Discussion Papers 1990. No. 10. 
Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary
CENTRE FOR REGIONAL STUDIES 
OF HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 

DISCUSSION PAPERS 
No. 10 
Regional Spread of Computer 
Technology in Hungary 
by 
RECHNITZER, Janos 
Series editor 
HRUBI, Laszlo 
Translated by SURANYI, Agnes 
P6cs 
1990 


Discussion Papers 1990. No. 10. 
Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary
ISSN 0238-2008 
Kiadja a Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Regionalis Kozpontja 
Felel6s kiado: Enyedi Gyorgy 
Sorozatszerkeszt6: Hrubt Laszlo 
Kesziilt 250 peldanyban. 2 (B/5) fv terjedelemben 
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Discussion Papers 1990. No. 10. 
Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary
CONTENTS 
Introduction 
P.  5  
Regional Differences in Supply with Computers 
p. 6 
Employment and Organizational System 
P.  9 
Computerization of Education 
 p.12 
Computerization of Higher Education and Cultural Services 
p. 14 
Private Sphere 
p.17 
Summarizing 
P.  20 
References 
 P. 
22  
Tables and Figures 
p. 23 




Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
INTRODUCTION 
In starting an analysis of the system of relations and the relationship between 
electronization and socio-economic spatial structure two groups of issues emerge. 
1/ The first question is how much the spread of electronization — the general 
emergence, existence of its entirety and elements — is helped or hindered by the 
network of settlements, its structure and determining features. Or in a wider sense: 
how the many-sided and multi-level spatial distribution of the society and economy 
can contribute to the spread of electronization and also how electronization itself 
with its different outward forms affects the spatial differences, their moderation or 
even elimination. 
2/ In the spatial structure of the society and the economy nodes — centres —
with „own resources" have been formed, exercising thus spatial regional impact. To 
what extent are the spatial resource centres supplied with systems of tools of 
electronization? Do these centres produce, transmit electronization, or rather they 
take part in the comprehensive, quicker spreading of these devices bearing 
modernization? Do the regional centres of the economy play a mediating function 
in the spread of the different formations of electronics or are these conditions 
bearing dynamics and renewal merely concentrated in one centre, in  Budapest? 
I tried to analyse the relationships of electronization and the spatial socio-
economic structure, at the same time I have to make some reservations to make the 
objectives of this paper clear and unambiguous. 
I did not deal with all the elements of electronization, their appearance and 
way of functioning. I examined only one of them: the spatial spread, appearance 
and presence of computers. Unfortunately because of the lack of data I could not 
touch upon either the electronization of the production processes /e.g. NC lathes, 
robot technology, the spreading of CAD/CAM systems/ or the evaluation of the 
regional presence and effects of communicative systems /data transfer, spatial 
networks, local TV and information systems/. I did not undertake to give a survey of 
the activities outside the production sphere, to discuss the electronization levels of 
the population, private persons, entrepreneurs, of the tertiary and quaternary 
sectors or their territorial structure. 
Thus in the analysis I will touch upon the spreading of the devices of computer 
technology, their spatial and temporal structure and the space-forming functions of 
their forms of appearance. I am going to demonstrate not only the economy and its 
supply but also the possibilities of access to the devices — for their functioning — as 
well as their spatial, settlement-network determinants. I shall give an outline of the 
supply of the educational system with machines, its composition and changes. At 
the same time I am going to deal with the regional characteristics of the degree of 
supply of the cultural, educational and extension training sphere with equipment. 
At last I am going to make an attempt at showing and outlining the regional 


Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
characteristics of the possible supply the private sector, the population with 
computers by using indirect information 
The special literature on electronization and within this on the socio-economic 
conditions of computer technology, the number of analyses on the social effects of 
computer technology is rather small and limited in Hungary. Within this there is a 
total lack of papers in connection with its spatial structure in Hungary but even in 
the foreign technical literature their number is small. For this reason I am not in the 
position of relying on an existing conceptual, analytic and methodological apparatus 
and I had to elaborate it on my own. Consequently my attempts are only 
approximations of these series of related phenomena being still in need of further 
evaluation and reconsideration. 
I was also in a difficult situation with the handling of the statistic data base. 
Statistic surveys, mainly data publications presenting computer technology have 
been published in Hungary since 1972. In the seventies these surveys were not 
annually published, they could merely boast of the inconsistency of spontaneous 
temporality. Since the 80's this aperiodicity has been broken and comparable data 
bases are published yearly.  The Computer Technology Department of the Central 
Statistical Office  put at my disposal the data series in a deeper breaking down in 
addition to the official data publication. In this way I am able to publish 
information which demonstrates the supply with equipment and its different 
parameters both at the county and settlement levels — relating to one year. /This 
data base concerns only the economic units being under official statistical 
observation, including state enterprises, co-operatives, publicly financed institutions 
and educational units. In the analysis I always indicate the character of the data 
base./ 
I got access to a comprehensive data base in respect of the education as well. 
With regard to the supply of this sphere with computers I have a relatively complex 
statistical information system at my disposal, therefore — mainly at the county level 
— I could point out temporal change and its different implications. 
The private sphere caused the greatest difficulties. Here I made use of indirect 
information in my paper trying to give an insight into some of the perceptible 
relations on this basis. I will try to conclude the regional relations of the supply of 
this very important sphere with computers from data concerning the residence of 
the members of certain associations and unions as well as form that of the 
subscribers to journals on computer technology. 
REGIONAL DII'FERENCES IN SUPPLY WITH COMPUTERS 
The new technology, development and devices bearing renewal were 
concentrated in the large centres in the seventies. From among them the capital 


Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
played an invariably important role, while the strengthening of the role of the towns 
with regional function was still perceptible to some extent and also the draining 
impact of the economic concentration of some other settlements. The territorial 
allocation of the computers is shown in  !Table 11. 
78% of the stock of computers was concentrated in  Budapest  in 1972 and this 
ratio decreased only to 72% in 1979. The machine stock of the cities did not change 
essentially, that is to say there was no significant computer technology base in the 
Hungarian towns with regional function. The county distribution of the machine 
stock is hardly of any significance: its increase can be observed only in two counties, 
Borsod  and  Fejer,  and even there the existence and operation of the machines are 
based partly on the computer technology-related industrial base and partly on a 
high percentage of the bases of the extractive and manufacturing industries and 
R + D centres. 
In the case of the other counties the situation is rather bad, since the stock is 
basically concentrated in the county seats and its size settles on the level reached in 
the middle of the decade, in brief, the increase is insignificant and minimal. 
We have to continue analyses on the merits with the eighties, as the explosion 
in the number and regional spread of the computers has produced spectacular and 
easily demonstrable restructuring. The main cause of the change fundamentally lies 
in the headway of the personal computers /PC's/, their appearance on the market, 
their very quick reception and use. In 1982 the computer stock of the country was 
only 2665 units, in 1987 already as many as 64983, that is the increase was twenty-
fourfold. /Here and from now on I will analyse the machines recorded by the 
official information system, making use of the number as shown there. In this 
system the machines used by private enterprises and the units owned — and used —
by the population are not taken into account./ 
The regional proportions also changed between 1982 and 1987. While in 1982 
about two-thirds of computers were concentrated in the capital in the last year of 
observation the share of  Budapest  was only 40%. The provinces nearly doubled 
their stock of computers, which is characterized also by the difference in the yearly 
rates of growth 'Table 21. 
The data illustrating the number and increase of the computers show a gradual 
decrease and after 1986 they are significantly reduced. This trend is the most 
powerful in the case of the capital. Here presumably the change in the number of 
computers has arrived at the starting point of a new phase, while the rise in the 
provinces continues with a steadily decreasing rate and intensity. In this case, 
however, I may not speak of either classical saturation or the flattening of the 
growth curve of the provinces, I may only state that the former expansion rate has 
been moderated, consequently the spreading of computers has become even in the 
provinces, too. 


Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
The absolute index of the stock of computers naturally does not give an exact 
picture of the spreading of its use and actual role in either the temporal or regional 
comparison. It is less suitable for direct regional comparison /e.g. according to 
counties/ because the differences in economic structure and the level of 
development significantly influence the trend of this index. A somewhat more exact 
picture is given if we examine the regional distribution in relation to a standard 
projection base. For this purpose I chose the number of the employees of the 
individual counties and characterized the degree of supply by the number of 
computers per 10,000 employees  
/Figure 1/. 
I broke down the country into 6 regions and investigated the supply of these 
regions with computers. Clearly the number of the computers is the highest in 
Budapest  and also the increase in the level of supply is spectacular excelling the 
curves of the other regions. The difference is rather great between the capital and 
the other regions, namely in the capital as in the only multi-directional innovation 
centre of the country the supply with computers is becoming increasingly 
favourable. In principle an ever greater mass of employees get access to computers, 
that is an increasingly greater circle of the production and activities get in 
connection with this determining means of modernization. 

The rest of the country — the other 5 regions — are at about the same level 
concerning supply, in fact the trend line is broken only after 1985 with a manifold 
differentiation taking place. 

Beyond the number of computers the index of the size of the capacities of 
computer technology — which can be characterized by the actually available total 
performance — also refers to the composition and quality of the stock  /Table  
3/. 
The data of the table illustrate the capacity of computers as recorded in the 
individual counties for 1985 and 1988. Between the two points of time the 
registered computer capacity of Hungary grew 8.9 times. This was significantly 
exceeded by the total increase of the provinces which was 11.1-fold, while in 

Budapest the expansion of capacity was below the average /7.4-fold/. 
The regional distribution of the capacities fundamentally changed, as the 
position of the provinces was improved by about ten percentage points, which can 
be accounted for by the steady and comprehensive spreading of computers. The 
paces of the capacity expansion of the individual counties are different, which is 
indicated by the fact that the two extreme values are a 4-fold and a 22-fold increase 
calling attention to differentiation. 

The spreading  of computers in the provinces /outside Budapest/ has taken 
place with relative intensity since the second half of the eighties. Within this, 
however, the concentration related to certain settlement functions and settlement 
size is very strong as shown by  Table 4 and 5. 
We can make conclusions to the degree of supply from the distribution of 
computer capacity. In this respect the high ratio of  Budapest  is determining again, 


Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
the total capacity of computers in the county seats is a little bit more than a half of 
it, while the other towns together have a value amounting to about half of that of 
the county seats and fmally the villages dispose of about half of the capacity of the 
town category. That is to say the capacities have been developed on the basis of a 
strongly hierarchical structure. 
The hierarchical diffusion of computers adjusted to the role and functions of 
the settlements is revealed in their distribution according to the size of the 
settlements as well. Besides this the difference of distribution in the number and 
capacity of computers also refers to the fact that a symmetrical spatial and 
temporal diffusion model prevails. The diffusion of computers reaches the larger 
settlements with national and regional functions and greater role first and then the 
smaller settlements having local functions, at the same time this delay generally 
results in the adoption of qualitatively better /more up-to-date/ computers with 
higher capacity. 
EMPLOYMENT AND ORGANIZATIONAL SYSTEM 
The impact of computer technology upon employment cannot be disregarded. 
The fact of the matter is that it creates a mass of new places of work that can be 
taken into account both directly and indirectly in the institution, factories, 
production units and services centres. From the aspect of our topic it is a question 
of importance where the workers of computer technology find employment, partly 
in which regions, partly in what type of settlement they are concentrated. In this 
way it will be possible to point out what impact the spread of this new device —
regarded in several places of this paper as one of the most important vehicles of 
innovation — or rather activity has on the division of labour and employment. Or 
again, whether the regional distribution of the employees of computer technology is 
definitely concentrated in the central settlements being linked to the central 
functions or it merely represents a wide-spread service /activity/. 
Figure 2  shows the number of employees in the computer technology line 
between 1975 and 1987. I divided the total number of employees into three groups 
which are separately shown in the figure as well. They are as follows: 
—programmers doing organization and management /let us call them software 
experts/ 
— experts of the apparatus serving /and supplying/ the hardware stock /let us 
call them hardware-operators/ 
—other additional staff doing jobs not directly connected with computer 
technology /let us call them other employees/. 


Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
On the basis of the national data, the number of the computer technology 
people more than doubled, the more vigorous changes started in the early eighties. 
In the case of the groups formed according to the character of activity a similar 
pace of development can be registered. From among the two main groups the 
number of the employees serving, preparing and managing the hardware stock has 
increased somewhat more steeply than that of the experts dealing with 
programming management. The number of those indirectly engaged in computer 
technology /other employees/ has changed with lesser or greater fluctuation but 
steadily. 
Let us start the examination of the regional, settlement distribution of the 
computer technology people with the analysis of the population census of 1980, as 
this was the first time that the number of active wage-earners in these jobs was 
made public at the county and town levels in Hungary. 
Figure  3 illustrates the regional distribution of the computer people employed 
in the regions on the basis of the population census of 1980 on the county average 
and according to towns. 
The structure shown earlier does not show a significant change, since this is 
the year prior to the explosion in computer sciences in Hungary but it is already 
obvious that the active wage and salary earners were predominantly concentrated in 
the counties considered to be economically developed and the same applies to the 
cities with many-sided functions, the regional centres, the organizing and 
management centres. In this way computer technology is an urban service 
expanding the urban tertiary functions and slowly starting the restructuring of 
employment there, although it still does not result in the radical transformation of 
the traditional structure. 
A more powerful change in computer technology was brought about by the 
transformation of the organizational system. The discussion of this together with 
employment can be justified by the fact that these new organizational formations 
have created job opportunities based on innumerous new ventures, the economic 
dependence and relations of which are radically different from the structures 
having existed and functioned in the seventies or the early eighties. 
In the organizational systems of the seventies the sectoral character and the 
traditional form of the centralized large-scale enterprises and large-scale 
organizations were predominant. Nearly each sector formed its own — one or more 
— mainly organizational, administration-mechanizing enterprises which established 
their regional offices in some kind of territorial organization afterwards. These 
offices organized the, enterprises belonging to a particular sector of two or more 
counties and also served their slowly launched computerization later on. In the 
period of large-scale computers the endeavour towards central processing was 
prevailing at the sectoral level in the form of jobwork. It is not the task of this paper 
to make judgements about the deficiencies and competence — from the professional 
10 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
aspect or otherwise — of these organizations but it cannot be denied that 
undoubtedly they played an important transmitting role in the spatial spread of 
Hungarian computer culture. A great number of branches and enterprises got to 
know computer technology through these organizations, obtaining thus the 
foundations for the further expansion and exploring of the possibilities of the 
creation of the mechanization conditions. 
The explosion in the number of computer organizations was brought about by 
the legal rules concerning the new forms of small organizations becoming operative 
in 1982. These small organizations are suitable for responding to the market, a 
quick switch and adjustment to conceptions, to say nothing of their more flexible 
management, more moderate price policy etc. The rapid development of these 
organizations started. Their temporal changes and changes in the forms of activity 
are illustrated by  Table 6. 
It can be concluded that the number of the units operating in the „traditional" 
form of enterprises and co-operatives is determining, the overwhelming majority of 
the employees and the market share is concentrated by them. At the same time on 
account of the high number of employees their per capita sales receipts are already 
unfavourable. There has been a spectacular rise in the number of so-called „small 
enterprises" and „small co-operatives" only during the past few years as a result of 
the new regulation and the improvement of interests. On the other hand, the 
initially rapidly mushrooming so-called „business partnerships" came to a halt and 
a great number of organizations were converted into the forms of small enterprises 
and small co-operatives because the income conditions there have become more 
advantageous recently. 
The number of the people employed in business partnerships is being reduced 
and the rate of the per capita sales receipts is also below the total average of the 
organizations from year to year. The so-called „business partnerships within the 
enterprises", the „specialized industrial co-operative groups" and the 
„associations" do not play an important role either in employment or the market 
share. 
In this way the number of organizations dynamically increased, all this, 
however, has not been accompanied by a radical rise of employment level in the 
field of computer technology. The traditional form of enterprises and co-operatives 
is invariably prevailing but the new small enterprises and small co-operatives 
employing only a few people have gained ground, too. After the initial pace the 
number of business partnerships did not increase further, nevertheless the number 
of their employees was still on the increase. 
At present there is no available data base for presenting the regional 
distribution of these organizations. It is possible, however, to make an approximate 
estimation of the regional structure with the help of the data series of  Table  7 which 
show the regional distribution of small venture organizations that support technical 
innovation. /It should be mentioned that because of classification which is different 
1 1 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
from that of the previous table it is not possible to make a direct comparison 
between the two tables./ 
From among the 1570 small businesses 46% is engaged in providing computer 
technology and organization services, 45% of which can be found in  Budapest. 
The role of Budapest capital as  an innovation node is also obvious in the case 
of the „small organizations", since the information, the market relations and the 
production-service-management activities ensuring the demand are concentrated 
here. Furthermore precisely on account of the concentration of the intellectual 
potential the strata of entrepreneurs ready and able to run new ventures can be 
found here. 
It is natural that the regional distribution of these organizations is so to say the 
mirror image of the regional spread of the computer stock as outlined above. The 
machine supply as well as the demand for computer technology services of the 
peripherically situated territories is moderate. In the settlement distribution of 
these organizations the county-seats play a determining role, in the other cities their 
number is significantly lower, while in the villages there are organizations of this 
kind only once in a while. 
On the whole we can conclude that the number of the employees of computer 
technology has dynamically risen during the past ten years. A real breakthrough 
was brought about by the establishment of the small organizations when the number 
of jobs significantly rose and more flexible, simple organizational forms grew in 
number. It is also due to them that the demand is on the increase, computer 
technology is becoming a more and more relevant economic factor. 
The regional structure of employment and the organizations is characterized 
by an overwhelming concentration in  Budapest.  Besides it the larger regional 
centres and the county-seats concentrate the intellectual bases of computer 
technology. In the other cities their presence is perceptible but not significant yet, 
in the villages the job opportunities and organizational forms are still scarce. 
COMPUTERIZATION OF EDUCATION 
The diffusion of computers and related knowledge can be made most efficient 
in the case of the younger  generations. They are not only most responsive to the 
new but also represent a large mass of people, therefore the transfer of knowledge 
can be rapidly integrated in their daily activities, thus — later — in production and 
services. Finally the knowledge passed on in school education may induce further 
demand — interest — within the family, the smaller or larger community for 
computer technology which may result in the expansion of the market and the 
faster reception of the devices and the transformation of the former means of 
12 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
communication /entertainment, reception and processing of information etc./. In my 
opinion today we cannot realistically assess the impact of computer science yet, its 
influence on the active generations of the future but it is certain that the 
appearance and application of these devices as widely as possible on the different 
levels of education is indispensable. 
In the early 80's a countrywide project was launched to provide computers for 
the schools. For this purpose budgetary resources were used and local-council and 
— with some restriction — institutional funds were mobilized as well. The demand 
for computers increased in this way, which naturally had an impact on domestic 
production. Computer types complying with the educational needs came into 
existence and the institutions were inundated with them. According to the 
„Hungarian practice" several elements of this action were criticized: the 
performance of the computers, their comparatively primitive character, the degree 
of equipping, the way of distribution etc. Unfortunately, the domestic industry —
owing to the monopolistic situation of the manufacturers — did not make use of the 
possibilities of the development-generating computerization of schools and it was 
unable to develop — despite the high demand — the computer type which might have 
led to the establishment of the domestic base of computer science culture through 
mass production./ 
The computerization project of schools was an extremely important step, a 
milestone in the domestic spreading of the devices and activities. It had a great 
impact on a great number of educational institutions and the computers became 
available nearly everywhere. Not only a part of the teachers had to be trained for 
coping with the new forms of communication but all the pupils and students had a 
chance of coming across this basic device of innovation in real life. The success of 
the project is proved by international standards, too. Through intensive 
computerization we could catch up with the highly developed countries by the end 
of the 80's and the rate of supply reached is laudable in all respects. 
Computerization rose powerfully in the primary schools. While in 1986 there 
were not any computers in 50% of the schools, by 1987 this rate decreased to 
22.6%. There was a spectacular restructuring of the stock of computers with the 
percentage of schools having five or even more units having been quadrupled. The 
supply of the secondary schools showed a more favourable picture than that of the 
primary schools because in this group the number of schools without computers is 
relatively low and there are more and more secondary schools /81.6%/ equipped 
with five or more units. Finally computers are already available in the vocational 
schools, too, in fact the circle of schools with more than one computer is on the 
increase /Table 81. 
A survey of the regional structure of the stock of computers does represent 
spectacular dynamics because while in 1986 in the primary schools there was only 
one computer per 252 pupils, by 1988 one computer was at the disposal of 72 
13 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
pupils. The rates of the secondary schools are more favourable, while those of the 
vocational schools are near the level of the primary schools. 
The differences between the counties are extremely great. There are regions in 
which the project embraces all the spheres of education, while in others only 
certain types of the educational institutions get support and finally in the third 
group the whole project has not gained ground yet  /Table 91.  The regional structure 
of computerization is rather divided. On the one hand, the regional educational 
structure and policy differentiated between the institutions, on the other hand, the 
regional adaptation and implementation of the central programmes created the 
differences between the educational institutions of the individual regions. 
Here we have to mention the supply of the settlements with machinery, as this 
index gives a relatively balanced picture in the comparison of the county-seats, 
towns and villages. The formerly experienced imbalances are somewhat eliminated 
and significant, great differences in the distribution of the stock cannot be 
observed. 
COMPUTERIZATION OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND CULTURAL 
SERVICES 
It is needless to emphasize the importance of the computer supply of higher 
education because the equipment available in these institutions serve education as 
well as research and development. In the individual types of the institutions the 
standards are different because of the character of education and the market 
demand of research, thus significant differences can be pointed out in the regional 
structure. 
Table 10  characterizes the equipment of the higher education institutions 
which function in the individual counties. On the whole the degree of supply is 
getting more and more favourable. The majority of the traditional university centres 
/thus Szeged in Csongrad  county, Debrecen  in Hajdu-Bihar county,  Sopron  and  Gyro 
in Gyor-Sopron  
county,  GOdeill6 in Pest county, Pecs in Baranya county and Miskolc 
in Borsod Abauj Zemplen  
county is in a better position, although there are 
