Hungarian central bank Governor Mihaly Varga started the year as a loyal member of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s cabinet. Now he finds himself where his predecessor often used to be: Under pressure to tailor monetary policy to politics. The peaceful coexistence between the government and the central bank, so welcomed by markets after years of tension and unpredictability, abruptly ended this week when Orban and then Economy Minister Marton Nagy said interest rates were too high. Both told policymakers they had room to cut the benchmark without hurting the currency. Varga’s team pushed back, but the damage was already done, as my colleagues Zoltan Simon and Marton Kasnyik in Budapest reported. The forint plunged as Hungary was thrown back to the days of former central bank chief Gyorgy Matolcsy, who spent the first part of his term supporting Orban and the latter part fighting him. The desire for lower borrowing costs comes as Orban’s Fidesz party trails in the polls ahead of an election in April. To keep voters onside, the five-term premier has promised all kinds of handouts, from a double-digit minimum wage hike to more subsidized loans to businesses. Mihaly Varga, governor of the National Bank of Hungary, used to be Orban’s finance minister. Now he’s in a different spotlight. Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg But the economic revival Orban is promising looks far away. Inflation has remained stubbornly above the central bank’s targeted range for nearly a year and Varga has backed a hawkish monetary policy since taking over the central bank in March. Opposition leader Peter Magyar poured cold water on Orban’s plan to jumpstart economic growth, saying that will only happen if there’s a change of government. Only then, he said, can Hungary again embrace predictable policies and regain access to European Union funding it lost under Orban. Indeed, until this week, Magyar’s plan to reset relations with the EU had been accelerating a rally in the forint, as my colleague Andras Gergely reported earlier. There’s a long way to go before the vote, and Orban might still win. The currency market will be watching. |