Hungary\\\'s debt-relief plan could hurt economy, say analysts
Wednesday, 20 August 2014
Controversial new plans to make Hungary's banks bear the burden of surging mortgage repayments could drag down economic growth and may prompt some beleaguered lenders to leave the country, analysts say. Around a million Hungarians have been left with skyrocketing repayments on foreign-currency loans taken out before the onset of the financial crisis as the national currency has slumped. Those loans were originally cheaper than forint-denominated debt, but as the currency has weakened it has made repaying them more expensive. Prime Minister Viktor Orban, re-elected in April on a populist platform, has repeatedly tried to shift the loan burden onto the banking sector, which he accuses of enticing consumers with overly attractive loans. Under a new law, lenders will have to refund past fee and interest rate hikes on the loans. Another proposal calls for the debt to be converted into forints to make it easier to pay back. Laszlo Geza Tilk, head of the Currency Debtors Advocacy Association, a group helping borrowers to sue the banks, argues the government's plans do not go far enough, according to AFP.