-
-
significant differences in their supply. 
In addition to them new centres have been established.  Kaposvdr in Somogy 
county is becoming perceptibly a base of agrarian research or s could mention 
Veszprem in Veszprern  county as an example of a centre with certain traditions, the 
centre of chemical industry and biotechnology, where the degree of supply is fairly 
good. 
In some counties where non-traditional but in numerous cases non-
independent institutions of higher education are run — perhaps precisely for these 
14 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
reasons as well of non-independence, but — mainly as a consequence of the 
specialized character of the educational units the degree of the computer supply is 
low. It can be pointed out that, for example, in the counties of  
Bekes, Szabolcs-
Szatmdr  and Szolnok  the machine supply of higher education is worse than that of 
the secondary schools there, in  Heves  and  Vas  counties, however, the institutions of 
higher education are very near the mechanization level of secondary schools 
institutions. The consequences of this unfortunate situation asserted themselves not 
only in the counties in question but in other places, too, and they may give rise to a 
complex effect. The secondary school pupils with some knowledge of computer 
science may not be able to find the possibility of using and applying it in such 
higher institutions — and just because of the rapid and explosion-like development 
of the hardware and software — their knowledge will become out-of-date and 
obsolete before long. After graduation already they may get employment in well-
equipped institutions, thus the lack of knowledge may impede adaptation or the 
application of up-to-date education. 
Computerization in the higher education fed on a great number of financial 
sources /receipts from contractual work, research and budgetary subsidies, 
donation, private etc./ and this has contributed to putting a lot of computer types to 
work in the institutions. Just for the sake of illustration: in 1987 251 different types 
of computers were registered at the institutions of higher education, 97 kinds of 
which could be found only in a single institution! This extraordinary heterogenity 
according to computer types has begun to disappear only recently, mainly with the 
spread of the distribution of the IBM PC types in Hungary. When the stock of 
computers is scrapped, it is generally replaced by this type. 
On the whole the computer supply of higher education is gradually increasing, 
this increase is perceptible, while it is influenced by the character of the individual 
institutions, the size of  resources to be obtained or available from the supreme 
authority. Therefore the regional structure is not balanced either, the great 
differences affect the standards of education, training and research carried out in 
the institutions. In a lot of institutions of higher education — mainly in the colleges —
we will have to reckon with the fact that the new students entering there will 
possess knowledge of computer science on a higher level than at the time when they 
graduate. That is the extending of knowledge concerning this very important device 
and activity bearing innovation is not ensured by these institutions, not to speak of 
preparation for the application of the obtained knowledge in practice. 
In the computer supply of the different branches of  culture, general education 
and  communal entertainment  today our falling behind is still extremely  great, 
consequently the regional distribution  gives a very depressing picture. Although 
these forms might ensure for the different strata of society — besides work or 
education — large-scale accL;s to computers and getting acquainted with this boon 
of electronization as well as their preparation for further use. At the same time they 
might play a transmitting role in the main activity of particular strata partly through 
15 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
retraining and post-graduate studies, partly through the facilitation of 
communication and the acceleration of information. 
In  Table 11 I  am trying to put the scanty Hungarian data base on a standard 
projection base. It shows the standards of the computerization of cultural services, 
the book stock of libraries and the free-time activities of the young generation and 
finally the computer supply of a determining professional stratum, the educators. 
On the average 12.2% of the  community culture centres  had computers, their 
number of computers was between 3-4 according to the national average. The 
counties with tiny villages attract attention with their bad supply  /Baranya, Borsod, 
Ndgrad, Zala, Vas/  while in the region of the  Great Plain we get more favourable 
values, often above the average  /Hajdu-Bihar, Csongrad, Szolnok',  in the remaining 
counties these values vary. A close and unambiguous relationship of a positive 
trend cannot be pointed out between the economic potential and the computer 
supply of the community centres, as in counties such as  Gy6r-Sopron  and  Veszprem 
the equipping is unfavourable /in the former county there were 5, in the latter only 
3 computers per community centre on the average/, but again the values in  Fejer 
county are much higher and hence the access to computers. /Naturally the structure 
of settlement network is a very important factor, since in the counties with 
comparatively fewer settlements the supply is higher than in the ones with small or 
tiny villages. The data base does not orientate us with regard to the whereabouts of 
these computers, by all probabilities they are overwhelmingly concentrated in the 
towns./ 
The equipping of the libraries with computers /for the purpose of public 
education/ is below criticism, as throughout the country there are nearly half a 
million volumes per one computer, which means overloading even in the case of the 
most up-to-date machines /not to speak of the real composition of the stock/. In 
some counties endeavours towards computerization can be observed  IHajdu-Bihar, 
Vas, Szolnok/,  
but the general situation is very bad. 
I analysed the access of the young generation to computers in the part on 
education and within this in the primary schools. The presentation of the 
equipment of the Houses of the Children —  taking pupils of the counties of precisely 
this age as a projection base — is important both for entertainment, pastime and for 
laying the foundations of the completion of education and absorbed activities. 
Nationally there is one computer per 91 pupils in the Houses of teh Children.  These 
are concentrated in the towns of certain counties and basically may have influence 
only on some centres or at best on their environs. The dispersion is very great, 
therefore it is difficult and not expedient to outline overall, general trends. There is 
no doubt about one thing: this data base can give orientation concerning personal 
commitment and the standard of concern for the children. 
Finally, in this table I am giving an illustration of the computer supply of a 
single professional stratum, the educators and within this that of the pedagogical 
institutes that support the professional training of the secondary school teachers. 
16 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
This data series with a signalling value is also thought-provoking, since how can up-
to-date education be expected if the organs of training, post-graduate education 
and professional consultation do not have enough computers — of adequate 
standard — and the regional distribution is extremely uneven? This not very 
promising situation is worsened by the fact that the overwhelming majority of the 
existing computers are types of lower capacity. The high capacity computers able to 
provide a wider range of services are rare to find, their occurrence is random, thus 
from the large mass of the institutions only a few are able to provide effective 
computer technology services. 
On the whole the computer equipment of the cultural services, public 
education and certain branches of extension training is unfavourable, the 
possibilities of access are limited, moreover, they are regionally differentiated. It is 
impossible to notice deliberate and planned intervention and development or in the 
case of their existence — declaration — any perceptible impact. The neglect of these 
spheres and their slow diminution — which is not revealed even in the preservation 
of the stock at the current level — may cause enormous damage to the economy. 
PRIVATE SPHERE 
I have reached the most complex part of this paper. The question itself is 
rather simple. How many PC's are privately owned and where are they situated in 
the country? 
Let us start with the definition of „private sphere". I mean by this concept the 
computers used in households by families for games and — perhaps — household 
chores as well as the units used by small organizations, private or joint ventures, the 
ones that are not taken into account or registered by the official statistical data 
collection. It would be essential to explore what proportion of the families in 
today's Hungary get close to computers, in how many families such units can be 
found and how they are distributed between the different levels of the settlement 
network. 
It can be assumed that the strata of entrepreneurs and propertied people with 
high income buy computers for the households. From among them the 
entrepreneurs also make use of this technical device — in an increasing number — in 
their everyday work. The computers applied in accounting, filing and solving other 
contractors' tasks /planning, designing etc./ increase the safety of the business 
decisions and widen the range of the activities in entrepreneurship. 
Unfortunately, I could not obtain surveys and information on the 
computerization of the population or the households and their regional 
distribution. Thus I was compelled to estimate the levels of supply and its possible 
spatial distribution on the basis of approximate procedures. 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
The indirect data bases only suggest the computer supply of the population. 
The data were processed in a way enabling me to show the character and 
distribution of the regional structure between the larger spatial units or between 
settlements and to refer with them to the regional units bearing innovation. The 
secondary data sources are not suitable for pointing out the degree of equipment 
with computers, they can give only orientation about the higher concentrations with 
the value of signalling, and also about their spatial distribution or rather their 
relationship with the network of settlements. 
I am going to start the analysis with describing a professional society. The 
Janos Neumann Society of Computer Science  was founded in 1970 with the objective 
to unite the workers and students of different institutions so as to promote by social 
means the development of computer technology as a science, the spread of 
applications, the solution of topical issues supporting the spread of the culture of 
computer science, the regular information and extension training of experts. 
Among these complex objectives it is essential for us that the society is the 
professional and scientific scene of the experts whose interests are official and job-
related and of the people interested on the private, individual level. Their 
whereabouts also expresses the strength of affinity towards computer technology as 
well. 
In  Table 12  I grouped the members of the society living in county-seats 
according to the year of joining. After the initial upswing the number of the 
members increased in 1976-80, then significant change was brought about in the 
period of 1984-87. The number of the experts officially interested in computer 
science increased at an identical pace with the spread of personal computers. 
Most of the members can be found in  Budapest,  then in the regional centres, in 
order of importance:  Debrecen, Szeged, Pecs  and  Szekesfehervar. In  the other 
county-seats the number of the members varies showing at the same time great 
dispersion. This can be accounted for by the activity of the organization, the size of 
the local computer capacities and all the attracting factors that influence individual 
activity and willingness to participate. It is obvious that higher growth in the 
number of the members can be put at the time of the period of 1984-87, the circle 
of those interested in computer technology not just in general but professionally as 
well is on the increase. 
Particularly in the private sphere the most widely used type of computers in 
Hungary today is the  Commodore.  The owners of such computers formed the 
Commodore Association  which is regarded as the other important social-
professional organization of computer science in Hungary today. 
The Association is a purposive business venture and advertising activity at the 
same time, since the allowances accompanying membership serve both the spread 
of the hardware and software stock and close attachment to the product. 
18 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 14  shows the regional distribution of the members of the  Commodore 
Association  according to the individual counties and within them according to the 
types of settlements. /Here private persons and institutions figure together but in 
the latter case individual interests are embodied as well./ It can be seen again that 
the activity of the regional centres and large cities is powerful. For  Miskolc, Szeged, 
Debrecen  and maybe Pecs  unite most of the  members from among the county-seats, 
while the second group includes  Gy6r, Szekesfehervdr, Veszprem, Kaposvdr, Szolnok, 
Kecskemit  and Nytregyhdza  where interest in computer technology is perceptible. In 
addition to these some other centres — where the higher educational and economic 
base is significant — make use of the services provided by the Association. 
In analysing the private sphere we may not disregard the media of innovation 
and their spatial appearance, namely the examination of the subscribers of journals 
and periodicals on computer technology. I carried out the analysis of two widely 
distributed journals  IMikro Magazin, Computer World 
Szamittistechnikal  and of 

