Its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita was 5,669 Euro in 2001 (Statistical Yearbook, 2001). Ninety-seven percent of the country's population is Hungarian. The ethnic minorities, comprising 3% of the population, are German, Slovak and Romanian. The minority with the highest population, ...
Research by Eurostat on household expenditures across the European Union in 2018 reveals that Hungarians spend a larger than average proportion of their expenses on food; alcohol and tobacco; fuel and maintenance of personal transport; and communications. Spending on food and non-alcoholic beverag...
It investigates a reduction in the budget deficit maintained by Hungary to a five percent of gross domestic product (GDP)in 2008 compared to 10.1 percent of GDP in 2006. The report also forecasts that the Hungarian market for medical equipment and supplies will expand at a compound annual ...
Hungary's economy has lost the past decade. Since the country acceded to the European Union, it has not been able to converge towards the EU average in per capita GDP, whereas the majority of the countries in the Central and East European region have come much closer to it. The general...
Initially the answer seems to be that the relatively low price level is a positive legacy of the socialist planned economy -- though hard to change -- that has given the population access to relatively more health-care provision than their countries' level of development (GDP per capita) ...
In the case of Budapest, the value of GDP per capita refers to the development, but based on the measurement, Pest County was supposed to belong to the transitional areas. Between the years 2014鈥 2020, the whole area of the Central-Hungarian region was getting to the level of a ...
Our database contains more than a million application entries, covers student scores, place of residence, and GDP per capita and employment data of their regions of residence. Similar economic data have been collected about the institutions as well as their indicators of academic excellence. We ...
In the new version of the Hungarian guideline the discount rate will be changed from 5% to 3,7%, the cost-effectiveness threshold will be explicitly determined (twofold and threefold of GDP per capita) and the direct comparisons will be preferred instead of indirect comparisons. Conclusions ...