Hungary's Defiance of IMF and European Authorities Scares the
Guardians of Austerity in Europe
By Mark Weisbrot
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This column was published by The Guardian Unlimited on August 9, 2010.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/aug/09/viktor-orban-hungary-imf
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The government of Hungary has taken on a lot of powerful interests in
the last couple of months, and so far appears to be winning - despite
provoking outrage from "everybody who's anybody."

"The IMF should hold the line," shouted the Financial Times in an
editorial the day after Hungary sent the IMF packing in July. "With so
many countries in vulnerable positions, it cannot be seen to be a soft
touch. Showing a few yellow and red cards is a good way to send a
signal to other governments that might be tempted to flirt with
indiscipline."

This is the great fear among the defenders of European "pro-cyclical"
policies - that is, policies that weaken the economy during a
recession or when it is barely growing. Hungary's defiance could
conceivably spread to other governments currently being squeezed by
the IMF and European authorities.

First the Hungarian government decided in early July to levy a new tax
on banks and other financial companies that would raise some $855
million dollars this year and next. Foreign banks, who made a fortune
during Hungary's bubbly growth years prior to the crash in 2007,
screamed and lobbied, but - despite having the IMF in their corner-
did not prevail.

Then the government refused to give in to IMF demands for further
budget deficit reduction. Hungary has already been through nearly four
years of austerity in which the deficit was reduced from 9 percent to
3.8 percent of GDP. More importantly, the country's current account
deficit - its imbalance with the rest of the world -- which was more
than 7 of GDP in 2008, is less than one percent for this year. With
unemployment having risen from 7 percent in 2007 to nearly 12 percent
today, and the economy still barely growing, Hungarians were
understandably beginning to wonder when they would see light at the
end of this long tunnel. Negotiations with the IMF over conditions for
further access to IMF funds broke down on July 17th.

Now the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban, whose party won a
landslide with more than two-thirds of the Hungarian parliament in
April, has taken aim at the country's central bank, blaming it for
keeping interest rates too high and thereby delaying the recovery. The
government cut the salary of Andras Simor, the governor of the central
bank, by 75 percent. (If only we could have done that to Ben Bernanke
or Alan Greenspan, just to make an example out of them for missing the
two biggest asset bubbles in world history and thus guaranteeing our
worst recession since the Great Depression.)

The central bank is holding policy interest rates at 5.25 percent, one
of the highest in Europe (compare this to our own Federal Reserve's
policy rate of zero to 0.25 percent, since the end of 2008).

All of these decisions by the Orban government have some economic
logic to them. The bank tax amounts to about one-half percent of GDP,
which is significant for a government that is trying to reduce the
deficit; and the banks - whose reckless lending practices, as in the
United States and elsewhere, had a lot to do with causing the mess
that Hungary faces - are already profitable while the economy is still
stagnating. This is a good place to collect taxes. The pro-cyclical
policies demanded by the IMF (budget cuts and tax increases) have kept
the economy from recovering; at some point someone has to say "enough
is enough."

And the same is true for the central bank's high interest rates: they
have been much too high through most of the downturn, between 8 and
11.5 percent in 2008 while the economy was in decline. Last year
Hungary's GDP fell by 6.3 percent, while policy rates were still
between 6.25 and 9.5 percent. A crash of this magnitude, with the
economy barely growing this year, indicates policy failure.

But the government's actions have elicited harsh rebuke from on high.
The standard orthodoxy is that central banks must be "independent" of
the government - which often means that they look out for the
interests of bankers rather than the general public. Credit rating
agencies such as Moody's and Standard & Poor's - the folks who brought
us triple-A rated toxic junk in the form of mortgage backed securities
a couple of years ago - have put Hungary on review for possible
downgrade due to its failure to reach agreement with the IMF.

As the New York Times reported on Tuesday, the fight in Hungary
"reflects a larger struggle that is expected to play out over the next
year or so as most European politicians . . . seek to impose fiscal
discipline on their increasingly unruly citizens."

We can only hope that they get more unruly. The governments of Spain
and Greece, for example, have a lot more bargaining power and a lot
more alternatives than they have been willing to use. It is ironic
that a center-right government in Hungary has taken the lead here; but
if the socialist governments of Spain and Greece were to stand up to
the European authorities and the IMF, they could also rally popular
support. And then we would see a new playing field in Europe that
would allow for a more rapid recovery, and possibly end the current
assault on the living standards of the majority.
-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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