four pronouncedly professional periodicals  lInfomiaci6 Elektronika, Magyar 
Elektronika, Hiradastechnika, Mere s ess Automatikal  on the basis of the domiciles of 
the subscribers and the number of copies subscribed to projected to the number of 
the inhabitants. 
In Figure 4 I indicated the settlements where the number of the subscribers is 
of perceptible magnitude /that is minimum one journal-one subscriber per 1,000 
inhabitants/. The towns show the highest values. Some non-urban settlements also 
have a significant concentration of subscribers /industrial settlements with low 
population/. In the zones of the country that are poor in towns the number of 
subscribers is either low or non-existent and it can be observed that basically in the 
/commuting/ zones of the town environs quantifiable values also emerge. 
The knowledge about computer technology disseminated by the journals is 
concentrated in the towns and the attracted settlements of the town environs also 
excel in this respect but the journals do not already reach some zones of the 
country /regions with tiny villages, depression zones, underdeveloped regions/, 
therefore the number of the interested people — and with this the possibilities of 
adaption — are limited and strongly determined. 
The whole activity of the private sphere in computer technology is basically 
concentrated in the large centres and the centres with definite and significant 
economic potential /small towns/. We can conclude that the presence of the devices 
of computer technology is also significant in the zones of agglomeration and 
commuting zones.  A lot of settlements of the other zones of the country do not have 
access to the application of this innovation-bearing device even through the private 
sphere, which is due to the lack of intellectual resources or their unfavourable 
composition. 
19 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
SUMMARIZING 
In Hungary computer technology has penetrated into the various spheres of 
life, widely manifesting itself at work and in the working processes but it also crops 
up in the homes, families and private life. It is spreading relatively rapidly in many 
directions with a trend which is still exponential, nevertheless in certain centres and 
activities the first signs of saturation can be already discerned. Computer 
technology is communicated by the market mechanisms, competitive organizations 
have been formed, a lot of which are well provided with capital and participate 
actively in the forming of the market and there are the small flexible intermediary, 
organizing and management businesses which stimulate competition and increase 
supply. 
The market, the devices and services of computer technology are concentrated 
in the capital of the country.  Budapest  today is the only innovation centre of this 
activity that can be classically  designated.  In other words the market processes start 
and are concentrated here. This applies to both the large-scale ventures well 
provided with capital and the small flexible organizations, that is  Budapest  is the 
centre of the intellectual capacity managing and organizing this market. In the big 
cities of the country organization of supply of computer technology is lower by 
dimensions, the organizations there are generally local offices, subsidiary companie, 
of the organizations of  Budapest  and less frequently ventures relying on local 
resources. Nevertheless, more and more of the latter organizations managed to 
achieve a break-through on the regional and national markets. The supply of 
machinery, devices and specialists in the big cities is the multiple of that of the 
other settlements. Consequently the economic organizations there are closely 
related to computer technology. These centres concentrate the references of 
computer technology in the extra-economic spheres as well, the differences in these 
fields of activity are, however, already extremely significant. Although computers 
appeared in the network of medium-sized and small towns, in their economic 
organizations, it took place in a very differentiated way. For the great variety of the 
organizations and activities implies great differences in the equipment and the 
degree of supply. In the extra-economic spheres the spreading is not significant yet, 
alleged centres come and go but their equipment is often related to their 
specialized functions. In the villages the presence of computer technology can be 
perceived in the centres where the economic and service activities are organized 
and managed, namely in the economic centres of micro-zonnes. it is difficult to 
point out and demonstrate the further spread of computer technology in the 
villages. In the agglomeration zones of several large centres or in the industrial, 
agricultural villages with standard economic potential the presence of computers is 
tangible even in the private sphere but these villages appear in each case separate. 
In the spread of the culture and knowledge of computer technology the 
provision of schools with computers has played a determining role. In numerous 
20 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
counties with less developed or rather traditional economic structure the 
possibilities involved by this project were recognized and the schools were flooded 
with computers. At the same time in other places where significant economic 
potential has been accumulated, the support of education in this direction is still 
moderate and restrained. The future, however, can be established only through the 
quick replacement of the present computer stock, the development of the 
peripheries and the diffusion of the many-sided educational and learning 
programmes because the composition and equipment of the current stock is 
obsolete and out-of-date. The computer supply of higher education is also 
differentiated. Several university, college centres are just about to adopt and apply 
computer technology, while, for example, some smaller institutions have already 
taken important steps in introducing this infrastructural element of education and 
research. Unfortunately, the composition of the machinery in higher education is 
extremely heterogeneous and in several places — maybe everywhere — it has 
unfavourable composition of age. 
The computer supply of the community centres that provide for culture, free-
time activities and aptitude-developing is depressingly primitive. They cannot 
comply with their tasks or services with the help of the present stock and cannot 
become centres disseminating and transmitting knowledge on computer technology. 
In the private sphere it is not easy to register the presence of computer 
technology or, in particular, to demonstrate its composition on the level of the 
regions and settlements. It can be concluded by all means that in the large centres 
the presence of the devices and activities is more active, while in the medium-sized 
and small towns only their occasional presence can be found. In the rural regions 
„white spots" indicate the lack of the spread of computer technology. This 
monotony is sometimes broken by some settlements where their presence, however, 
is also accidental. 
The regional spread of computer technology has started in Hungary. Its pace 
and intensity are closely connected with the changes of the society and economy, 
therefore it can be expected that the regional structure of supply will have become 
more balanced by the turn of the millennium. 
21 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
REFERENCES 
Informatika Franciaorszagban - ma. (1986). (Information Science in France -
Today). Budapest: Kozponti Statisztikai Hivatal 
MASUDA, Y. (1988): Az informdcios tdrsadalom mint posztindusztridlis tdrsadalom. 
(Information Society as a Post-industrial Society). Budapest: Orszagos Mfiszaki 
Informaci6s Kozpont es Konyvtar 
RECHNITZER J. (1989): A szamttastechnika ten:tied tetjedese Magyaroszagon. 
(Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary). Tanulmanyok, elemzesek, 
dokumentumok, javaslatok. Gyor: MTA Regionalis Kutatasok Kozpontja Eszak-
Dunantfili Osztaly 
RUTTKAY E. (1988): Innovaciora alkalmas tersegek Magyarorszagon. 
(Innovation-prone Zones in Hungary).  Kutatas-fejlesztes.  no. 3-4, pp. 232-242. 
SZABO J.  (ed.) (1986):  Tanultnanyok az informaciagazdasagrdl.  (Studies on 
Information Economy). Budapest: Orszagos Mfiszaki Informacios Kozpont 6s 
Konyvtar, Kozponti Statisztikai Hivatal 
22 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
TABLES AND FIGURES 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 1 
Regional location of computers in the 70's 
Computer stock 
The number of population 
Naming 
/pieces/ 
per 1 computer /1000 persons/ 
1972 
1975 
1977 
1979 
1972 
1979 
Big Cities 
Budapest 
125 
281 
387 
467 
16 

