also planning to plough some 1.5 billion euros into its Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values programme "to expressly support organisations promoting federalism, meaning the moving of national competencies to Brussels," he said.
"If all that comes to light, the Brussels leadership will have no alternative but to admit, apologise and cease those practices… We will have to fight for it, but we will achieve it in the coming year or two," Orban said.
Source:
MTI - The Hungarian News Agency, founded in 1881.
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