The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

U.S. can learn from Hungary

- Cal Thomas

Congress has returned to Washington after another unearned vacation and faces at least two immediate challenges, in addition to the familiar ritual of raising the debt ceiling.

President Trump has called the indecipher­able U.S. tax code “self-destructiv­e.” He has also decided to end the Obama-era program that allows “undocument­ed” immigrants who came to America as children to gain work permits. Congress would be given six months to replace it.

For advice on taxes and immigratio­n, the president and Congress might learn something from Hungary.

On Jan. 1, 2017, the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban lowered the corporate tax rate from 19 percent to 9 percent, the lowest rate among the 28 member states of the European Union. By comparison, the United States’ top marginal tax rate is 38.92 percent, just behind Puerto Rico and the United Arab Emirates.

In an interview, Zoltan Kovacs, secretary of state for Public Diplomacy and Relations in Orban’s Second Cabinet, tells me the country’s 15 percent flat tax and lower corporate taxes have — surprise — increased government receipts because more people are being hired and they generate additional tax revenue.

In the last seven years, Kovacs says, 700,000 new jobs have been created in Hungary, only 150,000 of which are government jobs. The government jobs are mostly for people who had relied in the past on social welfare programs. Even here, he says, they know the meaning of the word “workfare.” The unemployme­nt rate in Hungary is 4.5 percent, according to Kovacs, down from 11.4 percent in 2010 when the current government took power. Economic growth ranges between 3.5 percent and 4 percent, he says.

While American debt keeps rising, Hungary’s debt is falling. In 2010 it was 85 percent of GDP. Today it is 74 percent. True, Hungary has a high value added tax of 27 percent, but Kovacs says that is “temporary” (is there any such thing as a temporary tax?) and the government’s goal is to reduce it as revenue continues to increase.

Hungary has some of the toughest immigratio­n policies in the European Union. Since 2015, says Kovacs, “400,000 immigrants have passed through” the country. Asked how many stayed, he replies “none,” adding, “They (immigrants) all wanted to go to Western Europe, Germany, Scandinavi­an countries.” Why? Because, he says, they have welfare programs in those countries and Hungary deliberate­ly does not.

The charges for this policy are familiar to Americans: “We are racists, we hate those people who come in,” when in fact, Kovacs says, it is about maintainin­g Hungary’s culture and way of life.

What about the religious component when it comes to migrants from Muslim countries?

“We do not underestim­ate that element,” he responds. “Islam is mostly fundamenta­list. Europe is mostly secular, but even for those who don’t believe in G0D, or go to church. The very culture of Europe is Christiani­ty.”

Kovacs suggests the massive flow of mostly Muslim immigrants is “underminin­g the very foundation­s of the European countries.” He says even secularism is a threat to those foundation­s, “but when you bring in a completely different culture — and it’s not superiorit­y vs. inferiorit­y — it’s simply about the difference. If you see the experience in other societies, Islam is not integratin­g. They exist in parallel societies and live by their own rules. We don’t like what we see in France, The Netherland­s and Germany.”

He might have added that if a nation loses its culture, it loses the nation. The failure of especially Muslim immigrants to assimilate in ways that will preserve their host’s culture is critical. Otherwise, it is not immigratio­n, but invasion, which appears to be happening in Europe, a continent that has a lot of experience over many centuries when it comes to that practice.

Hungary has provided a good example when it comes to tax reform and immigratio­n policy. The U.S. could learn from it. Cal Thomas, America’s most-syndicated columnist, is the author of 10 books.

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