Debrecen 


14 
16 
43 
12 
Gr5r 



11 
36 
11 
Miskolc 


11 
11 
47 
19 
P6cs 




157 
24 
Szeged 


10 
12 
67 
14 
Big cities altogether 
139 
321 
438 
524 
20 

Counties 
Baranya 


Bilcs-Kiskun 



142 
13Ekes 



145 
Borsod-Abatij-Zempl6n 

11 
23 
35 
Csongrid 



467 
Fej6r 

16 
13 
27 
133 
16 
Gy6r-Sopron 



214 
Hajdii-Bihar 



552 
Heves 




68 
50 
Komirom 




265 
40 
Negrad 



80 
Pest 


11 
17 
152 
57 
Somogy 



120 
Szabolcs-Szatmar 




297 
Szolnok 




218 
56 
Tolna 




84 
266 
Vu 



143 
Veszprem 




208 
55 
Zala 



105 
Counties altogether 
22 
60 
75 
122 
380 
68 
Sumtotal 
161 
381 
513 
646 
64 
16 
Sources: SarnitsfstechnikaiStatisztikai Eviiinyv. 1972, 1976, 1978, 1982 (Statistical 
Yearbook of 
Computer Technology. 1972., 1976., 1978., 1980.). Budapest: KOzponti Statisztikai Hivatal 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 2 
Yearly rates of growth of computer stock (%) 
Naming 
1983 
1984 
1985 
1986 
1987 
Budapest 
174 
191 
165 
186 
148 
The provinces 
211 
253 
207 
205 
184 
Source: SzimItistechnikai Statisztikai Zsebkonyy, 1988 
(Statistical Pocket Manual of Computer 
Technology). Budapest: KOzponti Statisztikai Hivatal 
Table 3 
Change of the capacity of the computer stock between 1985 and 1988 
1985 
1988 
Change /%/ 
Naming 
Capacity 
Proportion 
Capacity 
Proportion 
/thousand Kbyte/ 
/To/ 
/thousand Kbyte/ 
/%/ 
Central region 
Budapest capital 
891.9 
60.8 
6,610.9 
50.9 
741 
Pest county 
39.5 
2.7 
451.8 
33 
1,144 
Northern Transdanubia region 
Fejer county 
73.1 
5.0 
294.8 
2.3 
403 
Gy6r-Sopron county 
29.4 
2.0 
374.0 
2.9 
1,272 
Komiirom county 
28.4 
2.0 
440.6 
3.4 
1,551 
Vas county 
13.9 
1.0 
202.1 
1.6 
1,477 
Veszprim county 
28.2 
1.9 
4163 
3.2 
1,477 
Southern Transdanubia region 
Baranya county 
39.3 
2.7 
308.5 
2.4 
785 
Somogy county 
23.8 
1.6 
165.9 
2.0 
1,117 
l'olna county 
15.4 
1.0 
170.4 
1.3 
1,107 
Zala county 
28.2 
1.9 
416.5 
3.2 
1,477 
Northern part of Great Plain region 
Hajdti-Bihar county 
47.3 
3.2 
447.2 
3.4 
946 
Szabolcs-Szatmar county 
1.5.7 
1.1 
255.7 
2.0 
1,629 
Szolnok county 
23.2 
1.6 
322.9 
2.5 
1,392 
Southern part of Great Plain region 
Becs-Kiskun county 
16.3 
1.1 
364.0 
2.8 
2,233 
Bikes county 
17.6 
1.2 
225.6 
1.7 
1,282 
Csongred county 
38.4 
2.6 
528.8 
4.1 
1,377 
Northern Hungary region 
Borsod-Abatij-Zemplen county  71.5 
4.9 
5343 
4.1 
748 
Heves county 
133 
0.9 
250.6 
1.9 
1,856 
NOgnid county 
11.4 
0.8 
97.7 
0,8 
859 
The provinces altogether 
574.1 
39.2 
6,368.1 
49.1 
1,109 
Sumtotal 
1,466.0 
100.0 
12,979.0 
100.0 
885 
Source: Special data by Computer Technology Department of the Central Statistical Office. 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 4 
Distribution of computer stock and capacity according to settlement types in 1988 
Computer stock 
Computer capacities 
Naming 
in pieces 
distribution (%) 
in 1000 Kbyte 
distribution (%) 
Budapest capital 
31,857 
57.5 
6,611 
50.9 
County seats 
13,154 
23.8 
3,648 
28.1 
Other towns 
7,298 
13.2 
1,777 
13.7 
Villages 
3,048 
5.5 
943 
7.3 
The provinces altogether 
23,500 
42.5 
6,368 
49.1 
Sumtotal 
55,357 
100.0 
12,979 
100.0 
Source: Special data by Computer Technology Department of the Central Statistical Office 
Table 
Distribution of computer stock and capacity according to settlement size in 1988 
Computer stock 
Computer capacities Distribution 
Naming 
in 
distri- 
in 
distri- 
of the 
pieces 
bution 
1000 Kb 
bution 
settlements' 
(%) 
(%) 
population 
Settlements with population over 100,000 
8,575 
36.5 
2,320 
36.4 
20.4 
Settlements with population of 50-100,000 
5,199 
22.1 
1,469 
23.1 
14.2 
Settlements with population of 20-50,000 
4,495 
19.1 
979 
15.4 
20.8 
Settlements with population of 10-20,000 
2,033 
8.6 
533 
8.4 
16.7 
Settlements with population of 5-10,000 
920 
3.9 
380 
6.0 
12.2 
Settlements with population of 2-5,000 
1,259 
5.4 
374 
5.9 
11.4 
Settlements with population of 1-2,000 
722 
3.1 
226 
3.5 
3.2 
Settlements with population of 500-1,000 
240 
1.0 
70 
1.1 
1.0 
Settlements with population below 500 
57 
0.3 
17 
0.2 
0.1 
Source: Special data by Computer Technology Department of the Central Statistical Office 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
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Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 7 
Regional distribution of small businesses supporting technical innovation 
(June of 1987) 
Business partnerships in 
Business partnerships in 
computer technical 
Capital and 
technology designing innovation 
county 
other 
Altogether 
villages 
counties 
and 
and 
development seats 
towns 
organization engineering 
Budapest 
328 
327 
48 


