Monday, February 14, 2011

Pride over not being prejudiced

Ok, it was a safe guess. Nothing specific and new in Orbán's speech. Even though I have to admit, even my guess was too optimistic: Orbán didn't even announced anything specific regarding unemployment benefits. Anyway, I'm proud as clearly I was among the few expecting what really happened.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Playing Cassandra, resolving cognitive dissonance and on the importance of not investing too much emotional and intellectual capital in expectations

As I try to take a distance from politics in a stricter sense it could mean that in less troubled times I remain silent. My intention is not to comment on everything happening in Hungary or in ECE, especially not when someone else is perofrming it with more expertise and in line with my opinion, rather to give my ideas when I feel I can express thoughts and ideas less prevalent in the public discussion. (Even if this blog is clearly not part of any kind of public discussion, just a variety of a diary or a notebook.) Furtherome, many occurences in the politics are connected to the crisis only indirectly. Although the electoral success of Fidesz in Hungary, their two-thirds majority enabling them to pass a new constitution and change the basic laws of Hungary according to their will, was not independent from the economic crisis and the populations distaste for and discontent with the Socialists and asuterity, the concept according to they are acting is their very own, rooted in their nationalist ideology what is not a reaction to the crisis. Therefore, although I can offer some thoughts on this problem it is only tangentially part of this blog. Nonetheless, the "war of economic independence" or "economic war of independence" as Fidesz labelled its economic policy in the summer that is part of this broder effort of reshaping the country, reached its next phase this Feburary, after the quasi-nationalization the compulsory private pension funds. The Fidesz now has its own budget, not one they can pretend to have no responsibility for and they acquired enough room for manoeuvre with the partial default and forced natioinalization to come up with their own and original ideas.


Some of the important constraints remained, from the EU with the deficit target under 3%, and from the broader environment as the crisis still looms over Europe. (During the Irish crisis Hungary was significantly affected.) But the government now tries to pre-empt negative reaction and contributed to the growing expecatations regarding a fresh refrom package due in February, at aboput 600-660 billion HUF. The story offers an interesting experience of human behavior and psychology, its failings in a supposedly rational and competitive environment. Especially as it is not the first occasion we can observe an almost identical chain of action and reaction. The sequence is always built on communication according to the taste, expectations and desire of the so-called analysts (or in its impersonal form the markets), a sudden eruption of enthusiatsic love for the government, even more communication and more active emanations of this strengthening love and... Well, in the earlier cases the end was always disappointment but it is clearly not a hindrance of the renewed passionate realtionship. Anyway, and this is where I dare to take Cassandra's role and robes, I would be surprised to see a different outcome this time, as the facts and the stark inner contradictions of what the government suggests and the analysts accept as a new, profound reform agenda are pointing to the opposite what the markets are expecting and waiting for. But this revived love-story is telling in itself.

It began already in December, when - even before the budget was passed - the government announced they will prepare and introduce a reform package in Februay. Common sense would have warned everyone as the least normal course of events is to make a budget with huge efforts, bring it to the parliament, proceed with it with energy and determination only to abandon it after one and a half month. Is this the way governments work? - could have asked everyone. But, instead, it caused jubilation and was taken as a sign that the Fidesz was brought back to its senses and at last they admitted the necessity to come up with structural changes bringing budget spending under control in the mid- and long term. Soon the opening moves of this subtle chess play were made, firstly György Matolcsy and later Viktor Orbán himself - in an interview with Wall Street Journal - told that his government will ensure the state pension fund will not spend more than it recives in the form of social contributions (although the ministry made it clear already in November that it means transfering disability pensions to a separate fund financed from the budget), and announce cuts concerning subvention of medicines, the social services for unemployed and the public transportation system. They even mentioned the sum of 100-100 billion HUF in case of the former two and 50 billion in the case of the latter. As these are the pet targets of every analyst who are reluctant to admit that the structural problems in Hungary can not be solved by simply cutting budget spending in some sectors it was well received and generated a wide-spread belief in the coming of a substantial reform package in mid-February. Neither an easy reality check - asking whether it is possible to cut 100 billion from these funds, both not higher than 340 billion per year while unemployment is well over 10% - nor Fidesz politician's instistence on not doing harm to the population and tampering with their benefits could have deterred analysts from their firm conviction that soon something important will happen. Optimism prevailed even after the first reports on the process of the preparation surfaced, showing that the government is still in the phase of brainstoriming in early Februray. (At that moment the different ministries still collected their ideas independently from each other and they had to put them forward to Matolcsy and Orbán, who are entitled to the final choice.) Optimism was not shaken by the emergence of other details - later admitted by Matolcsy - , suggesting that the plan is not to cut 600 billion in 2011 - an earlier assumption of the markets - but making a cosmetic surgery in this year and delivering some more substantial budget correction in 2012 and 2013. (A few days later the plan turned out to be to begin savings in 2013!) Furthermore, as the process of the planning was in delay the announcement was postponed. Originally the promise was a package published in mid-February. In January it was modified, mid-February became the date when the government could discuss it in first readingand the date of the announcement was established at 28 Februray. In early February the new informations suggested even more delay.

