Eurofound's EU PolicyWatch collates information on the responses of government and social partners to the COVID-19 crisis, the war in Ukraine, rising inflation, as well as gathering examples of company practices aimed at mitigating the social and economic impacts.
Factsheet for measure HU-2021-47/2417 – Updated – measures in Hungary
Country | Hungary , applies nationwide |
Time period | Temporary, 15 November 2021 – 06 December 2022 |
Context | COVID-19, War in Ukraine |
Type | Legislations or other statutory regulations |
Category |
N/A
– Support for fuel expenses |
Author | Nóra Krokovay (KOPINT-Tárki) and Eurofound |
Measure added | 24 May 2022 (updated 11 July 2023) |
Inflation in Hungary reached 7.4% in both November and December 2021 and continued to rise, reaching 8.5% in March 2022. The country’s central bank predicted that inflation could exceed 9% by the end of the year due to the continued war in Ukraine. In order to react to increasing inflation, among other measures, the government issued decree 624/2021 concerning fuel prices. The measure was put in place to offset soaring inflation.
On 15 November 2021 the government capped fuel prices at their level on 15 October 2021. For 95-octane fuel and diesel the price cap was set at HUF 480 per litre (about €1.23). Hungary’s government implemented the price caps in response to surging inflation and record weakness of the forint against the euro. They expect that the price cap would help the economy and help curb inflation. As the price cap puts strains on fuel merchants, the government also capped wholesale prices at the same level and reduced excise tax on fuel by HUF 5 per litre. The price caps were extended several times.
The following updates to this measure have been made after it came into effect.
06 December 2022 |
After several extensions, the fuel price cap ended on 6 December 2022. |
30 July 2022 |
Under government decree 94/2022, the government decided to change the target group for the fuel price cap, excluding the following groups:
|
18 February 2022 |
The government extended the price cap on fuel for another three months,until May 2022. In a related measure, in February 2022 it capped the wholesale price of fuel at HUF 480 as well, in order to reduce the risk of petrol stations going out of business due to making losses on their sales. |
In the March 2022 inflation report, the central bank said the fuel price cap reduced the rate of inflation by 2.5 percentage points. Retail turnover rose by 7.3% month-on-month in March 2022 and by 16.2% year-on-year, according to statistical office data. Food sales rose by 0.2% while fuel sales rose by 50%.
According to retail data published by the Hungarian Central Statistical Office KSH, fuel sales continued to rise year-on-year, by 32% in the second quarter of 2022 and by 21% in the third quarter 2022.
A report by the central bank in December 2022 said that price caps were not successful in curbing inflation, instead they were stoking it, as can be seen by food prices rising higher in Hungary than anywhere else in Europe.
Workers | Businesses | Citizens |
---|---|---|
Does not apply to workers | Does not apply to businesses | Applies to all citizens |
Actors | Funding |
---|---|
National government
Company / Companies |
National funds
|
Social partners' role in designing the measure and form of involvement:
Trade unions | Employers' organisations | |
---|---|---|
Role | No involvement | No involvement |
Form | Not applicable | Not applicable |
Social partners' role in the implementation, monitoring and assessment phase:
In response to rising fuel prices, trade unions jointly proposed the government should raise the fuel travel compensation employers can give tax-free to employees from its 2022 level of HUF 15 per kilometre to HUF 50 (about €0.13) per kilometre. The trade unions’ proposal was partly successful, as the travel compensation was raised to HUF 30 per kilometre as of 1 January 2023, likely in part to compensate for the fuel price cap's removal.
LIGA trade union said the price cap was an important measure to counter inflation, which is espeacially beneficial for low-income groups. They warned, however, that the rising cost of fuel increases the cost of going to work and in the long term it will impact the labour market.
In August 2022 the Hungarian Mineral Oil Association (MÁSZ) warned that as many as half of its 1,000 member petrol stations may be closing as they will no longer be able to supply fuel at the capped price.
This case is sector-specific
Economic area | Sector (NACE level 2) |
---|---|
G - Wholesale And Retail Trade; Repair Of Motor Vehicles And Motorcycles | G47 Retail trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles |
This case is not occupation-specific.
Citation
Eurofound (2022), Price cap on fuel, measure HU-2021-47/2417 (measures in Hungary), EU PolicyWatch, Dublin, https://static.eurofound.europa.eu/covid19db/cases/HU-2021-47_2417.html
Share
30 January 2023
Governments across the EU continue to implement policies to support citizens and businesses in the face of rising food and energy prices caused by the COVID-19 crisis and intensified by the war in Ukraine. This article summarises the policy responses as reported in Eurofound's EU PolicyWatch database from January to September 2022.
Article12 September 2022
Although the worldwide pandemic situation had already disrupted supply chains and triggered increases in energy and food prices in 2021, the situation deteriorated in 2022 with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Article12 September 2022
This article summarises the first policy responses that governments across the EU have started to implement to support companies affected by the rising prices, and those with commercial ties to Ukraine, Russia or Belarus.
Article5 July 2022
This article summarises the first policy responses of EU Member States, including those of the social partners and other civil society actors, enabling refugees to exercise their rights under the Temporary Protection Directive.
ArticleDisclaimer: This information has not been subject to the full Eurofound evaluation, editorial and publication process.