Hungary

This country note provides an overview of the key characteristics of the education system in Hungary. It draws on data from Education at a Glance 2023. In line with the thematic focus of this year’s Education at a Glance, it emphasises vocational education and training (VET), while also covering other parts of the education system. Data in this note are provided for the latest available year. Readers interested in the reference years for the data are referred to the corresponding tables in Education at a Glance 2023.

  • High-quality VET programmes integrate learners into labour markets and open pathways for further personal and professional development. However, the quality and importance of VET programmes differ greatly across countries. In some countries, half of all young adults (25-34 year-olds) have a vocational qualification as their highest level of educational attainment, while the share is in the low single digits in other countries. In Hungary, 38% of 25-34 year-olds have a VET qualification as their highest level of attainment (Figure 1): 24% at upper secondary level, 13% at post-secondary non-tertiary level, and 1% at short-cycle tertiary level.

  • Across the OECD, unemployment rates for 25-34 year-olds with vocational upper secondary attainment are lower than for their peers with general upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment. This is also the case in Hungary, where 3.2% of young adults with vocational upper secondary attainment are unemployed, compared to 4% of those with general upper secondary attainment.

  • Although an upper secondary qualification is often the minimum attainment needed for successful labour-market participation, some 25-34 year-olds still leave education without such a qualification. On average across the OECD, 14% of young adults have not attained an upper secondary qualification. In Hungary, the share is lower than the OECD average (13%).

  • Workers in Hungary aged 25-34 with vocational upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment earn 31% more than those without upper secondary attainment, whereas the earning advantage for workers with general upper secondary attainment is 40%. However, in almost all OECD countries, tertiary degrees provide a significantly larger earnings advantage. In Hungary, 25-34 year-old workers with bachelor’s attainment (or equivalent) earn 84% more than their peers without upper secondary attainment, while those with master’s or doctoral attainment (or equivalent) earn 123% more.

  • Tertiary attainment continues to increase among the working age population. On average across the OECD, tertiary attainment is becoming as common as upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment among 25-64 year-olds. In Hungary, 29% of 25-64 year-olds have tertiary attainment, a smaller share than those that have upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment (58%).

  • On average across OECD countries, 14.7% of young adults aged 18-24 are not in education, employment or training (NEET), while in Hungary the corresponding figure is 13.5%. Reducing NEET rates among young adults is a particularly important challenge in all countries because those who become NEET face worse labour-market outcomes later in life than their peers who remained in education or training at this age.

  • As the demand for skills in the workplace changes ever more quickly, the importance of lifelong learning continues to grow. In Hungary, the share of adults who participated in non-formal job-related education over a four-week reference period is 4% among 25-64 year-olds with vocational upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment, 4% among those with general upper secondary attainment and 9% among those with tertiary attainment. This compares to average shares of 7% (vocational upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment), 7% (general upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment) and 14% (tertiary) across the OECD.

  • Participation in high-quality early childhood education (ECE) has a positive effect on children’s well-being, learning and development in the first years of their lives. In Hungary, 11% of 2-year-olds are enrolled in ECE. This increases to 85% of 3-year-olds, 96% of 4-year-olds and 99% of 5-year-olds.

  • Compulsory education in Hungary starts at the age of 3 and continues until the age of 16. Students typically graduate between the ages of 17 and 19 from general upper secondary programmes. The age range for completing vocational programmes is just as wide, with students typically graduating from vocational upper secondary programmes between 19 and 21. This is different from most OECD countries, where graduates from vocational upper secondary programmes have a wider age range, reflecting the greater diversity of pathways into these programmes than for general ones.

  • The large majority of 15-19 year-olds across the OECD are enrolled in education. In Hungary, 33% of this age group are enrolled in general upper secondary education and 34% in vocational upper secondary education. A further 3% are enrolled in lower secondary programmes and 6% in tertiary programmes. This compares to an OECD average of 37% enrolled in general upper secondary programmes, 23% in vocational upper secondary programmes, 12% in lower secondary programmes and 12% in tertiary programmes (Figure 2).