Nevertheless, analysts were very excited at the beginning of this month and expected Viktor Orbán to share important elements of the package with the public in his so-called "state of the country" speech, due on 7 February. As Orbán held a very banal speech, composed of proverbs and self-styled popular sayings analysts, the markets did not show dispair or at least some surprise, they predicted that Orbán will make the whole package public on 14 February, in the parliament, and expetced the Fidesz caucus to discuss it between 9 and 11 February. The latter obviously did not happen, but expectations remained.

However, as there seem to exist no coherent package in the moment, the ideas during the long barainstorming more and more turned towards raising new revenues instead of planning the reforms eagerly awaited it would be astonishing to hear something really significant, different from Orbáns 29 points and the economic plan implemented in October - with the quasi-nationalization of the pension funds. Something certainly will be announced, probably pointing out some directions vaguely, packed in the banal terms of the renwal of the country and it is also probable that cutting unemplyment benefits will be one of the few explicit measures. But it will fall short of any kind of reform and will be very far from the expectations driving the markets to extasy in the last few weeks. There are at least three reasons to expect this outcome. Firstly, Fidesz is aiming at a renewal and reorganization of the nation in its own, nationalist terms. What they try to realize is not some cost-effective restructuring of sub-systems based on thorough consideration of existing models and good practices, but the only model that would express the substance and spirit of the Hungarian nation. It is quite different in the sense that the plans are based on a set of speculative assumptions, but they assume that no constraints of costs may impede its realization. (Exemplified by Orbán, who told the Fidesz caucus, that even if people are right that the governments plans for the public instruction system will cost more than at present, it is the responsibility of the economic minister to find the necessary resources, and not the secretary of state for education to adjust plans to budget constraints as the plans are pointing to the right direction.) Such approach also means that fields analysts consider important in the reforms could be of secondary importance for the government, leading to their neglectment, while other sub-systems - like education - won't be restructured according to the criteria analysts are expecting to direct the changes. Secondly, Fidesz clearly wants to avoid confronting any significant electoral group and as long as they can implement measures that at least seemingly do not affect the people - like the so-called crisis-taxes - they will opt for thes. It is hard to expect major changes in the funding of the public transportation system if it would mean rising costs for the population - for example elimination or curtailing of existing benefits for students, children under 6 or people over 65. The whole brainstorming approach and the continous delay of the announcment is exactly because of this reluctance. According to the information leaked, the apparatus was always very effective in bringing new ideas of new revenues and not quite successful in outlining cost-cutting measures. Thirdly, the present structure of the government and its personal composition with a lot of inexperienced and not quite bright party hacks occupying key positions in ministries consisting concurring departments without a minimum of internal coordination and with a minister responsible for economics ad budget who only trusts in a very limited number of people is an obstacle in the way of preparing a coherent plan, assessing every proposed measure in the context of the state as a public institution and an instrument to deliver public good the most effective way - apart from its assessment in the light of Fidesz's nationalist ideology.

