Hungary will offer mothers who have at least four children a lifetime exemption from income tax in a bid to boost its birth rate, the nation’s anti-immigration prime minister has announced.
Viktor Orban said the measures were being introduced in a bid to reverse population decline without relying on new migrants coming to the country.
Making his “state of the nation” address on Sunday, Mr Orban revealed the government would offer a range of benefits, including a subsidy of 2.5m forints (£6,821) towards seven-seat vehicles for families with three of more children.
Women under the age of 40 marrying for the first time would be eligible for a low-interest loan of 10m forints (£27,286), which would be waived entirely if they give birth to three children.
Those with four children or more would be exempt from paying income tax for life.
Protest against the government in Hungary: in pictures
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Mr Orban, who has made his “zero tolerance” stance on immigration a key policy in recent years, said the initiative was designed to “ensure the survival of the Hungarian nation”.
“There are fewer and fewer children born in Europe. For the West, the answer [to this problem] is immigration,” the prime minister said. “For every missing child there should be one coming in and then the numbers will be fine.”
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There was no immediate government estimate for the cost of the new measures.
Mr Orban’s chief of staff, Gergely Gulyas, said on Friday new spending would be financed from general reserves or surplus revenues in the 2019 budget.
The prime minister also used the speech to kick-start his right-wing Fidesz party’s European Parliament election campaign, repeating his regular assertion the European Union wants to fill the continent with migrants, mainly fromy Muslim backgrounds.
“We have to understand that the European peoples have come to a historical crossroads,” Mr Orban said.
“Those who decide in favour of immigration and migrants, no matter why they do so, are in fact creating a country with a mixed population.”
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Europe’s left-wing had become “the gravedigger of nations, the family and the Christian way of life”, he claimed.
Fidesz and Mr Orban approach both European Parliament and local government elections this year hot off the heels of large protests in Hungary against the premier’s rule.
Demonstrations were sparked by the passage of laws in December allowing employers to ask for up to 400 hours of overtime per year, and the creation of new administrative courts that will answer to the government and oversee sensitive issues.
But despite protests, the party appears to remain well ahead of its rivals, with its support among the public estimated to be close to the 40 per cent mark by several recent polls.
Additional reporting by agencies
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Viktor Orban said the measures were being introduced in a bid to reverse population decline without relying on new migrants coming to the country.
Making his “state of the nation” address on Sunday, Mr Orban revealed the government would offer a range of benefits, including a subsidy of 2.5m forints (£6,821) towards seven-seat vehicles for families with three of more children.
Women under the age of 40 marrying for the first time would be eligible for a low-interest loan of 10m forints (£27,286), which would be waived entirely if they give birth to three children.
Those with four children or more would be exempt from paying income tax for life.
Protest against the government in Hungary: in pictures
Show all 12
Mr Orban, who has made his “zero tolerance” stance on immigration a key policy in recent years, said the initiative was designed to “ensure the survival of the Hungarian nation”.
“There are fewer and fewer children born in Europe. For the West, the answer [to this problem] is immigration,” the prime minister said. “For every missing child there should be one coming in and then the numbers will be fine.”
Read more
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There was no immediate government estimate for the cost of the new measures.
Mr Orban’s chief of staff, Gergely Gulyas, said on Friday new spending would be financed from general reserves or surplus revenues in the 2019 budget.
The prime minister also used the speech to kick-start his right-wing Fidesz party’s European Parliament election campaign, repeating his regular assertion the European Union wants to fill the continent with migrants, mainly fromy Muslim backgrounds.
“We have to understand that the European peoples have come to a historical crossroads,” Mr Orban said.
“Those who decide in favour of immigration and migrants, no matter why they do so, are in fact creating a country with a mixed population.”
Support free-thinking journalism and subscribe to Independent Minds
Europe’s left-wing had become “the gravedigger of nations, the family and the Christian way of life”, he claimed.
Fidesz and Mr Orban approach both European Parliament and local government elections this year hot off the heels of large protests in Hungary against the premier’s rule.
Demonstrations were sparked by the passage of laws in December allowing employers to ask for up to 400 hours of overtime per year, and the creation of new administrative courts that will answer to the government and oversee sensitive issues.
But despite protests, the party appears to remain well ahead of its rivals, with its support among the public estimated to be close to the 40 per cent mark by several recent polls.
Additional reporting by agencies
MORE ABOUTVIKTOR ORBÁNHUNGARYEUROPEAN UNIONEUROPEEUROPEAN PARLAIMENTFIDESZ
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