Hungary Election Winner Will Have to Rein in Social Spending, S&P Says

BUDAPEST, March 24 (Reuters) – The winner of ⁠Hungary’s ⁠April 12 parliamentary election will ⁠have to take steps to rein in social spending to shore ​up state finances amid risks to an economic recovery from the global energy price shock, S&P Global ‌said.

Hungary’s budget deficit reached nearly ‌40% of the full-year target in the first two months of this year amid heavy ⁠spending by ⁠right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban ahead of the ballot, where the ​veteran leader faces the toughest challenge to his 16-year rule.

S&P said no apparent re-balancing of the medium-term fiscal position after the elections, in combination with rising external pressures, could trigger a ratings downgrade.

“We would ​anticipate that the incoming government after the 2026 election (regardless of the government composition) will ⁠need ⁠to engage in consolidation efforts ⁠to rein ​in the trajectory of social spending,” S&P told Reuters in an emailed reply to queries.

Orban ​has said no austerity would ⁠be needed after the election to rein in the shortfall, which has exceeded government forecasts in the past years and is seen at around 5% of output.

Centre-right rival Peter Magyar is betting on a quick release of billions of euros in European Union funding, an anti-corruption ⁠drive and a wealth tax to shore up state finances.

S&P said recent global ⁠economic challenges put downward pressure on its 2.5% growth estimate after three years of near-stagnation. On Monday, Goldman Sachs lowered its growth forecast for Hungary to 1.6% from 1.9% due to the energy price shock.

“Our current negative outlook to Hungary’s ‘BBB-‘ rating reflects the potential risk that its fiscal performance could prove materially weaker than our forecasts,” S&P said.

It said the energy price shock could lift both inflation and fiscal costs for Hungary due to the high energy intensity of the economy. ⁠S&P does not expect Hungary to receive any funding from the EU’s pandemic recovery facility due to time constraints.

Earlier this month, Fitch Ratings said reversing weak growth and the deterioration of public finances and policy credibility would be the main challenges ​for Hungary’s next government after larger-than-expected fiscal easing ahead of the ballot.

(Reporting ​by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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