3 result(s) for summer break in Business
70,000 Foreigners Worked in Hungary Last Year - 20,000 Via Staffing Agencies
- 9 Mar 2023 6:07 AM
- http://www.hatc.hu
- business
According to Central Statistics Office data, a total of 70,000 foreigners worked in Hungary in the middle of 2022, up by 20% from a year earlier.
Number of Jobseekers in Hungary ‘Lowest in Past 30 Years’
- 29 Dec 2021 9:25 AM
- hungarymatters.hu
- business
The number of registered jobseekers in Hungary fell to 238,700 in December, Tamás Schanda, state secretary at the innovation and technology ministry, said, adding that the number is the lowest in the past 30 years except for December 2019.
CNBC On Hungary's "Economic Freedom War"
- 9 Aug 2010 3:00 AM
- business
"Comments by Hungary’s government officials have been "very mixed" about the deficit targets, Peter Attard Montalto, analyst at Nomura in London, told CNBC on Friday, adding that the issue is fundamentally about the cabinet’s attitude to international lenders and austerity. He said the government’s current approach is fine for now, but the markets will "bite eventually".
70,000 Foreigners Worked in Hungary Last Year - 20,000 Via Staffing Agencies
- 9 Mar 2023 6:07 AM
- http://www.hatc.hu
- business
According to Central Statistics Office data, a total of 70,000 foreigners worked in Hungary in the middle of 2022, up by 20% from a year earlier.
Number of Jobseekers in Hungary ‘Lowest in Past 30 Years’
- 29 Dec 2021 9:25 AM
- hungarymatters.hu
- business
The number of registered jobseekers in Hungary fell to 238,700 in December, Tamás Schanda, state secretary at the innovation and technology ministry, said, adding that the number is the lowest in the past 30 years except for December 2019.
CNBC On Hungary's "Economic Freedom War"
- 9 Aug 2010 3:00 AM
- business
"Comments by Hungary’s government officials have been "very mixed" about the deficit targets, Peter Attard Montalto, analyst at Nomura in London, told CNBC on Friday, adding that the issue is fundamentally about the cabinet’s attitude to international lenders and austerity. He said the government’s current approach is fine for now, but the markets will "bite eventually".