takács péter and math…..


  • Together with Attila Steiner, you announced that under the Jedlik Ányos Program, you will be able to renovate healthcare buildings using 88–90 billion forints.
  • Essentially, this is an energy-focused investment where we must aim for energy efficiency, so that healthcare institutions — primarily hospitals and ambulance stations — spend less on utility costs. Naturally, the money saved can later be used to improve patient care.

But there’s also a typically “Hungarian” criticism here: there is this thing called the RRF, the Recovery and Resilience Facility, where a rather substantial amount — around 900 billion forints — was allocated to healthcare development, and part of it should have been used for hospital renovations. Fifty hospitals and thirty-one ambulance stations were on the list. Yet, as we know, our political opponents are blocking these funds for political reasons.

So I came up with the idea: if the EU doesn’t give us the money from one pocket, then we’ll simply take it from the other pocket of the Brussels bureaucrats. And I brought this proposal to Minister Lantos — to send a little jab — that if we don’t get it from one place, we’ll take it from another. And in this energy-efficiency envelope, which has been opened to Hungarians — thanks to the Prime Minister — we can tap into a sizable EU fund. With that, we will now be able to renovate exactly those 50 hospitals and about 20 ambulance stations that were originally on the list.

We examined what cost 80 billion in the National Bank’s renovation — and the irreversible mistakes they made — with photos