Discussion Papers 1999. 
Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration 69-85. p.
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
69 
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM AND REGIONAL 
DEVELOPMENT IN TRANSITION (1987-1997) 
ZOLTAN GAL 
In this essay I would like to give a short overview of the spatial structure and the 
development tendencies of the banking network on the regional and settlement level 
which occurred during the first decade of two-tier banking. Allocation of branches of 
the banking institutions plays an important role, not only in the development of the 
national economy as a whole, but in the development of the local and regional econo-
my, in innovation and, last but not least, in the organisation of production and service 
sectors. The elements of the banking network connect to regional development as the 
supply section of the business services therefore the density and the number of banks 
and their branches are an important indicator of regional economic development. 
Surveys on the regional structure of banking are all the more important because in 
the last decade the Hungarian banking system underwent fundamental transformation 
followed by bankruptcies, bank consolidation, privatisation processes, sometimes 
accompanied by strong state intervention. The role of the state in these processes very 
often became a bone of political contention. 
DEVELOPMENT AND SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF THE HUNGARIAN 
BANKING SYSTEM 
(1987-1997) 
The first important step forward in the modernisation of the Hungarian financial 
sector was the creation of the two-tier banking system in 1987, which was more adapt-
ed to a market environment. Following this Act, the National Bank of Hungary, per-
forming primarily central bank functions, and the institutionally-separated commercial 
banks were set up in January 1987. Commercial banks who originally had corporate 
clientele were admitted to the retail market, while financial institutions were given 
commercial banking licenses. 
If we take ten years of development in the banking system into consideration it can 
be divided into different periods. The short period between 1989-1992 was the peak 
time for foundation of new banks. Competition was also increased by the entrance of 
the new foreign-owned and joint-venture banks founding their own subsidiary banks in 
Budapest. 
After the period of rapid and extensive expansion the banking- system was charac-
terised between 1992-1995 by the first bankruptcies and failures. This automatically 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
70 
ZOLTAN GAL 
led to the loss of market shares of the Hungarian owned banks and strengthened the 
position of foreign banks. Pecuniary difficulties of the mainly state-owned banks made 
inevitable the restructuring of the Hungarian banking sector, together with the loan, 
bank and debtor consolidation. The main purpose of bank consolidation and privatisa-
tion was to decrease the percentage of state ownership in the banking sector to at least 
below 25%. 
In the third period, commencing in 1995, a stabilised and a more competitive bank-
ing system emerged, characterised by successful privatisation of the banking system 
resulting a slower expansion in the banking from 1996 onward. In this latter period of 
development the branch network expansion was one of the major phenomena. This 
was due to business policies of banks shifting from the corporate to the retail market, 
intending to gain more of the market shares through easier access to retail customers, 
and on the other hand strengthening the competition which force mainly foreign banks 
without branches to build networks in order to hold their ground. 
One of the most important alterations in the Hungarian banking system was that the 
role of foreign capital in ownership was determined.  (Table 1)  As the consequence of 
foreign capital inflow into the Hungarian banking, the structure of ownership was 
entirely transformed; parallel with the process of the significant decrease in state own-
ership (17% recently), shares of foreign capital attained 65% of the banking system, 
Table 1 
Proportion of foreign capital in the Hungarian banking system 
1987 
1991 
1996 


ope 
Germany 

260 
0.4 
884 
0.7 

15  503 
7.4 


260 
0.4 

3 817 
3.1 

14  508 
6.9 

110 
0.2 

884 
0.7 

4 987 
2.4 
Italy 

110 
0.2 

1 419 
1.1 

4 427 
2.1 
Holland 


0.0 

1 220 
1.0 

2  701 
1.3 
Russia 


0.0 


0.0 

3  500 
1.7 
America 
USA 

806 
1.3 

1 660 
1.3 

9  802 
4.7 
Far East 
Japan 

110 
0.2 

1 434 
1.2 

4  893 
2.3 
Korea 


0.0 

3 154 
2.5 

6 094 
2.9 
International banks 
EBRD, IFC, CECD 

150 
0.2 

803 
0.6 

8  510 
4.0 
Others  


0.0 

1 652 
0.8 
10 
9  759 
4.6 
Sum-total 
3  1 910 
3.1 
17 
16 685 
13.6 
29 
84  684  40.3 
1 Foreign bank shares in number of Hungarian banks 
2 Amount of foreign capital in registered capital (million HUF) 
3 Proportion of foreign capital in the total registered capital of Hungary (%) 


Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
71 
gaining a majority of market shares within a short time. This very high proportion of 
foreign capital is unique not only compared with Poland (where it was 8.5% in 1994) 
but in the European context it is also one of the highest. (In the UK 53% of ownership 
is foreign, but in Finland it is only 1%, in Germany 2%). The main investors are, 
according to the portion of invested capital, still the leading German and Austrian 
entrepreneurs, following by the American, Dutch, French, Japanese and Korean 
investors. Activity of the Dutch banks is indicated by the fact that all the top-ranking 
Dutch banks opened subsidiaries in Hungary (ABN Amro, ING, Rabobank) but 
British banks are conspicuous by their absence. 
To summarise the role of foreign capital in the Hungarian banking system it can be 
said that such a rapid process of privatisation of banking without foreign capital inflow 
would have been impossible. Foreign capital investment has contributed significantly 
to the growth of international competitiveness of Hungarian banking. (Per capita 
investment of foreign capital accounted for 1,520 USD in Hungary, compared to 680 
USD in the Czech Republic and 318 USD in Poland till 1996.) 
In contrast to Hungarian traditions, a specialised rather than universal banking sys-
tem has been created, sorting different type of banks by functions (32 commercial 
banks, 8 specialised banks, mortgage banks and building societies, 246 co-operative 
savings banks). Compared to the network which existed at the turn of the century 
(when the number of independent banks scattered throughout the countryside were 
overshadowed within the banking network, and there were proportionally few branch-
es in banking before World War I, consequently only 5.7% of the network was concen-
trated in Budapest), the recent banking system is characterised by strong spatial 
concentration.  (Figure 1) 
The fact that all the banks except one are based and headquartered in Budapest 
results in a deformed structure in the banking system. Banking in Hungary is still the 
most centralised branch of the economy with a definite centre in Budapest. The lead-
ing position of Budapest in the financial sectors, especially in banking and insurance, is 
more striking than in any other sectors. Consequently local and regional banks are 
missing from the Hungarian banking system. (However, this strongly monopolistic 
structure is more in line with international tendencies, which are characterised by 
overconcentration at the global level; in contrast to other transitional economies, such 
as Poland, where the role of regional banking is significant.) Branches of banks based 
in Budapest have much less room for making independent decisions than the branches 
of county seats during the communist period. 
In contrast to the concentration processes in the global markets the growing signifi-
cance of regionalism requires establishment of the regional money markets and insti-
tutions financing regional policies. The boom of private enterprise, privatisation, the 
necessity of their presence in the local markets and competition for the retail markets 
also requires the expansion of the banking network in the countryside. Besides the cor-
porate and the retail market project, financing will be one of the most profitable busi-
nesses for banks which have to support the regional development programmes through 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
72 
ZOLTAN GAL 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
73 
financing infrastructural, power and telecommunicational investment and co-operating 
with regional and local administrations. 
From the deformed spatial structure of the banking network of the early 1990s arose 
more difficulties: 
-
Lower density of the network meant both the low level of availability of 
branch offices and the higher structural polarisation of the branch net-
work. On the one hand this meant that the rapid expansion of banking, 
initially concentrated almost exclusively in Budapest, was not followed by 
the extension of the branch network at a rapid pace in the countryside. 
On the other hand the new banks established in 1987 inherited a particu-
lar branch network from the National Bank of Hungary, since branches 
were missing from certain county seats, accompanied with a spatial- 
regional asymmetry. 
-
The other marginal pole of the national banking system is the dense net- 
work of the co-operative savings banks scattered throughout the country-
side. The most important disadvantages of these are their weak financial 
standing and lack of strong centres or headquarters. Despite the number 
of co-operative savings banks being 1,740, thereby accounting for 64% of 
the total national network, most of these small savings banks situated in 
the smaller towns and villages have a very low capital circulation and can 
supply only a narrow range of services. 
The start of the 1980s and 1990s was the first period of boom in the establishment of 
banks: 17 commercial banks founded about 350 branches, concentrating 85% of the 
new offices into the provincial cities. During the next period of the two-tier banking 
system between 1992-1996 the network was considerably restructured. Expansion of 
the banking system was restricted very much by the huge inherited debt imposed a 
large burden on the institutions. The smaller banks went bankrupt (Ybl Bank), others 
were liquidated (Dunabank, Iparbankhaz) or some of them were merged. The big 
banks rescheduled their policy of network building and a few closed some of their 
branch offices, but the other banks such as Budapest Bank and Postabank started a 
spectacular growth in network expansion. Accordingly, between 1992-1996 the number 
of banking institutions decreased due to the bankruptcies, mergers and the purchasing 
processes of privatisation. In only two years (1995-1996), six banks were liquidated or 
merged into other commercial banks.  (Figure 2) 
The foreign-owned banks started to expand their branch network (by purchase 
through privatisation and opening new branches) later and more cautiously. There are 
different reasons for this policy. On the one hand, these banks were strong enough in 
terms of capital intensiveness, therefore they could adjust the pace of network building 
to their own pace of development. On the other hand, foreign-owned banks were first 
of all interested in corporate banking supplying services for the joint-stock companies. 
However, the foreign owned banks switched to rapid expansion, gaining both larger 
market shares and leading positions in terms of profitability, and grew more rapidly 
than the bigger banksl. 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
74 
ZOLTAN GAL 
Figure 2 
Branch network of Hungarian commercial banks, 1997 (not including OTP) 
37 
140 
120 
100 
•••C 
el 
/.3 
4E' 
60 
.4% 