I do not realy want to contemplate the question why analysts again swallowed the bait. Probably they invested too much emotional and intellectual capital in their belief of Fidesz's rationality and willingness to go down the way they expected and at the end they could not disengage. However, it is of some use, at least at a personal level. For a while I had to feel guilt as I was crying with the pack of analysts whom I had criticized earlier. Now it is a chance to detach myself and again point out their failings. Vanity and arrogance as it may be, but reassuring because it restores a part of my identity. :) It resolves this particular form of cognitive dissonance.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Mark Pittaway, 1971-2010. R.I.P.

Just a short note on an official website, but an enormous loss. Banalities rush to my mind, maybe one of them is decent enough to dedicate it to the memory of a friend.: the most tragic of losses when you must realize the one who passed was so much better than you.

Update: The Open University website has now a tribute page.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Hungary and sovereign default

It's almost official: the government's ingenious plan is to nationalize compulsory private pension savings and spend it on current budget expenses (pensions) and debt reduction. They hope it will enable them to survive without major restructuring and action until the tax cuts will bring 7% GDP growth. (Actually many expressed doubts, how realistic this expectation could be. Some calculate that 8-10% growth would only fill the holes of the budget from 2013.) Anyhow, the government expects 90% of the mambers of such private pension schemes will return to the state run, pay-as-you-go system, eventrually transferring their portfolio to the state. The delicacy of the issue: it is nothing else than default on a part of the debt and restructuring.

Private pensions savings, although compulsory, are private property. They hold about 2800 billion HUF savings in sovereign bonds (circa 1300 billion) and other assets, mainly stocks and investment funds. It means at around 5% of the GDP is in the hands of these private as government issued bonds. As soon as they transfer it to the government they will be rewarded with a promise of a state pension and their portfolio transformed into state property. Obviously the state will never be obliged to redeem them, it will reduce the debt. It is not a straightforward way of default and debt restructuring, but in its essence it is nothing else. Government liabilities at private debtors are declared void and exchanged to another type of government liablity. At the moment it is - nominally - voluntary. However, the pirme minsiter expressed his firm conviction that as much as 90% ot the members of private pensions schemes will choose the satte run system in two months time. As this number is highly unrealistic on a voluntary basis one could expect legislation making it compulsory, transforming the process in a confiscation. Especially in the light of Fidesz's willingness to reduce the jurisdiction and competenc eof the Constitutional Court, barring it from judging the constitutionality of economic legislation.
Hungary in fact defaulted today...

Thursday, October 14, 2010

White mice - Updated

After months of permanent "revolution" the prime minister, Viktor Orbán announced new measures this Wednesday aimed to bring the budget deficit under the ceiling aggreed with the EU, supposedly without austerity. It would be easy to mock him how he defines austerity (as next years budget is planned with a nominal cut in budget expenditures, obviously affecting a lot of people) but I presume it will be a popular activity in the coming weeks. It is more interesting whether this new action plan (complemeted with a modified tax system due to be announced next Monday, but a series of ideas already known) signals a dicision at last concerning the economic policy. Especially as the 29 point from June were the sign of indecision. (See my post here.)

