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Category: VOLUME II, No. 3

THE GREAT HUNGARIAN DEBATE

The adoption of a brand new constitution in Hungary has been met with celebrations from Fidesz and its supporters, groans of anguish and theatrical gestures from its opponents, and not a few glances of blank incomprehension from abroad. The argument boils down to this: the government argues that Hungary needs

BY THE GREEN DANUBE

NT:Hungary was struck last October by a serious chemical disaster, when a reservoir containing red sludge from an alumina plant burst at Ajka in the midwest of the country. Are you any closer to finding what or who was responsible? ZI: I have emphasized from the start that responsibility lies on

HUNGARY, ON A NEW PATH

In recent months Hungary has figured prominently in the news, partly as the country that currently holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, but also because of issues of domestic policy, which usually do not arouse much international interest. In general only negative headlines create a big stir. Frequent

THE EUROPEAN DEBT CRISIS – A VIEW FROM HUNGARY

It is proper to claim that 2011 is the “year of Europe” in Hungarian economic policy making, and only partly because of the Hungarian presidency of the European Union (EU) in the first half of 2011. Subsequent government initiatives, such as the fiscal consolidation plan named after Kálmán Széll (a

THE CHALLENGE OF GROWTH

In the second decade of the 21st century Hungary faces the challenge of growth on at least three levels. First, economic growth, which grew by an annual 3.9 per cent in 1996–2000 and even by 4.2 per cent in 2001–2006, decelerated to a mere 1 per cent in 2007, i.e

SANDS AT EIGHTY

A personal tribute to Ferenc Mádl, on his 80th birthday In one of the rare moments when Ferenc Mádl spoke of the important influences in his life – perhaps in the biographical film made in the summer of 2000 – he mentioned that in his childhood he could see on

MUSINGS FROM NO. 19

In Defense of Tipping Physicians In recent years the practice in Hungary of routinely tipping physicians has come under much deserved criticism. The so-called “hálapénz rendszer,” or “gratitude money system” (though it is hardly sufficiently codified to merit the word “system”), originated under communism as a means of compensating for

WHAT THE ARAB REVOLUTIONS MEANS FOR EAST CENTRAL EUROPE

The protest movement in the Arab world has been likened to the popular uprisings that brought down Communism in Eastern Europe in 1989. The EU, back then, rose to the challenge, embraced and supported the fledgling democracies with vast amounts of money, and ultimately rewarded the most reliably democracy-minded among

VISEGRÁD’S PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

The future of the Visegrád initiative has not been a hot topic in either Washington or Brussels. Indeed, even those policy makers and politicians who know something about the Visegrád Group (V4) have no strong opinion about its past, present, or future. They do not view it either as a

HUNGARY AND THE BREAK-UP OF YUGOSLAVIA – PART II

The Soviet break up – a model? A coup d’etat against Soviet President Gorbachev was attempted in Moscow on 19 August 1991 by hard-liners, but thanks to the resolution of Russia’s President Yeltsin and due to the unequivocal position of the Soviet Army it failed. The Baltic States made good