45 
40 
23   21 
20 
20 
1c 
14 14 12 
ri  8 8 8 7 
3 3 
 





1-f,9 111i 
.. 
.1 
Ban

• 
LQ 

1.1 
1) 


ekban
0  A 

kar

Ta
HYPO-

Banks 
Recently, the tendency of concentration has decreased due to the successful expan-
sion of the foreign-owned and medium-sized banks 2. The balance of power in the 
banking system which held sway at the end of the first decade of two-tier banking will 
be expected to readjust according to growing competition for larger market shares. 
According to surveys, a shift from the moderate deconcentration will emerge and the 
few large banks (from the group of the medium-sized and the foreign-owned ones) 
with considerable financial standing will dominate in the retail market. Besides these, 
10-15 banks will play an important role in the banking system.  (Table 2) 
REGIONAL STRUCTURE OF THE 
HUNGARIAN BANKING NETWORK 
Surveying the diffusion of the banking system by means of its geographical location 
and settlement hierarchy is very important. 
At the birth of the two-tier banking system the network was characterised by a cer-
tain spatial balance due to the evenly-allocated branches of the OTP Bank (National 
Savings Bank), located in more than 270 settlements. After the foundation of the new 
commercial banks significant spatial asymmetry occurred within the country since cer- 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
75 
Table  
Annual balance sheet footings and number of employees in the  Hungarian banking, 
1991-1996 
Date Of 
Number 
Balance sheet footings(million HUF) 
Number of emp oyees 
Owner- 
founda- 
of 
ship 
tion 
branches 
1991 
1993 
1995 
1996 
1991 
1993 
1995 
Big banks 
I.  on. 
1949 
423 
669 599 
830 958  1072 777  1256 085 
12  659 
14 367 
2. Postabank 
1988 
41 
89 863 
168 085 
269 632 
378 718 
987 
1  472 
2  173 
3. KIIB 
1987 
174 
214 234 
231  723 
342 294 
360 003 
3 891 
4  112 
3 837 
4. MKB 
1950 
20 
238 319 
238  293  330 516 
347 901 
1  500 
1  512 
1  333 
5.  11.1H11' 
1987 
78 
321  824 
357 463 
246 091 
250 873 
4  180 
4 322 
3 095 
6. Budapest Bank 
1986 
74 
146 067 
156 61(5 
212 931 
225 380 
2 085 
2 952 
2 831 
7. CIB 
1979 
1) 
35  000 
76 010 
144 113 
175 021 
267 
184 
174 
8. C1B Hungaria 
1988 
12 
26 341 
45  135  126 424 
134 712 
.. 
168 
268 
9. Creditanstalt 
1990 
12 
28 400 
27 202 
77 074 
116 119 
111 
193 
343 
Medium-sized banks 
10. Raiffeisen Unicbank 
1986 
28 450 
36 083 
77 117 
109 630 
88 
152 
309 
I I. Mezaankh 
1986 
29 984 
34 544 
80 883 
97 152 
41)1 
657 
720 
12. Citibank 
1985 
35  248 
36 474 
59 628 
93 196 
97 
150 
216 
13. MFB Rt. 
1991 

