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COVID response workers to receive paid leave of ten days

PM Orbán also announced the launch of a National Consultation public survey on Hungary’s economic recovery.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has announced paid leave of ten days for workers who contributed to Hungary’s COVID-19 response efforts. “This is the least they deserve,” he said. Workers would not have the option of accepting overtime pay instead of taking time off, as the purpose of the measure was to give them a chance to rest.

PM Orbán also announced the launch of a National Consultation public survey on Hungary’s economic recovery. The aim of the survey is to find common ground on the most important matters concerning the creation of a stable economy, he said. The government envisions a new kind of post-pandemic economy that draws on the lessons of the previous decades, and is preparing for a period of pandemics and mass migration.

PM Orbán added that Hungary is in need of an economy that provides balance, stability and security for its population not only in times of peace but amidst pandemics and migration, too, he added. The public will be asked, for example, whether they think the increase of the minimum wage to HUF 200,000 (EUR 575) alongside considerable tax cuts for SMEs should happen in multiple phases or in one go, he said. This, he added, required an agreement between the government and the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry. The government is also looking for backing from the public on a measure allowing parents who earn below the average income to reclaim their 2021 PIT in 2022.

The prime minister said the survey will also touch on the issue of the moratorium on loan repayments, adding that the government and the banking association were debating the next steps concerning the measure. The public will also be asked about a climate tax Brussels has proposed levying on Hungarian families’ flats and vehicles, he said. If Hungary decides to oppose this, it will find itself in the middle of a fierce international dispute, he said, adding that the government therefore had to have strong backing from the people on the issue. Hungary’s government believes that the costs of the fight against climate change should be borne by the world’s biggest polluters, PM Orbán said.

The survey will also cover the issue of mandatory migration quotas, “which are back on the agenda, and which Hungary has always firmly opposed.” PM Orbán said the bloc should suspend its policy of taking in migrants for at least two years “until the pandemic is fully behind us”.