Finance Minister Mihály Varga said Hungary is among the European Union countries that have made the most progress in whitening their economy since 2010.
The finance minister told a conference on Wednesday that the VAT gap has fallen to 4.4% from 22% and the rate of tax deductions as a percentage of GDP has decreased to 35% from 40%. Hungary’s government overhauled the tax system in 2010, shifting the emphasis from taxes on labour to consumption taxes, Minister Varga said on the opening day of the General Assembly of the Intra-European Organisation of Tax Administrations (IOTA) in Budapest. The highest personal income tax rate has fallen to 15% from 36% since 2010, while the corporate tax rate has been cut from 20% to 9%, the lowest in the EU, Varga said. Meanwhile, payroll taxes have been slashed from 33.5% to 13%, he added. It was thanks to these measures, Varga said, that Hungary ranks 11th out of the 38 OECD countries. The presidency of the IOTA in the year-long cycle ending on July 1, 2024, was held by Ferenc Vágújhelyi, head of the national tax and customs authority NAV.