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HUNGARY is seeking an international credit line of 15 to 20 billion euros (US$20-26.3 billion), the secretary of state heading the prime minister’s office, Mihaly Varga, was quoted Saturday as saying.
Hungary is seeking backup from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Union (EU) to reassure investors it has financing even if it gets cut off from debt markets later this year.
The country’s currency, the forint, sank to a record low against the euro a month ago, and its government bond yields rose above 11 percent on concerns that amid the euro zone crisis it may not be able to finance central Europe’s highest debt burden compared to its economic output.
Varga reiterated that the government expected to reach a deal soon on a credit line that it could tap if the European debt crisis deepened further.
“A quick agreement is in the interest of both parties, therefore a deal could be outlined in one or two months,” he said in an interview in the daily Magyar Hirlap.
“The amount of the safety net could be somewhere between 15 and 20 billion euros,” he said.
Hungary’s government unnerved investors repeatedly in 2010 and last year with unorthodox economic policy steps. It has also upset the European Commission with a range of legislation including a central bank bill that the Commission said curbed the bank’s independence.
The country’s markets have partially recovered due to pledges by the government to settle these issues and set up the international credit line.
“The planned financial backstop will allow the forint exchange rate to stabilize and government bond yields to drop,” Varga said.(SD-Agencies)
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