Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From May 16, 2016

Hungarian Economy Unexpectedly Shrinks as EU Funding Dries Up

None
STOCKS IN THIS STORY
Goenka Business & Finance Ltd.
--
Nifty Capital Markets
--
MSCI World
--
Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
--
Modern Threads (India) Ltd.
--
SAB Events & Governance Now Media Ltd.
--
Nifty BHARAT Bond Index - April 2033
--
Nuvama Wealth Management Ltd
--
Galada Power & Telecommunication Ltd.
--
Regency Investments Ltd.
--
Lawreshwar Polymers Ltd.
--
Eureka Industries Ltd.
--
Vax Housing Finance Corporation Ltd.
--

Hungary's economy unexpectedly had its first quarterly contraction in four years after a plunge in European Union funding. The forint dropped to a four-month low against the euro.

Gross domestic product shrank 0.8 percent in January-March from the fourth quarter after a 0.6 percent gain in the previous three months, the Budapest-based statistics office said in a report on Friday based on preliminary data. The median of five estimates in a Bloomberg survey was for an increase of 0.4 percent. Growth was 0.9 percent from a year earlier, the slowest since 2013.

“Construction plunged by almost 30 percent as EU funds dried up,” cutting government orders that had buoyed the sector, statistician Zsuzsanna Boros told reporters. In addition, car manufacturers also cut production, she said.

The downswing is exposing the weakness of policies championed by Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who regularly touts Hungary and eastern Europe as the continent's growth engine and has questioned his western neighbors' approach to escaping economic stagnation. In Hungary, growth is sputtering after a drop in EU funding, which accounted for almost all public investments in the former communist nation.

The forint was down 0.2 percent to 315.98 versus euro at 9:25 a.m. in Budapest after touching a four-month low following the publication of the GDP data.

“Household spending has likely remained fairly stable, though today's release suggests that it was weaker than retail sales prints had suggested,” Marcin Kujawski, a Warsaw-based economist at BNP Paribas SA, said in an e-mailed report. “We expect the pattern of poor capital spending and decent private consumption to continue in the quarters to come.”

--With assistance from Kristian Siedenburg To contact the reporter on this story: Zoltan Simon in Budapest at zsimon@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net, Paul Abelsky, Andras Gergely

Essential Business Intelligence, Continuous LIVE TV, Sharp Market Insights, Practical Personal Finance Advice and Latest Stories — On NDTV Profit.

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search