http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-0 ... ate1-.htmlc'est pas terrible tout ça :
La Hongrie est dans une grave situation à cause du gouvernement précédent qui a manipulé les chiffres et a menti (ça me rappelle qq chose..), dixit le porte parole du 1er ministre Hongrois, il rajoute qu'il n'est pas exagéré d'évoquer la banqueroute.
La Hongrie a contracté une aide du FMI de 20 milliards de us$ en 2008 ce qui lui a évité la banqueroute.
Le président du parti au pouvoir a dit que les chances d'éviter une situation comparable à la Grèce étaient très faibles.
Un plan d'action devrait être mis en place d'ici les trois prochains jours.
Hubert.
Citer:
By Edith Balazs
June 4 (Bloomberg) -- Hungary’s is in a “grave situation” because the previous government “manipulated” figures and “lied” about the state of the economy, said Peter Szijjarto, spokesman for Prime Minister Viktor Orban. The forint fell for a second day, dropping as much as 2.1 percent against the euro.
A fact-finding panel will probably present preliminary figures on the state of the economy this weekend, Szijjarto said today at a news conference in Budapest. The government will publish an action plan within 72 hours after the committee reports its findings, he said.
“It’s clear that the economy is in a very grave situation,” Szijjarto said. “We need a clean slate to formulate our economic action plan, and the fact-finding committee will provide just that.”
Hungary needed a 20 billion-euro ($24 billion) international bailout to avert a default in 2008. Orban, who took over May 29 after winning elections by pledging to cut taxes and stimulate the economy, yesterday failed to get European Union approval for looser fiscal policy.
“Investors are losing their patience,” Gyorgy Barta, a Budapest-based economist at Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, said in a phone interview. “This is part of a communications strategy that wants to tell voters one thing and the markets another. It’s getting too complicated, and the government now needs to come clean and present a convincing plan of fiscal consolidation.”
The forint fell 1.8 percent to 287.28 per euro as of 1:45 p.m. in Budapest. The currency dropped 2.5 percent yesterday after Lajos Kosa, a deputy chairman of Orban’s Fidesz party, said Hungary had a “very slim” chance to avoid a Greece-like situation.
“It’s no exaggeration” to talk about a default, Szijjarto said today.
Szijjarto said Hungary will seek to improve the fiscal balance and boost the economy’s competitiveness at the same time. The government won’t give up plans to lower taxes, even if the budget deficit is about 7 percent of gross domestic product, as State Secretary Mihaly Varga indicated earlier.
“The directions are clear: tax cuts, simplifying the tax system, supporting economic growth and boosting competitiveness,” Szijjarto said.