20 468 
57 81)5 
91 921 

117 
184 
14. IEB 
1980 
35  090 
40 540 
62 387 
91 117 
202 
323 
417 
15. ING Bank 
1991 
2 564 
20 283 
64 558 
84 005 
.. 
80 
.. 
16. Commerzbank 
1993 
11  027 
57 994 
75 270 

40 
74 
17. AEB 
1922 
19  766 
26  148 
37 970 
71 657 
270 
294 
279 
I8. Takarekbank 
1989 
36 760 
37 323 
40 360 
66 789 
281 
509 
613 
y
19. BNP- Dresdner Bank 
1990 

9 836 
15  014 
35 252 
50 639 
90 
115 
20. Credit Lyonnais 
1992 
12 577 
28 627 
42 160 
.. 
21. HYPO-Bank 
1993 
4 831 
22 349 
40 198 

3(1 
160 
22. DAEWOO Bank 
1989 
11  291 
12 854 
25 ((48 
38 774 
44 
54 
76 
23. ABN-Amro r  
1993 

5 566 
29 826 
38 430 

19 
51) 
24. EKB 
1991 
6  612 
8 71)0 
23 081 
33 631 
34 
46 
110 
25. WestLB Hungaria 
1985 
12 890 
9 186 
20 372 
31 975 
113 
122 
110 
26. Penzintezeti Kozpont 
1983 
15  364 
24 001 
29 768 

354 
244 
27. Polgari Bank 
1993 
2 900 
27 069 
29 764 

210 
291 
28. Konzum bank 
1986 
16 016 
11  725 
12 894 
27 590 
179 
332 
354 
Small banks 
N
29. Realbank 
1989 

10 200 
13  948 
16 622 
20 704 
63 
.. 
.. 
WI O
.10. Volksbank 
1992 

1  227 
9 356 
15 579 

24 
52 
.
, 0 C 0 
31. Merkantil Bank 
1988 
4 508 
5  530 
11 772 
13 689 
66 
90 
93 
32. EXIMBANK 
1994 

1  267 
5 196 
12 134 

.. 
66 
33. Corvinbank 
1984 
11)  449 
18  375 
12 558 
11 888 
91 
173 
193 
34. Porsche Bank 
1994 

500 
7 834 
7 072 

.. 
52 
35. Opel Bank 
4 630 
•--. 
36. Ilanwha Bank 
1990 
 0
4  206 
5 613 
4 551 
4 371 
65 
74 
59 
.
.. 
37. Kvantum Bank 
1991 
1  036 
1  050 
3 164 
3 581 
16 
39 
68 
38. Deutsche ;lank 
39. IC Bank 
1993 
40. RilkOczi Bank 
1992 
41. Nomura 
1991 

2 994 

 

979 
1 087 
2 330 

22 
..
.:"
.. 