703 
Baranya 
21 
17 

40 


42 
136cs-Kiskun 
22 
34 

30 
25 

59 
BikEs 
12 
23 

19 
13 

37 
Borsod-Abauj-Z. 
16 
21 

33 


46 
Csongritd 
56 
23 

67 
15 

82 
Fejer 
57 
24 

61 
21 

88 
Gydr-Sopron 
32 
26 

45 
15 

61 
Hajdu-Bihar 
26 
19 

44 


47 
Heves 






10 
Komarom 
24 
35 

24 
19 

51 
Nogriid 



13 


18 
Pest 
54 
36 
10 
60 
50 
110 
Somogy 
15 
24 

25 
16 

42 
Szabolcs-Szatmir 
10 
14 

23 


27 
Szolnok 

20 

20 


29 
Tolna 

23 
18 


31 
Vas 

13 
14 


18 
Veszprdm 
15 
11 

18 


27 
Zala 

31 

25 
16 

42 
Altogether 
730 
736 
104 
528 
240 
99 
1,570 
Source: RuttkayE  1988. 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 8 
Distribution of schools on the basis of supply with computers 
(Academic years 1986/87, 1987/88) 
Proportion of schools 
Type of schools 
Years 
Number of 
without 
with 1 
with 2-4 
with 5 or more 
schools 
computer 
computer 
computers 
computers 
Primary school 
1986/87 
3,540 
49.7 
18.2 
23.2 
8.9 
1987/88 
3,541 
22.6 
11.1 
30.2 
36.1 
Secondary school 
1986/87 
587 
8.0 
1.2 
33.2 
57.6 
1987/88 
608 
7.7 
0.5 
10.2 
81.6 
Vocational school 
1986/87 
278 
22.3 
3.6 
48.9 
25.2 
1987/88 
284 
19.4 
1.8 
23.2 
55.6 
Sources: Statisztikai Tijekortat6. A mtfveldcffsi efgazat szamIdstechnikai eszkozellitottsdp. 1986, 
1987, 198&  (Statistical Bulletin. Supply of cultural branch with computers. 1986., 1987., 1988.) 
Budapest: Tudomenyszervezesi Fs Informatikai Intizet 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 9 
Regional distribution of the  computer supply of schools 
Supply of 
Naming 
primary schools 
secondary schools 
vocational schools 
in 
in 
in 
1986 
1988 
1986 
1988 
1986 
1988 
Central region 
Budapest capital 
244 
69 
64 
33 
297 
133 
Pest county 
348 
87 
57 
30 
135 
70 
Northern Transdanubia region 
Fej6r county 
457 
61 
72 
30 
85 
28 
Gy6r-Sopron county 
200 
70 
64 
29 
203 
83 
Komarom county 
314 
86 
70 
32 
185 
90 
Vas county 
385 
82 
68 
23 
117 
51 
Veszprim county 
252 
63 
50 
23 
194 
88 
Southern Transdanubia region 
Baranya county 
225 
77 
60 
31 
161 
82 
Somogy county 
174 
76 
50 
25 
109 
57 
Tolna county 
241 
64 
48 
23 
225 
63 
Zala county 
163 
66 
62 
23 
222 
88 
Northern part of Great Plain region 
Hajdii-Bihar county 
270 
71 
79 
39 
232 
90 
Szabolcs-Szatmar county 
273 
76 
64 
20 
223 
67 
Szolnok county 
278 
83 
48 
19 
174 
47 
Southern part of Great Plain region 
Bacs-Kiskun county 
190 
50 
60 
22 
161 
67 
Etekes county 
280 
54 
74 
25 
164 
56 
Csongrad county 
175 
75 
66 
170 
72 
Northern Hungary region 
Borsod-Abauj-Zemplen county 289 
65 
64 
26 
220 
72 
Heves county 
282 
79 
102 
27 
113 
86 
N6grad county 
239 
85 
52 
25 
149 
64 
Altogether 
252 
72 
64 
28 
177 
72 
Source: Special data by Computer Technology Department of the Central Statistical Office 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 10 
Computer supply of the institutions of higher education 
Number of students 
Counties 
per 1 computer in 
1986 
1987 
Baranya 
23 
25 
Bilcs-Kiskun 
25 
13 
&kis 
25 
39 
Borsod-Abatij-Zemplin 
12 
14 
C.songrid 
36 
28 
Fejir 
19 