  • Bachelor’s programmes are the most popular programmes for new entrants to tertiary education. On average across the OECD, they attract 76% of all new students compared to 73% in Hungary. Short-cycle tertiary programmes are the second most common level of education for new entrants into tertiary education, but their importance differs widely across countries. In Hungary, they are chosen by 10% of all new entrants.

  • Perhaps surprisingly, the share of international students at tertiary level has not been negatively affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in many OECD countries. However, a few countries experienced double digit declines in the share of international students. Hungary is not one of them, as the share of foreign students remained stable between 2019 and 2021 (13% of all tertiary students).

  • All OECD and partner countries devote a substantial share of their domestic output to education. In 2020, OECD countries spent on average 5.1% of their gross domestic product (GDP) on primary to tertiary educational institutions. In Hungary, the corresponding share was 3.7% of GDP, of which 24% was dedicated to primary education, 23% to lower secondary education, 26% to upper secondary education, 4% to post-secondary non-tertiary education and 23% to bachelor's, master's and doctoral or equivalent programmes (Figure 3).

  • Funding for education in absolute terms is strongly influenced by countries’ income levels. Countries with higher per capita GDP tend to spend more per student than those with lower per capita GDP. Across all levels from primary to tertiary education, Hungary spends USD 8 612 annually per full-time equivalent student (adjusted for purchasing power), compared to the OECD average of USD 12 647. Expenditure per student is equivalent to 25% of per capita GDP, which is below the OECD average of 27%.

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has created unprecedented challenges for education systems across the world. On average across the OECD, expenditure on primary to tertiary educational institutions per full-time equivalent student (including expenditure on research and development) grew by 0.4% from 2019 to 2020 (the first year of the pandemic and the latest period with available data). In Hungary, it decreased by 7.2%. This change in expenditure per student is the result of total expenditure on educational institutions decreasing by 8% and the total number of full-time equivalent students decreasing by 0.8%.

  • The distribution of spending between general and vocational upper secondary programmes depends on a variety of factors, such as the number of VET students, the fields of study within VET programmes and the importance given to VET relative to general programmes. In Hungary, 13% of all funding for educational institutions is spent on general upper secondary education and 13% on vocational upper secondary education (11% and 10% respectively on average across the OECD).

  • Government sources dominate non-tertiary education funding in all OECD countries, while the private sector contributes 9% of the total expenditure on educational institutions on average. Private funding in Hungary accounted for 15% of expenditure at primary, secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary levels.

  • In most countries, private sources accounted for similar shares of expenditure on general and vocational programmes at upper secondary level. However, in a few countries the differences in the share of private funding between general and vocational programmes were wider. In Hungary, the private sector is responsible for 23% of expenditure on general upper secondary programmes and 9% of expenditure on vocational upper secondary programmes.

  • On average across OECD countries, more than half of government expenditure on primary to post-secondary non-tertiary education comes from subnational governments. In Hungary, 92% of the funding comes from the central government, after transfers between government levels and 8% from the local level.

  • The total compulsory instruction time throughout primary and lower secondary education varies widely from country to country (Figure 4). Across the OECD, over the course of primary and lower secondary education, compulsory instruction time totals an average of 7 634 hours, distributed over nine grades. In Hungary, the total compulsory instruction time is lower, at 5 929 hours, over eight grades.

  • On average across OECD countries, 25% of the compulsory instruction time in primary education is devoted to reading, writing and literature and 16% to mathematics. In lower secondary education, the share is 15% for reading, writing and literature and 13% for mathematics. In Hungary, 25% of time is devoted to reading, writing and literature and 16% to mathematics at primary level compared to 13% and 12% at lower secondary level.