It would be easy to dismiss yesterday's plans as the postponement of this state of agony, as it is not easy to see any coherent direction of action in the rather patchy series of new - intentionally only temporary - levies. However, considering the nature and content of the earlier internal conflict and the resulting political dilemma for Orbán, this time one should assume the decision has been made and what one can see is the backbone of the new economic strategy of Hungary's government. For years economists around and inside Fidesz fought a pitched battle whether the state has to be reduced with drastic cuts in order to make room for tax cuts in a corresponding extent or taxes should be reduced without any offsetting measures. Funnily and ironically proponents of both directions pointed out the same examples, most notably Slovakia, but in the last few years Romania and Bulgaria as well. The representatives of the former line - many of whom participated in the activity of the Reform Alliance in 2008 and 2009 - argued that the size of the state was and is too large and its extent of income redistribution - especailly with its ratio of social expenditures - is crowding out private investment and depresses initiatives. A much smaller state would enable the private sector to invest more leading to higher production and with time higher income. However, according to this line of thought, the balanced budget is a precondition of higher grwoth, because the budget deficit is just as harmful as the high redistribution ratio. If the state runs deficit it needs financing and the sivereign bonds issued attract the capital easier than investment. Those holding an opposite view in Fidesz do not deny the necessity of a smaller state. Nevertheless, their recipe is quite different, as their diagonisis focuses on the reasons of the weakness of economic growth eslwhere, finding it in the lack of sufficient internal demand. Therefore they propose a kind of shock, government measures in order to raise personal income levels creating the preconditions of rapid growth.* They presume this boost of internal demand would lead to such a growth rate that would allow a larger state expenditure in nominal and real terms and simultaneously reduce the redistribution rate as a ratio of GDP.

It is clear the latter "soultion" needs either a very benevolent attitude form those financing the diefict or a permission of the EU, the guradian of the Stability and Growth Pact, because it is usually seen as a way leading to immediate worsening of the situation of the budget. Even if faster growth would bring higher revenues with time as the proponents of this solution claim (far from being certain, but a very popular argument) someone has to finance this transitional period. The idea of a higher deficit for this year, so ferociously defended (portrayed as inevitable) during the run up to the election and afterwards served exactly this purpose. After the EU Commission reppoached Orbán and made it clear they wouldn't accept any deviation from the plans outlined by the outgoing government the circle looking for this way needed to find another soultion. For a while it seemed the former group prevailed and next years' budget will be constructed very cautiously, but meanwhile there were signs of attepmts signaling the almost desperate will for implementing the second version of economic policy. Despite these signs "analysts" and "economists" were deluded by the readily repeated promises of government officials that Hungary will stick to the deficit target both this and next year. They convinced themselves it logically means bugdet cuts, asuterity, reforms.**

Yesterday it turned out we won't see the first alternative being realized, instead Orbán Viktor opted for raising internal demand without lasting measures to offset losses. It doesn't mean the budget won't be extremely tight, but every inch of room for maneuvre will serve the purpose of a huge tax cut. (The one I sketchily characterized in my previous post.) However, the whole action has a transitory nature as the government expects a new wave of additional revenues from higher growth. New windfall taxes on telecommunication companies, on the energy sector and on retail cahins will be imposed (already due this year!) and contributions to private pesnions schemes (obligatory for at about 3 million people in Hungary) will be withhold in the budget. Whether it is the first step towards complete nationalization (a very contorversial issue under EU law) or just a necessary step to cover losses temporarily (the minister hinted to an eventual compensation, although without specifying its nature) is not clear. Anyway,for many observers it seems the government bought itself enough time to bring about its tax cut without destroying the budget and placing the country at the mercy of external financers. Doubts are only raised regarding durability of the reduction of the budget deficit when these measures expire without significant reforms.

If the informations regarding the harsh cuts in the budget (affecting sectors like health care, already drained by years of austerity) turn out to be correct one should conclude the situation is more serious than one would have thought earlier. In this case it will be clear the country is the scene of a mass experiment of supply side economics and the government is playing a gamble. Not that some of the problems they conceive would not be real. Further austerity - albeit propsed by the EU and requested and expected by the markets - could easily push Hungary to the Greek, Irish or Portuguese road. Austerity depresses growth and fails to reduce debt to GDP ratio lastingly making a new wave of cuts necessary and further depressing growth. The vicious circle is not easy to escape (I tend to think it is impossible without coordinated efforts of the EU) and the governments plans to brake it can be seen as legitimate. Although some of the doubts echoed are equally legitimate, the real problem with the proposed solution lies elsewhere. The government relies on the assumption that the only hindrance for growth in the country is the depressed internal demand and a sufficiently strong boost will give the necessary impulse to the economy, bringing new orders to local SMEs etc. In order to achieve this they will introduce a Slovak-type tax system (they even copied the abolishment of the inheritance tax) accompanied by Slovak-type social assistance system, but contrary to the Slovak model they won't prefer market-oriented reforms of systems like the health care, child benefits or pensions. A very strange version of neoliberalism (provincial and protectionist) but still supply sider neoliberalism.

