Teachers’ wages in Hungary are low even in when compared regionally, according to G7‘s analysis, writes Hungary Today
The economic investigative site refers to the European Commission’s recent report, showing:
- In Hungary, teachers earn roughly 66-75% of the national average wage, the lowest ratio in the region (e.g. in comparison to Czech Rep., Slovakia, Austria, Slovenia, and Romania)
- Starting teachers’ salaries are also the lowest in Hungary compared to the aforementioned four neighboring countries, plus Czechia: Hungarian starting teachers earn only 43% of the average wage. In the rest of the region, this number ranges between 60 and 100%.
- In a broader comparison, starting teachers earn less than in Hungary in only four of the examined 36 European countries: in North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Albania, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- In Albania, starting teachers’ salaries are only 42% lower than in Hungary, the country’s GDP per capita makes up 35% of that of Hungary’s.
In another comparison, examining the trend of the last roughly one and a half decades, it has been demonstrated that Hungarian teacher salaries are on a downward trend.
Drawing a comparison between a primary school teacher’s salary with 15 years experience (as this was available in Hungary) and the national average, it is clear that teachers’ salaries haven’t followed the hikes of the national average salary either. After veteran teachers’ salaries reached the average wage (after a comprehensive wage settlement and introduction of life career model by the Fidesz government) in 2013, even catching up to Austria’s data in this matter, they have since fallen to three-quarters of the national average (salaries were not indexed at the time, resulting in the effect of the measure to have simply lost to inflation).
- By now, this has resulted in the fact that in the region, Poland’s experienced teachers are the only ones earning less than Hungarians (but starting salaries are higher there).
- In addition, comparing the education sector’s average wage to the corporate sector, we also find a decrease in the last five years, with Hungary bottoming out the regional comparison in this matter, too.
This information came amid an ongoing protest by teachers and controversy with the government. After the government refused to settle their wages, the two unions announced a strike. The government, however, has since issued a decree that made striking virtually ineffectual, and therefore pointless.