  • Teachers’ salaries are an important determinant of the attractiveness of the teaching profession, but they also represent the single largest expenditure category in formal education. In most OECD countries, the salaries of teachers in public educational institutions increase with the level of education they teach, and also with experience. On average, annual statutory salaries for upper secondary teachers in general programmes with the most prevalent qualification and 15 years of experience are USD 53 456 across the OECD. In Hungary, the corresponding salary adjusted for purchasing power is USD 21 689, which is equivalent to HUF 3 885 420.

  • Besides average teacher salaries themselves, annual teaching time requirements, annual hours of compulsory instruction time for students, and class size also impact total spending on teacher salaries. When combined, these factors can be used to estimate an average cost of salaries per student and show the relative impact of each individual factor on total salary spending. Total teacher salary costs per primary student are USD 2 612 in Hungary, lower than the OECD average of USD 3 614. This difference can be broken down into these four factors: lower teacher salaries reduce costs (by USD 1 775), below-average teaching hours increase costs (by USD 538), below-average student instruction time reduces costs (by USD 525) and smaller classes increase costs (by USD 760). Between 2015 and 2021, the salary cost of teachers per student increased by 21% in Hungary (from USD 2 151 to USD 2 612).

  • Between 2015 and 2022, statutory salaries of upper secondary teachers in general programmes (with the most prevalent qualification and 15 years of experience) declined in real terms in roughly half of all OECD countries with available data. In Hungary, upper secondary teachers’ salaries decreased by 7% between 2015 and 2022.

  • On average across OECD countries, in full-time equivalent terms, there are 14 students for every teaching staff member in general upper secondary programmes and 15 students per staff member in vocational upper secondary programmes. In Hungary, in full-time equivalent terms, there are 11 students per staff member in general upper secondary programmes, lower than the OECD average. In vocational upper secondary programmes, in full-time equivalent terms, there are 9 students for every teaching staff member (below the OECD average).

  • The average age of teachers varies across OECD countries. In some countries, the teaching workforce is much younger than the labour force in general, whereas in others, teachers tend to be older. In Hungary, 45% of teachers in general upper secondary programmes are aged 50 or older, compared to the OECD average of 39%. Teachers in vocational programmes are older than their general programme peers, with 49% aged 50 or above (43% on average across the OECD).

  • National/central assessments (standardised tests with no consequence on students’ progression through school or certification) are more common at primary and lower secondary levels than at upper secondary level, while most OECD countries conduct national/central examinations (standardised tests with formal consequence) in the final years of upper secondary education. These national/central assessments and examinations take place at different grades and can have different periodicities, their contents may vary over years and/or across students and are not necessarily compulsory for students. In Hungary, there is one national/central assessment at primary level, and at least two at lower secondary level. At upper secondary level, there is one national/central examination that each student may be expected to take.

References

OECD (2023), Education at a Glance 2023 Sources, Methodologies and Technical Notes, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/d7f76adc-en.

OECD (2023), Education at a Glance Database, https://stats.oecd.org/.

OECD (2023), Education at a Glance 2023: OECD Indicators, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/e13bef63-en.

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For more information on Education at a Glance 2023 and to access the full set of indicators, see: https://doi.org/10.1787/e13bef63-en.

For more information on the methodology used during the data collection for each indicator, the references to the sources and the specific notes for each country, see Education at a Glance 2023 Sources, Methodologies and Technical Notes (https://doi.org/10.1787/d7f76adc-en).

For general information on the methodology, please refer to the OECD Handbook for Internationally Comparative Education Statistics 2018 (https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264304444-en).

Updated data can be found on line at https://doi.org/10.1787/eag-data-en and by following the StatLinks 2 under the tables and charts in the publication.

Explore, compare and visualise more data and analysis using the Education GPS:

https://gpseducation.oecd.org/.

This work is published under the responsibility of the Secretary-General of the OECD. The opinions expressed and arguments employed herein do not necessarily reflect the official views of OECD member countries.

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