This is exactly the Achiles heel of the whole plan, it focuses on one single factor and assumes a large enough change will generate substantial changes in the whole economy and society. Ironically, it would need a completely and perfectly funcitiong economy, something doesn't exist in the country to the extent the plan would presume (and the existence of which would make the whole idea obsolete). But beyond rather insignificant general observations the whole plan suffers from many important deficiencies. Firstly, there is no sign of the rowth generating effect of stronger internal demand among the present circumstances. Real wages and incomes have grwon in Hungary in this year due to not insignificant tax cuts for middle income categories. On some income levels it was almost 10% raise of net income and on an aggregate level in the first half of the year real income was 5% higher than a year earlier. (This is now fading due to base effects.) Nevertheless, retal sale were continously decreasing, an omnious sign for every attempt to use internal demand as a means of stimulus.***

An even more important factor giving way to doubts is the very uneven distribution of benefits from the proposed tax cuts either in terms of social status or georgraphy. According to preliminary calculations based on the leaked informations on the new tax system a very sognificant part of the working populatioin will not be better off or only with an insignificant ammount, probably meaning a loss of real income. It won't be offset by the child allowance fr these social groups. Moreover, even families with low income but three or more children will not benefit from the generous child allowance. The only group that will certainly enjoy a significant advance in financial terms will be the one of families with high income and three or more children, while the more people earn at the present the more positive the effects of the tax cut will be. Although it is hard to assess the distribution of the tax cuts precisely, it is safe to assume it will make better the position of those with a lower marginal propensity to consume except families with children. Moreover, while the tax cuts can serve as a stimulus via internal demand, the cuts of budget expenditure will have a negative effect on public invesment and public consumption, a factor of GDP dragging down growth already for years. Once again, I have no clue to the ratio of these conflicting effects, but it is hard to accept the planned 500-600 billion HUf tax cuts will raise grwoth with the envisaged 2%.

Of course one can say at least the demographic effect will be positive and I wouldn't be surprised to learn of a temporary positive change in the birth rate in next year. Given the number of live births just under 100000 per year 10000 additional newborn would be a very significant development. However, as I mentioned the child allowance will only mean a significant help for thosew with extremely high income (by Hungarian standards) and with three or more children. People with high income could opt for a third child, but it still won't change the picture fundamentally. Meanwhile the sate will renounce on the social infrastructure of child upbringing (kindergartens, play-scholls etc.) as it won't have the necessary funds to rebuild the instiutions lost in the last two decades. The well-to-do large families will be able to afford private kindergarten (the monthly fee of which is equal to the ammount of the entire child allowance planned!) and will be able to finance one of the parents remaining at home, while those with less children and/or lower income will still struggle to reconcile work (substantial to secure an accepatble family income) and child care. The whole complex is aggravated by the fact that in the backward regions of the country where unemployment - longterm, structural - is concentrated and where the above mentioned larger family type with low income (somteimes living on social assitance) is widespread people's burden won't really be lifted by this new tay system. The result: higher inequalities in the country, less opportunity for people in these reagions and less social mobility. The latter is especially important as under the planned tay system lasting positive developments in demography would need very strong social mobility, because the real positive effect on birth steps in at higher income levels. As long as one can not break away from poverty or the trap of mediocre income one could not really enjoy generous child allowance. (The difference is huge. The child allowance is worth 10000 HUF for the first two children each, and 33000 for each children after the third one is born!)

