The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region

In the time of accession to the EU, Hungary drops to the second part of the programming period 2000-2006. The Central-Hungarian region (which includes the capital and Pest County) was classified as a less developed region, similarly to all of the six ‚rural‘ regions and thus the area received the hi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Péli László, Czabadai Lilla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-05-01
Series:Visegrad Journal on Bioeconomy and Sustainable Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/vjbsd-2016-0005
id doaj-dd83195011f8470faa607c73f745e62e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dd83195011f8470faa607c73f745e62e2021-09-05T20:51:35ZengSciendoVisegrad Journal on Bioeconomy and Sustainable Development1339-33672016-05-0151273010.1515/vjbsd-2016-0005The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian RegionPéli László0Czabadai Lilla1Szent István University, Gödöllő, HungarySzent István University, Gödöllő, HungaryIn the time of accession to the EU, Hungary drops to the second part of the programming period 2000-2006. The Central-Hungarian region (which includes the capital and Pest County) was classified as a less developed region, similarly to all of the six ‚rural‘ regions and thus the area received the highest amount of the supporting sources. In the programming period 2007–2013, the Central-Hungarian region belonged to the transitional regions and so it received continuously decreasing subsidies. In the case of Budapest, the value of GDP per capita refers to the development, but based on the measurement, Pest County was supposed to belong to the transitional areas. Between the years 2014–2020, the whole area of the Central-Hungarian region was getting to the level of a developed region. It means that this area is not entitled to get Cohesion sources anymore. On the 30th of October 2015, Pest County Assembly made a decision about Pest County’s disruption and declared its intent to create a separated region. As long as the government stood for the idea and it met with a warm response in Brussels, Pest County could operate as an independent region from 2018. Our study will draw attention to the huge territorial differences between the capital and its agglomeration and the surrounding areas.https://doi.org/10.1515/vjbsd-2016-0005regional policynuts 2 levelcentral-hungarian regionregional differences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Péli László
Czabadai Lilla
spellingShingle Péli László
Czabadai Lilla
The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
Visegrad Journal on Bioeconomy and Sustainable Development
regional policy
nuts 2 level
central-hungarian region
regional differences
author_facet Péli László
Czabadai Lilla
author_sort Péli László
title The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
title_short The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
title_full The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
title_fullStr The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
title_full_unstemmed The Formation and the Future Potentials of the Eighth Hungarian Region
title_sort formation and the future potentials of the eighth hungarian region
publisher Sciendo
series Visegrad Journal on Bioeconomy and Sustainable Development
issn 1339-3367
publishDate 2016-05-01
description In the time of accession to the EU, Hungary drops to the second part of the programming period 2000-2006. The Central-Hungarian region (which includes the capital and Pest County) was classified as a less developed region, similarly to all of the six ‚rural‘ regions and thus the area received the highest amount of the supporting sources. In the programming period 2007–2013, the Central-Hungarian region belonged to the transitional regions and so it received continuously decreasing subsidies. In the case of Budapest, the value of GDP per capita refers to the development, but based on the measurement, Pest County was supposed to belong to the transitional areas. Between the years 2014–2020, the whole area of the Central-Hungarian region was getting to the level of a developed region. It means that this area is not entitled to get Cohesion sources anymore. On the 30th of October 2015, Pest County Assembly made a decision about Pest County’s disruption and declared its intent to create a separated region. As long as the government stood for the idea and it met with a warm response in Brussels, Pest County could operate as an independent region from 2018. Our study will draw attention to the huge territorial differences between the capital and its agglomeration and the surrounding areas.
topic regional policy
nuts 2 level
central-hungarian region
regional differences
url https://doi.org/10.1515/vjbsd-2016-0005
work_keys_str_mv AT pelilaszlo theformationandthefuturepotentialsoftheeighthhungarianregion
AT czabadaililla theformationandthefuturepotentialsoftheeighthhungarianregion
AT pelilaszlo formationandthefuturepotentialsoftheeighthhungarianregion
AT czabadaililla formationandthefuturepotentialsoftheeighthhungarianregion
_version_ 1717783590699270144