Hungary The Great Depression
Drumming on Saint Stephen's day in Borsod Country, 1929
[Sándor Gönyey; Ethnographic Museum, Budapest]
Courtesy Harriet Gerber
In 1929 the New York Stock Exchange crashed. As a
result,
world grain prices plummeted, and the framework supporting
Hungary's economy buckled. Hungary's earnings from grain
exports
declined as prices and volume dropped, tax revenues fell,
foreign
credit sources dried up, and short-term loans were called
in.
Hungary sought financial relief from the League of
Nations, which
insisted on a program of rigid fiscal belt-tightening,
resulting
in increased unemployment. The peasants reverted to
subsistence
farming. Industrial production rapidly dropped, and
businesses
went bankrupt as domestic and foreign demand evaporated.
Government workers lost their jobs or suffered severe pay
cuts.
By 1933 about 18 percent of Budapest's citizens lived in
poverty.
Unemployment leaped from 5 percent in 1928 to almost 36
percent
by 1933.
As the standard of living dropped, the political mood
of the
country shifted further toward the right. Bethlen resigned
without warning amid national turmoil in August 1931. His
successor, Gyula Karolyi, failed to quell the crisis.
Horthy then
appointed a reactionary demagogue, Gyula Gombos, but only
after
Gombos agreed to maintain the existing political system,
to
refrain from calling elections before the parliament's
term had
expired, and to appoint several Bethlen supporters to head
key
ministries. Gombos publicly renounced the vehement
anti-Semitism
he had espoused earlier, and his party and government
included
some Jews.
Data as of September 1989
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