Hungary - Real effective exchange rate index (2010 = 100)

The value for Real effective exchange rate index (2010 = 100) in Hungary was 85.79 as of 2021. As the graph below shows, over the past 30 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 104.89 in 2008 and a minimum value of 58.73 in 1991.

Definition: Real effective exchange rate is the nominal effective exchange rate (a measure of the value of a currency against a weighted average of several foreign currencies) divided by a price deflator or index of costs.

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics.

See also:

Year Value
1991 58.73
1992 63.98
1993 69.23
1994 69.06
1995 66.29
1996 67.95
1997 71.38
1998 70.93
1999 72.48
2000 72.98
2001 78.70
2002 86.86
2003 89.13
2004 94.88
2005 96.21
2006 91.62
2007 102.00
2008 104.89
2009 98.99
2010 100.00
2011 99.75
2012 97.03
2013 95.99
2014 92.12
2015 88.34
2016 88.94
2017 90.60
2018 90.14
2019 88.92
2020 85.45
2021 85.79

Development Relevance: In a market-based economy, household, producer, and government choices about resource allocation are influenced by relative prices, including the real exchange rate, real wages, real interest rates, and other prices in the economy. Relative prices also largely reflect these agents' choices. Thus relative prices convey vital information about the interaction of economic agents in an economy and with the rest of the world.

Limitations and Exceptions: Because of conceptual and data limitations, changes in real effective exchange rates should be interpreted with caution.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The real effective exchange rate is a nominal effective exchange rate index adjusted for relative movements in national price or cost indicators of the home country, selected countries, and the euro area. A nominal effective exchange rate index is the ratio (expressed on the base 2010 = 100) of an index of a currency's period-average exchange rate to a weighted geometric average of exchange rates for currencies of selected countries and the euro area. For most high-income countries weights are derived from industrial country trade in manufactured goods. Data are compiled from the nominal effective exchange rate index and a cost indicator of relative normalized unit labor costs in manufacturing. For selected other countries the nominal effective exchange rate index is based on manufactured goods and primary products trade with partner or competitor countries. For these countries the real effective exchange rate index is the nominal index adjusted for relative changes in consumer prices; an increase represents an appreciation of the local currency.

Base Period: 2010

Periodicity: Annual

Classification

Topic: Financial Sector Indicators

Sub-Topic: Exchange rates & prices