1  056 
1 072 
1 689 

18 
22 
0. 
1  042 
1  037 
780 
774 

11 
10 
H - Hungarian ownership HT - majority of Hungarian sl arcs 
K- foreign ownership 

KT - majority of foreign shares 
KV - joint-venture with foreign ownership 

a  State of development at the end of 1996 
In 1995 together with balance sheet footings of Agrobank 
ABN-Amro Bank purchased 89% of MHB in 1996 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
76 
ZOLTAN GAL 
tarn banks were missing from particular regions and county seats: KHB (Commercial 
Credit Bank) dominates in the Great Plain region, MHB (National Credit Bank) in 

Northern Transdanubia and BB (Budapest Bank) around Budapest. 
The spatial appearance and the regional diffusion of the new branches of banks 
reflected the recent Hungarian economic processes: 
-
The prevailing majority of economic associations, within it the joint-ven-
ture companies and the accumulated capital outside Budapest flowed 
into the Transdanubian region, firstly into the north-western part. 
-
The structure of diffusion of the banking network had followed this spa- 
tial pattern for the first time by the beginning of the 1990s. At that time 
banks were interested mainly in building up branches in the Transdanubian 
region. This was evident because the largest unexploited territories of 
financial services were situated in Western Hungary.  (Figure 3) 
-
Significant differences among the greater regions had practically evened 
out, except in Northern Hungary, by 1990, and the disadvantage of the 
Transdanubian region came to the end. From the mid-1990s, after satura-
tion of Transdanubia, the larger cities of Eastern and Southern Hungary 
became the main targets of branch network expansion. 
There were significant differences behind the well-balanced greater regions con-
cerning network density within the regions and counties. In some counties the number 
of new branches exceeded ten between 1978-1990 (Gyor-Moson-Sopron, Baranya, 
Hajdil-Bihar), while in other places only a few branches were opened (Fejer, 
Komarom-Esztergom, Tolna) and in some counties exclusively planted only in the 
county seats (Borsod, Fejer, Szabolcs-Szatmar-Bereg). An extreme exception was 
Esztergom-Komarom county where no branch was opened between 1987-1990 in 
Figure 3 
Distribution of banking network among Hungarian regions, 1996 
Central Region 
28% 
Northern 
Northern Hungety 
Transdanubia 
10% 
23% 
Northern 
Great Plain 
10% 
Southern 
Southern 
Great Plain 
Transdanubia 
13% 
16% 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
77 
Tatabanya, the county seat, where economic depression affected its heavy industrial 
background. For instance, during the short period between 1995-1997 there was no 
increase of the branches in North-Western Transdanubia, as it was viewed as a saturat-
ed region. 
A general characteristic of the period between 1992-1996 was the growing impor-
tance of Budapest in the expansion of the branch network (319 bank offices made up 
26% of the national network in 1997). All banks starting to open new branches have 
opened 2-3 new offices in the capital city in the past five years, and last year 20 banks 
had branches there. 
Within Budapest most of the principal offices of banks are based in the inner dis-
tricts. The spatial concentration of the institutions gives a strong impetus to the forma-
tion of the central business district, where the office buildings of banks became an 
important functional-morphological element of the townscape. In 1990 about two 
thirds of the financial organisations were based in the 5th District, namely in the core 
area of the city centre itself which is still the most popular domicile for new banks. By 
the end of the 1990s business (financial) functions of the 5th District had became satu-
rated and a few years ago the financial organisations started to diffuse towards the sur-
rounding inner city districts. Despite the expansion of banks the low density of network 
in Budapest is surprising, namely one office per 7,758 inhabitants (15,000 without the 
OTP). This fact unambiguously demonstrates the low level of the extension of the 
banking network in the capital city. The lack of banking services is more striking in the 
outer area of Budapest, resulting in overcrowded city centre branches.  (Figures 4, 5) 
In Hungary the number of banking institutions is 1,319, together with 1,800 co-oper-
ative savings banks, stands at about 3,100. Taking the figures of the network density 
into account, there is one office per 3,200 inhabitants, which is still a much lower den-
sity than in the Western European counterparts, where there is one bank per 1,400-
1,500 inhabitants. In spite of the boom in the foundation of new branches (last year a 
branch office opening ceremony took place every week on average) mainly by the for-
eign and joint-ventures banks. These banks still do not have enough branches in 
Hungary, although spectacular progress has been made, especially since 1996. 24 banks 
had a nation-wide branch network in 1997.  (Figure 6) 
Surveying the banking network according to the network density figures we can find 
a few counties with lower density of banks. Szabolcs-Szatmar-Bereg and Pest counties 
are the most unsupplied areas, accounting for half of the national average in 1995. In 
the case of the former, its economic and geographical situation, the activity of entre-
preneurs, the low level of foreign capital inflow etc. would be the explanation for the 
smaller interest of the banks. In the case of Pest county, the capital city causes back-
wash effects which influence the development of the banking network. Relative to 
population, Hajdii-Bihar, Borsod-Abauj-Zemplen, Komarom-Esztergom, Nograd and 
Fejer counties were also badly supplied by banking services. These counties could be 
the main target areas of expansion in the near future. 
Surveying the distribution of the banking network according to the settlement types 
is more expedient than investigating at county level; all the more so as banking institu- 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
78 
ZOLTAN GAL 
Figure 4 
Spatial distribution of branches in Budapest, 1996 
(without branches of OTP and mutual savings banks) 
60 
50 
 
