Hungary’s slide into autocracy to continue after Orbán's victory

Portfolio
Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party winning supermajority again in Hungary’s election forebodes further erosion of independent institutions, warned Phoenix Kalen, a London-based analyst at Societe Generale in a research note on Monday, but she also noted that the course has already been determined at the onset of this decade. She expects markets to be left unfazed by the election results.

Supermajority secured if only by a single mandate

Hungary held parliamentary elections on Sunday, where the ruling party Fidesz, along with its junior ally, the Christian Democrats (KDNP), managed a resounding victory.

Preliminary election results suggest that the ruling party has successfully regained its constitutional supermajority, which was lost during the last term following the result of a by-election. With about 99% of votes counted, Fidesz-KDNP secured 133 out of 199 seats in Parliament, just reaching the two-thirds threshold required for implementing changes to Hungary’s Constitution.

National right-wing Jobbik was the 2nd most popular party, with 26 projected seats in Parliament. Socialist MSZP-Párbeszéd coalition only managed to secure 20 projected seats, while Democratic Coalition DK is likely to have won 9 seats and green-liberal party LMP is likely to take 8 seats.

Limited market reaction, further erosion of independent institutions foreseen

Kalen expects limited near-term market impact from Fidesz’s parliamentary gains. She said markets essentially ignored Fidesz’s loss of its super-majority on 22 February, 2015, with the currency stable and rates market nonchalantly continuing its descent lower in the aftermath.

Kalen also believes pressure on the forint may be modest. Following yesterday’s electoral outcome, she anticipates stable rates markets, “while HUF may weaken marginally on market expectation of the National Bank of Hungary’s unfettered continuation of its unconventional, ultra-loose monetary policies."

Vast majority of Constitutional changes likely already implemented

“Heading into this spring’s Parliamentary elections, although most market participants likely anticipated that Fidesz would fall just shy of the supermajority (based on indications from various polls in the lead-up to elections), that Fidesz managed to regain two-thirds of Parliamentary seats does not materially alter the course of economic and fiscal policy-making in Hungary," Kalen said.

She noted that during prior terms, using its constitutional majority,

Fidesz had already implemented the desired overhauls to the judiciary, the media, the electoral system, and placed curbs on civil society. Further erosion of independent institutions will likely continue during this term, but the course has already been determined at the onset of this decade.

Hungary’s relationship with the EU will likely be strained further

Kalen believes that “Hungary’s Parliamentary election results will likely provide robust validation for the nationalist, populist, and xenophobic ideology espoused by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán."

Additionally, populist politicians across the world may adopt the aggressive electoral tactics that Orbán successfully employed (e.g. strong anti-immigrant messaging, demonizing the EU and Western countries, media distortion).

“The results may include continuing strains in Hungary’s relationship with the EU, which has thus far been powerless to stem Hungary’s slide into autocracy," Kalen warned.

 

More in Economy

bank épület fiókbezárás
November 22, 2024 12:20

This is how the new extra profit tax regulation will impact the banking sector

The tax base, the rate and the option of halving have also been updated by the legislative change

gyár munkás gyári munkás factory worker
November 22, 2024 11:41

Amounts of the 2025 minimum wage and the guaranteed wage minimum wage set

The parties have finalised their agreement

Benzin
November 22, 2024 11:28

Both petrol and diesel prices rise in Hungary over the weekend

Latest gross wholesale purchase prices are in

dolgozó worker gyár gyári munkás ipar kereset fizetés
November 22, 2024 10:59

Hungarian wage boom already slowing down, and will end rather soon

KSH releases earnings data for September

GettyImages-1203510164-emisszió-energiaipar-gyár-infrastruktúra-ipar-környezet-környezetszennyezés-légszennyezés-termelés-üzem
November 22, 2024 09:52

No end in sight for the free fall in investments

However, the recent miserable Q3 preliminary data is no surprise

orbán viktor kossuth rádió interjú miniszterelnök kormányfő
November 22, 2024 08:52

Viktor Orbán invites Benjamin Netanyahu to Hungary despite the ICC's arrest warrant

The PM also said that the plan is to raise Hungary's economic growth "well above the EU average"

LATEST NEWS

Detailed search