(Some additional thoughts.) The last - but not the slightest of problems - of the new line of action is that ironically it makes Hungary even more dependent on external factors than earlier. While the government claims to have realized economic independence with getting rid of the IMF, its plan is based on the positive development of a series of external factors. Even if one assumes a turnaround in the reatil sales (a signal of grwoing internal demand) public consumption and investment will affect GDP negatively. Therefore, Hungary will need significant export growth to make its very ambitious plans a reality and collect the revenues envisioned. However, the tax cuts has almost no effect on competitiveness and there are some ominous signs. In the first half of this year the extraordinary growth in germany did not generate enough export oriented economic activity to have offset the decrease elsewhere. If the world ecopnomy will slow down Hungary can find itself trapped again. Beyond this worrying possibility one should take into account the ongoing sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone. If in March, when Ireland will return to the financial markets its yields will still be too high to lend credibility to its claim of beginning to reduce debt as a ratio of GDP the whole edifice can collapse, bringing down Hungary as well. Meanwhile the world economy is inchoing towrads "currency war", a series of competitive devaluation, a dangerous development to the export capabilities of the EU.

As it seems although Hungary freed itself from the the IMF (but not from rules of the EU, that are much less flexible) it did not gain a larger influence on these exterenal factors. While countries had a chance to really negotiate measures with the IMF, and that way implement an economic policy - at least partially - of their own making and enjoying the safety of having the support of this institution, now the Hungarian government acts in the hope that every single external factor it can not influence will at the end contribute positively to its economic plicy. In this sense Hungary is less and not more independent at the moment, its future hinges exclusively on the positive developments in the world.

I do not want to presage an inevitable failure of this new policy, although I have not much confidence in it. But even if I try to make this generous gesture of fair play I could not escape feeling myself as a white mouse looking out of a cage juts before entering a labyrinth in a new laboratory experiment.

* Please note, the owner of this blog doesn't concur with any of these opinions, considering them very simplistic if applied to Hungary's present state of affairs and in general as well.

** One should pay respect to the few exceptions, most notably among the Peter Attard Montaldo at Nomura, who echoed suspicion from the beginning.

*** There could be many reasons for this surprising development. One of them is certainly the process of deleveraging, especially as the fx-based loans were hit by the rapid deterioration of the exchange rate of the HUF against CHF and EUR. People probably pay higher mortgage rates from their higher income, something that could easily last for years.

Friday, June 11, 2010

The Great Economic Experiment

For a while I was convinced that Fidesz's action plan is just the result of confusion and lack of time, that's the reason behind its incoherence. However, probably it is a more refined action to achieve the elbow room they wanted. As one of their basic slogans in the campaign was the end of "traditional economics" they decided to prove how problematic its basic assumptions are. This is an experiment, an empirical test of the Ricardian equvivalence, or at least one of its underlying basic assumptions, that rational actors always presuppose later developments and act accordingly. (In its basic form if the government finances today's debt with borrowing taxpayers will expect tax hikes later and therefore they begin to save instead of spending. However, in a generalized form it suggests that rational actors act not only according immediate advantages and benefits but they consider costs occurring on a longer time-horizon.)

What did the Hungarian government in the last few days? They announced an incoherent package of measures with the aim to keep deficit at 3,8% of GDP and simultaneously boost growth through competitiveness. One that probably won't help to keep deficit under control with measures (see my previous post) and contains measures controversial in itself, like the introduction of flat-tax with countermeasures defending lower income categories from losing form their net income due to higher effective tax rates. One very definite countermeasure was the announcement of higher minimal wages. (According to rough calculations the necessary raise would be around 23% plus at about 4% in higher social contributions after the new gross wage.)

What happened after the government made this plan public? The package as a whole was praised by analysts in Hungary while received with more doubt outside the country. (It is worth to note that one cannot easily imagine more rational actors in economics than financial analysts.) The former category can expect a significant material advantage from the new tax system as they certainly belong to higher income categories, the latter are not affected as they are paid under a different tax regime. Up to this moment no financial analyst exposed the controversial nature of the tax "reform", especially regarding its effects on competitiveness. Neither was doubt raised regarding financiability of the tax cuts, even though the offsetting measures are vague and in their present form unrealistic. Nothing was heard from the associations of entrepreneurs, whose companies will be subjected to these changes. (And entrepreneurs should be rational actors, by virtue of being entrepreneurs.)