hes  40 
 
branc

 o 
30 
ber 
Num 20 
10 
10 

4 4 
rl  3 3 3 3 
 2 2 2 



Districts 
Figure 5 
Banking network density of Budapest 
(number of inhabitants per office) 
0 - 1 000 
1 000 - 5 000 
5 000 - 10 000 
10 000- 15 000 
15 000 - 53 000 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
79 
Figure 6 
Density of the Hungarian banking network 1995 
(number of inhabitants per office) 
00000 
0 001-15 000 
15 001-20000 
NS  20 001-30 000 
tions have more links to the cities and towns, therefore capital flows is an important 
indicator of the different urban processes. Since by the beginning of the 1990s the 
number of branches had exceeded the number of larger cities which had been the main 
targets of the earlier expanding banks, consequently these banks turned their interest 
towards the smaller settlements.  (Table 3) 
The first branches in villages were also opened. The selected villages usually have 
some special function: Piliscsaba, where the IEB (Inter-Europa Bank) operates an 
office, is located in the agglomeration of Budapest and is the seat of the Catholic 
University. The German-owned Volksbank has been operating a branch in 
PilisvOrtisvar, a village with a Swabian background. 
Those banks just recently started to develop their network — most of them are for-
eign owned — situating themselves solely in regional centres. As a consequence of this, 
certain larger cities (Pecs, Gyor, Szeged, Szekesfehervar), despite not being seats of a 
regional bank, have been started to play significant roles in the operation of financial 
services in which different organisations of the financial sector (banks, insurance com-
panies, consulting) attract each other mutually. This also induces increased competi-
tion in the local-regional market. 
At the beginning of the 1990s the banking network was rather more polarised, both 
hierarchically and regionally, than nowadays. A more developed network existed in the 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
80 
ZOLTAN GAL 
Table 3 
Banking services in Hungarian cities, 1996 









10 
Hungary 
10  212  300 
255  043 
305  3 216 
630 
3  175 
16  210 
79 
405 
249.7 
Budapest 
1  906  798 
108  865 
64 
253 
125 
7  537 
15  254 
430 
871 
570.9 
Countryside 
8  305  502 
146  178 
278  2 548 
505 
3  260 
16  447 
57 
289 
176.0 
Cities - altogether 
2  082  932 
61  951 
... 
436 
274 
4  777 
7  602 
142 
226 
297.4 
- In Danubian 
counties* 
736  898 
22  225 
127 
199 
305 
4  107 
8  215 
118 
230 
296 
Debrecen 
214  228 
5  481 
20 
29 
16 
7  387 
13  389 
189 
343 
255.8 
Dunairiveiros 
57  970 
1  508 



