EU Affairs Minister Bóka said that a competitive European Union is impossible to bring about without competitive member states.
Minister Bóka appeared at an international press seminar on Tuesday, where he talked about the main goals of Hungary's EU Council presidency and EU policy-making.
The minister told the seminar that Hungary had a "complex" relationship with European institutions, as the government thought that the EU "could do more for its citizens". "European citizens want change in many areas. That demand for change has been incorporated into the Hungarian presidency's programme," he said.
Bóka said the EU's competitiveness was weakening, its productivity ailing, putting it on the back foot in international markets; it must remedy structural problems, he added.
Competitive member states are key to a competitive Europe, Bóka said. The Hungarian presidency's primary goal was to bring about a new competitiveness pact, an agreement between European institutions, member states, economic players and citizens on wide-ranging reforms aiming to boost competitiveness, he said.
That pact would work only if the united market was expanded and sectors determined where it was not effective, he said.
Infrastructure development "on the north-south axis of the EU" was also key, Bóka said, noting that in the past five years, the EU has not funded investments into the transport of fossil fuels.
Meanwhile, European defence and security capabilities had also become a primary concern due to the war in a neighbouring country, Bóka said.
He said that Hungary aimed to boost defence and security policy based on improvements of the European defence industry.
Bóka said debates on whether support for Ukraine should be a primary goal of the EU or an isolated strategic goal were often "conducted to mask another discourse" on the choice between supporting Europe's defence industry of that of the US. The latter would mean European monies would flow into the US defense industry to satisfy Ukraine security needs, he said.
The event organised by the Singapore-based inter-governmental Asia-Europe Foundation was brought to Budapest with a view to boosting connectivity between the two regions and to offering an opportunity for media professionals to get acquainted with each other's political culture.