
State Secretary: Number of jobseekers in Hungary down compared to last year
Over 41,000 jobseekers have found work as a result of recently launched European Union-funded government placement programs.
Citing data from the National Employment Service (NFSZ), Sándor Czomba, the state secretary for employment policy, said the number of jobseekers in Hungary stood at 222,854 in May, down by more than 3,000 from the same month a year earlier.
The May figure was the lowest for the month in more than three decades. Over 41,000 jobseekers have found work as a result of recently launched European Union-funded government placement programs, he added.

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Budapest Times
13 hours ago
- Budapest Times
Orbán: We must take Brussels while the emperor wages war
PM Orbán used the gathering to deliver a comprehensive and critical assessment of Brussels' current political and military posture, especially concerning the war in Ukraine and its implications for Hungarian sovereignty and the wider region. 'A real hussar's trick is needed,' declared the prime minister. 'While the emperor wages war, we must take Brussels; while Brussels prepares for war, we must strengthen Europe's anti-war initiatives.' He argued that the EU, once legitimized by its promise of peace and prosperity, has now lost its way. 'This is no longer the European Union we joined,' he said. 'The legendary quality of life in the West is gone.' Central to PM Orbán's critique was what he called Brussels' 'war policy,' which he claims has inflated energy prices, drained investment funds, and pushed the continent towards militarization. 'War has made everything more expensive,' he said, 'and now they want to solve economic problems through increased arms spending.' He described the EU's economic cycle as 'Brussels gives weapons to Ukraine, Ukraine buys them with EU loans, and Brussels buys Ukrainian goods,' asserting that this is not genuine economic growth but a 'war-based economic cycle.' He was especially candid about Ukraine's EU integration. 'Integrating Ukraine would break the Hungarian economy,' he warned. 'Full integration would cost €2.5 trillion over several years — 12 times the EU's current annual budget.' Beyond that, he noted, 'running Ukraine already costs €100 billion annually. For Hungary, this would be a burden of HUF 20 trillion.' On European centralization, PM Orbán said that Brussels is using the war as a pretext to grab more power. 'This is a coup,' he said. 'They want to eliminate national sovereignty and establish the United States of Europe.' He said that EU institutions are 'interfering in elections, monitoring sovereigntist parties, shutting down right-wing events, and financing federalist and pro-war fake civil society and media across Europe.' He further warned against new fiscal mechanisms proposed by Brussels: 'They want direct EU taxation, taking €37 billion a year from member states. They'd take money meant for our farmers and regional development and funnel it into the war effort.' Addressing Hungary's geopolitical role, PM Orbán emphasized regional cooperation. 'We must not join the Franco-German axis—we must strengthen the Visegrád cooperation,' he said, highlighting Poland's recent presidential election as 'particularly encouraging.' He envisioned a robust Central Europe that can 'block Brussels' federalist and pro-war agenda.' Finally, he reiterated his opposition to Hungary becoming a 'migrant country' and stressed the strategic importance of maintaining the Hungarian language and identity in the Carpathian Basin. 'The task is to teach 1 million people Hungarian over the next decade,' he said, adding that peaceful coexistence with neighbors is essential but must not come 'at the cost of national interest.' 'Our mission is clear,' concluded PM Orbán. 'Brussels must not sit on our necks. We stayed, they fell. But the wounds suffered by the Hungarian nation from the (last) empire have not yet healed. Let's not ask for a repeat—especially not in a Brussels uniform.'


Budapest Times
a day ago
- Budapest Times
State Secretary: Number of jobseekers in Hungary down compared to last year
Over 41,000 jobseekers have found work as a result of recently launched European Union-funded government placement programs. Citing data from the National Employment Service (NFSZ), Sándor Czomba, the state secretary for employment policy, said the number of jobseekers in Hungary stood at 222,854 in May, down by more than 3,000 from the same month a year earlier. The May figure was the lowest for the month in more than three decades. Over 41,000 jobseekers have found work as a result of recently launched European Union-funded government placement programs, he added.


Budapest Times
28-05-2025
- Budapest Times
Századvég: Brussels could plunge Hungary into an energy crisis
The Europe Project 2025 study, recently released by the Századvég Foundation, provides stark evidence of the growing energy crisis across the European Union. According to the data, 22 percent of Europeans are unable to properly heat their homes, and 26 percent have missed utility payments at least once in the past year due to financial constraints. These figures have more than tripled since before the current crisis, showing that over 65 million additional people in the EU are now energy-poor. Hungary, however, remains the exception. With just 9 percent of households struggling with heating and 12 percent behind on utility payments, Hungary reports the lowest energy poverty levels in the entire EU. These results are credited to the country's utility cost reduction policy, which uses strict regulatory pricing to protect families from market shocks and inflation. But these protections are under threat. Brussels is currently pushing a new package of sanctions that would ban all imports of Russian energy into the European Union. If implemented, the plan would cause wholesale gas prices to double, rising from 35 to nearly 70 euros per MWh, and possibly more due to market speculation. As a result, Hungary's energy costs would rise by up to HUF 1.1 trillion annually, rendering its current price protection scheme financially unsustainable. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has warned of the consequences. 'Without our utility cost reduction program, Hungary would also be in trouble,' he stated in a public message. He pointed out that if the Brussels proposal were enacted, Hungarian families would see heating costs jump to 3.5 times their current level. This would raise annual household expenses from HUF 176,900 to HUF 625,000, an increase of nearly half a million forints per year. Monthly electricity bills would double from HUF 7,000 to 14,000, and gas bills would climb from HUF 16,000 to 54,000. Hungary currently imports around 7.5 billion cubic meters of Russian gas per year, which accounts for a significant portion of its national consumption. Replacing this supply on the open market would be significantly more expensive, and the necessary infrastructure for alternatives, such as LNG, remains limited. The Századvég analysis also estimates that since 2022, high energy prices and reduced export opportunities have already cost Hungarian households an average of HUF 2.2 million. A complete ban on Russian gas would add another 448,000 forints in annual expenses, compounding the burden of other EU policy priorities such as military aid and accelerated accession for Ukraine. As the Europe Project 2025 findings illustrate, Hungary's regulatory model has been crucial in shielding citizens from the worst effects of Europe's energy crisis. Prime Minister Orbán is now calling on voters to support continued resistance to EU energy sanctions through the upcoming Voks 2025 opinion poll, stressing that this is a 'life-or-death issue for every Hungarian family.'