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Retail sales in Hungary rose by an annual 2.5 percent in July, or 3.0 percent when adjusted for calendar year effects, preliminary data released by the Central Statistical Office (KSH) on Friday show.

The increase slowed from 6.2 percent in the previous month. Retail sales have risen for four consecutive months after eight months of decline, KSH said.

Adjusted food sales increased by 3.7 percent and non-food sales were up by 2.6 percent. Vehicle fuel sales rose by 1.9 percent.

Hungary Inflation Eases to 4.6 % in July
Hungary Inflation Eases to 4.6 % in July

Vehicle fuel prices jumped almost 20 percent, the Central Statistical Office said.Continue reading

In January-July, retail sales were up by a calendar-year-adjusted 2.1 percent, KSH said.

Gov’t: growth thanks to government measures

Commenting on the data, a government official said the Hungarian retail sector is starting to recover from pandemic-related lockdowns. Péter Cseresnyés, a state secretary of the innovation and technology ministry, said that government measures resulting in 4.7 million jobholders, wages averaging above 400,000 forints (EUR 1,100) and higher minimum wages left money with Hungarians to spend on themselves. Barring another strong wave of the pandemic, the current moderate growth is expected to reach pre-pandemic levels by the end of the year, he said. Growing vaccine acceptance is key to that process too, he added.

Analyst: modest data due to Hungarians sending more on services during summer months

ING Bank chief analyst Péter Virovácz said the modest rise in retail sales could be attributed to households’ preference to spend on services during the summer months. ING is standing by its projection for full-year GDP growth of 7.7 percent, he added.

Takarékbank senior analyst Gergely Suppan also said consumers likely spent more on recreation during the month, but added that “dynamic” wage growth and a growth-linked year-end pensioners premium could boost retail turnover. He put full-year retail sales growth around 3 percent.

Wage Growth Slows to 3.5% in June
Wage Growth Slows to 3.5% in June

The wage growth was below the rate of inflation.Continue reading

Featured photo illustration by Attila Balázs/MTI


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