However, what we are looking at is contradicting to Ricardian equivalence and its basic underlying assumptions. Although it is probable that competitiveness will be suppressed by the higher wages leading to a result contrary to the will of everyone (and certainly affecting companies' profits), the hole in the budget will be filled with tax hikes affecting income later, people for whom the new tax system will bring immediate benefits support it, despite the prospect of negative measures later. They are not acting according to the Ricardian equivalence.

I think the whole action plan is an empirical test of economics. If the government can expose analysts and entrepreneurs neglecting the basics of rational expectations they can claim that the "traditional" economics really failed and ask for their well deserved higher deficit target. Why bother with the reaction of "rational markets" when they are proven to be irrational?

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

An action plan of indecision? Updated

Hungary's new prime minister, Viktor Orbán announced yesterday his "action plan" a set of measures seen as the guidelines of the government's economic policy. The announcement followed days of insecurity caused by remarks of Fidesz and government officials on the budget deficit this year, frequently using phrases "like Greece", "default" etc. This debacle (retrospectively Fidesz politicians - speaking only from behind the defense line of anonimity - hinted to a conscious strategy, but the party has a tendency to reinterpret every failure afterwards into a plan of a mastermind, therefore it is less and less credible with time) signaled the abandonment of earlier ideas and the realignment of the possible policies.

Anyway, the prime minister delivered a very conscious speech conveying the will and energy to achieve his goals and announcing 29 measures. It had an immediate effect, it was certainly a good show of an illusionist, especially among Hungarian analysts, whose obsession with flat-tax is almost a medical case. Many of them hurried to hail the greatest structural change of the last two decades etc. And the impression in general was certainly favorable, on the surface the new policy seemed to be really well thought. Nevertheless, if scrutinized with a more critical eye - without allowing oneself to be deluded by the flat-tax - it is a surprisingly empty and astonishingly not elaborated package.

The starting point was that the government has to achieve a budget deficit as high as 3,8% of GDP this year, because the IMF and the EU (espacially the latter) would not let them to raise th target to 5-7%. However, Fidesz promised a "tax revolution" in the campaign (although it was clear that they couldn't decide whether to opt for flat-tax or a family-tax system, copying the French model) and tax cuts for enterprises. After they lost a lot of room for manoeuvre when they had to accept the lower deficit figures they still stuck to this idea and decided to find other sources of revenues to offset the income losses. The solution was imaginative but not quite convincing: the banks will pay a half of their profit to the budget in order to allow them to relax the tax burden on individuals and on other companies. Besides the 16% falt tax combined with the family tax the prime minister announced the reduction of the wage costs in the public sector, reduction of tax on companies' profit (at least for those who has a profit less than 500 million HUF) from 19% to 10%, complete freedom of distilling spirits for individuals (really!) a freeze of public services fees for the population, a ban on mortgage based fx-loans and some symbolic measures, for example reducing costs in the state sector and subventions to political parties.

However coherent it seems (and the underlying idea, even if its is horrific, is really coherent) it do not need a Nobel-prize winner to discover how scratchy it is nd how much it lacks the essence of political action: decision on some core issues and acceptance of confrontation. First of all it is still not a decision to fuse two tax systems based on very different principles, it is the opposite: an escape from decision. Considering this state of affairs it is not quite surprising that today none ion the government was capable to give information on details. There will be something with a 16% flat tax rate and with tax breaks and credits for families raising children, but to wich amount the latter will extend, what will happen with the so-called "szuperbruttó" in the present system ("super-gross calculation" an effective extension of the tax base, it taxes the ammount of the social contribution as if they would be part of the income itself) and the tax rebate. Even more serious issue is the problem of "lower wages". The present system - due to a very extended tax rebate - lays only 16% tax on a monthly income of 230000 Huf well over average and median wage in Hungary. The elimination of this part of the system was announced - in two years - which at first sight will effectively mean a tax hike for everyone with 230000 Huf or lower income. There were hints that the government will ensure that no one pay more, but there seem to be no other solution than to raise wages, but an effective 20% wage raise will not deliver one if the most sacred result of as flat tax system (at least in the eyes of its adherents): lower labour costs. (On the idea that it will create incentives to present previously untaxed incomes for the tax authority you can see my earlier post. The very theory used to support the flat tax contradicts to this idea. There is no evidence, ECE countries with flat tax are more infected with black and grey economic activity than Hungary, according to every estimate.)