7  246 
14  493 
189 
377 
260.1 
H6dmez6visarhely 
50  631 
4  374 



6  329 
12  658 
547 
1 094 
863.9 
Miskolc 
193  905 
4  280 
19 
31 
18 
6  255 
10  773 
138 
238 
220.7 
Tarabdnya 
75  258 
1  679 

13 

5  789 
15  052 
129 
336 
223.1 
Salgetadin 
48  488 
1  060 



5  388 
8  081 
118 
177 
218,6 
Szolnok 
81  336 
2  213 
10 
16 
10 
5  084 
8  134 
138 
221 
272.1 
Nagykanizsa 
55  624 
875 

12 

4  635 
9  271 
73 
146 
157.3 
Nyiregyhiza 
119  317 
3  650 
16 
26 
14 
4  589 
8  523 
140 
261 
305.9 
Szikesfeherwir 
108  543 
3  625 
17 
25 
17 
4  342 
6  385 
145 
213 
334.0 
Kaposygr 
70  529 
2  135 
11 
17 
10 
4  149 
7  053 
126 
214 
302.7 
Szombathely 
84  745 
1  996 
16 
22 
12 
3  852 
7  062 
91 
166 
235.5 
Szeged 
173  820 
7  267 
21 
46 
20 
3  779 
8  691 
158 
363 
418.1 
Pecs 
164  872 
5  595 
25 
45 
23 
3  664 
7  168 
124 
243 
339.4 
Kecskemet 
108  345 
3  413 
19 
30 
15 
3  612 
7  223 
114 
228 
315.0 
Zalaegerszeg 
62  077 
1  663 
13 
19 
14 
3  267 
4  434 
88 
119 
267.9 
GA. 
130  244 
3  725 
26 
43 
23 
3  029 
5  663 
87 
162 
286.0 
Eger 
60  445 
1  345 
15 
20 
10 
3  022 
6  045 
67 
135 
222.5 
Bekesesaba 
67  621 
1  638 
13 
23 
13 
2  940 
5  202 
71 
126 
242.2 
Sopron 
54  311 
1  338 
12 
19 

2  858 
6  035 
70 
149 
246.4 
Veszprem 
63  553 
1  749 
14 
25 
15 
2  542 
4  237 
70 
117 
275.2 
Szekszeird 
37  070 
1  342 
12 
16 
10 
2  317 
3  707 
84 
134 
362.0 
Dunaajvaros, Tatabanya, Szekesjehervar, Pecs., Kecskemet, Gyor, Sopron, Szelazar I 

Population on January 1, 1996 

Number of enterprises with legal and non-legal entity 

Number of banks 

Number of all institutions of banking network 

Number of all institutions of banking network counted without OTP Bank and 
mutual savings banks 


Network density 1: population decline per branch 

Network density 2: population decline per branch without the branches of OTP Bank 
and mutual savings banks 


Network density 3: enterprise decline per branch 

Network density 4: enterprise decline per branch without the branches of OTP Bank 
and mutual savings banks 

