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Hungary to launch $128 million school-start benefit scheme

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 5:36 AM

BUDAPEST, July 2 (Reuters) – Hungary will launch a means-tested school-start benefit program at a cost of 40 billion forints ($128.41 million) per year, Prime Minister Peter Magyar said on Thursday, ​adding new spending after a surge in the budget deficit ‌in early 2026.

Magyar, who ousted right-wing leader Viktor Orban in an April election landslide, warned on Monday that the budget deficit would come in much higher than earlier estimates driven by Orban’s pre-election spending.

His government estimates the 2026 shortfall ‌at ​more than 7% of economic output, which ⁠could be the European Union’s ⁠largest, even with the favourable impact of a political agreement on the release of billions of euros’ worth of suspended EU funding.

“No child in Hungary should suffer a disadvantage merely because their ​families live in difficult circumstances,” Magyar said in a Facebook video, adding that the 100,000 forint grant paid in two halves ⁠would benefit 400,000 children.

He said the grant ⁠would be linked to existing social support measures ​and offered to children receiving a higher-rate family allowance due to a ​chronic illness or severe disability, special needs children or single-parent ‌households, among others.

Official statistics released on Wednesday showed Hungary’s budget deficit surging to 9% of gross domestic product.

Magyar’s Tisza party has said a sweeping anti-corruption drive, more transparent public procurement, lower spending on what ⁠they described as government “propaganda” under Orban and falling debt financing costs would help shore up the budget.

“The Tisza party must now contend with competing ⁠promises, including additional ‌fiscal support measures it pledged during the election ⁠campaign and its aim to lower the fiscal deficit ​to ‌3.0% of GDP by 2030,” rating agency Morningstar ​DBRS said ⁠in a note.

“We are of the view that reducing budgetary pressures in a lasting manner will require structural fiscal consolidation efforts both on the spending and the revenues sides which go beyond what has been announced so far.”

($1 = 311.5 forints)

(Reporting by Anita Komuves and Gergely Szakacs, Editing ​by William Maclean)