Similarly vague is the idea of the reduction of costs of public services. It is even not clear whether this applies to the entire public sector, only to certain parts of it or to the state owned companies? While the prime minister mentioned 120 billion Huf as saving for this year and referred to it as 15% reduction of these costs, the only concrete measure was a 48 billion reduction at state owned companies. (But it is tricky as it is the 15% of the wage bill for the entire year while the cuts will come in the second half. The result: 25-30% for six months!) Whether public instiutions, ministries, authorities or schools, the health care sector etc. will bore the remaining 72 billion or just a part of it it is still not clear.

The freeze on public services prices was declared to be temporary, until the government negotiates something with the respective companies. However, price control will soon be reestablished. The bank tax announced without preliminary consultations. Even the method of "liberating" spirit distillation is not clear., it is at the moment not more then a wish list without calculations. And it is based on a very tight calculation, without any reserves and always counting on the most optimistic scenario. If the bank tax falls of or fails to deliver the necessary amount, if growth will remain sluggish the deficit will soar up and austerity will settle to other sectors. Moreover, even the real extent of tax cuts is not clear, because no one knows the amount of family tax breaks and rebate and the future of the present tax rebates. Therefore no realistic calculation of the effect of the package on the budget is possible. (And no structural reforms - some percentage points relaxation in an already almost flat-tax system is far from being one, across the board cuts in the public sector can also be seen hardly as such,Gyurcsány would have been ridiculed by the same "analysts" with a similar action plan who are now praising Orbán.) We have seen the sorcerer, the white rabbit was fat and juicy but it evaporated in a day....

However, the direction is clear: redistribution of wealth from the lower strata to the rich (the very rich) and from the poorest regions to the richest quarters of Budapest. It's negative effect on local economies is predictable as purchasing power will dissipate (while the positive effects of creating jobs is doubtful at best, the recovery could easily turn out to be fragile with the austerity programs of EU governments, the most far-sighted ideas of the Fidesz program were postponed - investment into energy efficiency, for example - or even thrown off etc.) and already huge differences in the country will grow. Well, the show was excellent, but the road is still covered by thick fog.

Update: So, we have a plan with the aim to keep under control the budget deficit and boost competitiveness through lower labour costs. But the secretary of state in the ministry of national economy responsible for tax issues announced today that the "szuperbruttó" will be eliminated and no one will be worse off in the new system (i.e. no one will have lower net income) than in the old one. No details, of course.

But even in this very basic and vague form the plan seems to be way off the announced aims. If the government will pressure companies to raise wages it will negatively affect labour costs without an equivalent raise in productivity. At the moment the average wage of 56500 physical workers in the agriculture is 109746 HUF. They would need a 12,2% higher wage in order to have the same level of net wage. But it would mean an additional 3,5% in higher social contributions as well. Similarly, the (non-existent) average industrial worker (441900 people) will need a 7% rise in wages what would mean an additional 2% in social contributions. The 195900 workers in the commercial sector will need a 10,7% higher salary, an additional 2,9% burden in social contribution. Moreover, the state employs hundreds of thousands of public sector workers and teachers, nurses etc. who also will have to enjoy the benefit of higher salaries in order to offset negative effects - if the secretary of state mentioned above told the truth. 3,5% raise for average employees in the health care sector (148300 people), 13% for physical workers in the same sector (90200 people), 10% for physical workers in the educational sector etc. Certainly more than 30 billion HUF just in order to compensate them real wages still declining. It is still not a well thought plan, just improvisation.