Grffr-Sopron 
19 
14 
Hajdli-Bihar 
19 
15 
Heves 
43 
24 
Komgrom 

N6grild 
17 
13 
Pest 
14 

Somogy 
60 
 10 
Szabolcs-Szatmiir 
27 
41 
Szolnok 
28 
21 
Tolna 

Vas 


Veszprim 


Zala 
29 
12 
Budapest capital 
16 
13 
Total 
20 
15 
Sources: Statisztikai Tajekortat6. A mdveedesi Igazat szimitastechnikai eszk8zdltitottsap 1986, 1987., 
1988.  (Statistical Bulletin. Supply of cultural branch with computers. 1986., 1987., 1988.) 
Budapest: Tudomanyszervezisi is Informatikai Intizet 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 11 
Computer supply of cultural services in 1987 
Rate of community  Book stock of Number of members 
Number of 
centres with 
library 
of study circles 
Counties 
secondary school 
computers /%/ 
/1, 000 pieces/ in Houses of Children 
teachers 
per 1 computer 
Baranya 
7.6 
1,691 
95 
42 
Bics-Kiskun 
12.8 
441 
114 
62 
Bikes 
9.4 
367 
98 
38 
Borsod-Aballj-Zemplen 
9.8 
374 
78 
123 
Csongrild 
26.1 
968 
63 
Fejer 
18.2 
672 
85 
28 
Gy6r-Sopron 
8.5 
373 
49 
88 
Hajdu-Bihar 
27.8 
188 
75 
74 
Heves 
10.5 
215 
70 
53 
Komilrom 
11.8 
617 
51 
81 
N6graid 
5.1 
218 
89 
18 
Pest 
12.5 
1,644 
150 
96 
Somogy 
11.2 
583 
37 
Szabolcs-Szatmtir 
7.3 


37 
Szolnok 
23.6 
177 
175 
54 
Tolna 
13.1 
1,258 
159 

Vas 
3.2 
157 
241 
36 
Veszprdm 
10.4 
304 
148 
40 
Zala 
4.9 
259 
82 
39 
Budapest capital 
57.5 
1,686 
83 
182 
Total 
12.2 
429 
91 
53 
Sources: Stadsztikai Tajdkortat6 A mitveleddsi Igazat sztimItastechnikai eszkrizelltitottstfp. 1986, 
1987., 1988.  (Statistical Bulletin. Supply of cultural branch with computers. 1986., 1987., 1988.) 
Stadsztikai Ttijdkortat6. Kiizdpfokti oktatis. 1988 
(Statistical Bulletin. Secondary education. 
1988.) 
Statisztikai Tijekortato. MATI6dds. 1986 
(Statistical Bulletin. Culture. 1986.) Budapest: 
Tudomanyszervezisi Es Informatikai IntEzet 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 12 
Number of the members of the Janos Neumann Society of Computer Science 
in the county seats in 1987 according to the year of joining 
Number of members joined in 
Number of members 
County seats 
1971-75 
1976-80 
1981-83 
1984-87 
in 1987 
Budapest capital 
297 
394 
491 
1,212 
2,394 
Tatabanya 

16 

54 
77 
Salgdtarjan 


15 
37 
54 
Eger 

10 

33 
53 
Miskolc 
10 
26 
11 
40 
87 
Nyiregyhaza 

28 
16 
80 
126 
Debrecen  
21 
21 
45 
97 
184 
Szolnok 

24 

20 
54 
13ikescsaba 

16 

40 
60 
Kecskemet 

22 
16 
22 
64 
Szeged 
14 
21 
43 
88 
166 
Szekszard 
22 
15 
38 
75 
Kaposvar 



28 
40 
Pecs 
14 
12 
21 
87 
134 
Szekesfehervir 
12 
43 
11 
63 
129 
Veszprem 



25 
38 
Gydr 

14 

22 
41 
Szombathely 

26 
21 
18 
67 
Zalaegerszeg 

19 

23 
52 
County seats altogether 
94 
330 
262 
815 
1,501 
Total 
391 
724 
753 
2,027 
3,895 
Source: Special data by the Janos Neumann Society of Computer Science 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
Table 13 
Regional distribution of the members of the Commodore Association in 1987 
(persons) 
Number of members of the association in 
Counties 
Total 
county seats 
towns 
villages 
Baranya 
64 
13 
21 
98 
Bacs-Kiskun 
30 
46 
34 
110 
Bkis 
18 
42 
18 
78 
Borsod-Abatij-Zemplin 
82 
38 
22 
142 
C,songraid 
84 
56 
12 
152 
Fejer 
35 
37 

79 
Gydr-Sopron 
39 
37 
11 
87 
Hajdtl-Bihar 
90 
13 
24 
127 
Heves 
27 
31 
18 
76 
Komarom 
28 
48 
17 
93 
N6grid 
14 


31 
Pest 

76 
129 
205 
Somogy 
35 
18 
21 
74 
Szabolcs-Szatmilr 
29 
14 
19 
62 
Szolnok 
34 
27 
16 
77 
Tolna 
16 
18 
18 
52 
Vas 
18 
13 

34 
Veszprim 
36 
43 
30 
109 
Zala 
22 
16 

42 
Counties altogether 
701 
595 
432 
1,728 
Budapest 
1,440 

1,440 
Altogether 
2,141 
595 
432 
3,168 
Source: Special data by the Commodore Association 

Rechnitzer, János: Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary. 
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
 
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Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.


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Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
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Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 1990. 22 p. 
Discussion Papers, No. 10.
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Discussion Papers 1990. No. 10. 
Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary 
The Discussion Papers series of the Centre for Regional Studies of the Hungarian 
Academy of Sciences was launched in 1986 to publish summaries of research 
findings on regional and urban development. 
The series has 3 or issues a year. It will be of interest to geographers, economists, 
sociologists, experts of law and political sciences, historians and everybody else who 
is, in one way or another, engaged in the research of spatial aspects of socio-
economic development and planning. 
The series is published by the Centre for Regional Studies. 
Individual copies are available on request at the Centre. 
Postal address: 
Centre for Regional Studies of Hungarian Academy of Sciences 
P.O. Box 199, 7601 PECS 
HUNGARY 
Phone: (72) 12-755 
Fax: (72) 10-390 
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Director general: Gyargy ENYEDI 
Editor: Laszlo HRUBI 
* * * 
Forthcoming  in the Discussion Papers series: 
Types of Social Infrastructure in Hungary 
by 
Tamas SIKOS T. 

Discussion Papers 1990. No. 10. 
Regional Spread of Computer Technology in Hungary 
Papers published in the  Discussion Papers series 
No. 1 OROSZ, Eva (1986): Critical Issues in the Development of Hungarian 
Public Health with Special Regard to Spatial Differences 
No. 2 ENYEDI, Gyorgy — ZENTAI, Viola (1986): Environmental Policy in 
Hungary 
No. 3 HAJDU, Zoltin (1987): Administrative Division and Administrative 
Geography in Hungary 
No. 4 SIKOS T., Tamas (1987): Investigations of Social Infrastructure in Rural 
Settlements of Borsod County 
No. 5 HORVATH, Gyula (1987): Development of the Regional Management of 
the Economy in East-Central Europe 
No. 6 PALNE KOVACS, Ilona (1988): Chance of Local Independence in 
Hungary 
No. 7 FARAGO, Laszlo — HRUBI, Lasz16 (1988): Development Possibilities of 
Backward Areas in Hungary 
No. 8 SZORENYINE KUKORELLI, Iren (1990): Role of the Accessibility in 
Development and Functioning of Settlements 
No. 9 ENYEDI, Gyorgy (1990): New Basis for Regional and Urban Policies in 
East-Central Europe