10 Enterpreneurial activity: enterprise decline per population of 10,000 
Sources: Statistical Yearbook 1994 
Hungarian Almanac of Financial and Capital Markets 1995-1996 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
81 
county seats and in the cities of Western Hungary (which were targets of foreign com-
panies and banks); while in Northern Hungary and in the northern part of the Great , 
Plain the banking network is less developed than in Pest county, where the central role 
of Budapest counterbalances its disadvantage. In recent years a shift has taken place, 
levelling out the expansion of the banking network in favour of the eastern parts of the 
country. During these years the number of branches in the cities of Eastern and 
Southern Hungary increased more rapidly than in the western counterparts which 
were previously the most saturated parts of the country, considering the number of 
branches. Two years ago, Gyor, Pecs, and Szekesfehervar were considered the largest 
financial centres outside Budapest, while recently Miskolc gained the leading position 
in the number of branches (37), followed by Gyor and Kecskemet (each with 32 branch 
offices), then Pecs and Szeged (31-31), and finally by Debrecen (28) 3 . 
In conclusion it can be said that the network building expansion of branches initially 
followed the pattern of the spatial-economic division of the country, as banks mainly 
were opening branches in Western Hungary. Since the mid-1990s, owing to the process 
of nivellation, banks have started their expansion towards the eastern and southern 
parts of the country along the urban hierarchy 4.  (Figures Z 8) 
The next group of cities attracting banks consists of the other cities around the pop-
ulation mark of 100,000: Szekesfehervar, Nyiregyhaza, Szombathely. In the third city 
group 8-11 banks operate 9-15 branches: Veszprem, Kaposvar, Bekescsaba, Eger, 
Szolnok, Zalaegerszeg and finally Sopron figure in this group. 
The banking sector shows little interest in certain larger cities: Salgotarjan (6 banks 
— 6 branches), Tatabanya (6 banks — 5 branches), Szekszard (9 banks — 10 branches), 
Nagykanizsa (4 banks — 6 branches), Dunaujvaros (7 banks — 5 branches) and 
Hodmezovasarhely (4 banks — 4 branches). A few smaller towns have stronger finan-
cial functions concerning the number of branches. (Mosonmagyarovar, which is situat-
ed alongside the innovational axis between Budapest and Vienna, has 6 banks, and in 
the Danubian region in Baja, Kalocsa and Vac 4-4 banks operate.) 
In conclusion it can be seen that different banks are situated on different levels of 
network construction in the recent period of development. The share of the larger 
cities from the banking network intensively increased from 35-40% to about 50% (with 
Budapest 66%) between 1987 and the early 1990s owing to the fact that at least a 
dozen new banks entered the market and started their network development. 
Bankruptcies and the rationalisation policy of network development in the following 
period mainly affected these larger cities as the major beneficiaries of the boom in 
banking expansion. Despite several new branches opening, the proportion of larger 
cities within the banking network fell to 43% (or 63% including Budapest), parallel 
with the network diffusion towards the smaller settlements. 
Taking the expansion of the banking network into account, some experts believe 
that the spread of electronic home banking will counterbalance the traditional way of 
branch office building. According to others, whose opinion I share, there is a brighter 
future for the traditional expansion of the branch network since customers are much 
more devoted to a personal style of administration and rely more on branch offices. 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
82 
ZOLTAN GAL 
Figure 7 
Banking network of Hungarian cities, 1996 
30 
27 
27 
25 
22 
777  20  20 
20 
C3 
16 
16 
`••••. 
15 
15 
13 
12 
11 
11 
—  10 
4—, 10 





.+8 

27' 
tr 
a. 

-> 
.5. 
0. 
.4 
es 
-g 

Yf 
4,4 
tz 

Cities 
Figure 8 
Banking network of Hungarian county seats, 1998 
40 
37 
35 
32 32 31 31 
30 
Z3 
21 
21 
10 
15 
17 
17 

 
45. 
ar 
§ 
dd 
41 

.1 
herv
a. 
fe

kkes

Sz
Cities 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
THE HUNGARIAN BANKING SYSTEM 
83 
Despite the probability that virtual banking will be widespread in the future, building a 
more cost-intensive branch network is still very important. In addition, about 40% of 
the population has as yet no contact with banking. The figures for the year 1998 justify 
both these theories of the future prospects of banking. 
SUMMARY 
In surveying the spatial characteristics of the Hungarian banking system, it can be 
stated that the economic changes are very much dependent on the financial services 
which reflect the processes of economic transformation. Financial services became the 
key sector of the business services differentiated by spatial and regional development 
characteristics. The overall concentration of financial services in Budapest is a direct 
result of the general concentration of business sectors into metropolitan centres. As 
the consequences of rapid restructuring and modernisation of the economy of 
Budapest, the capital city of Hungary has become the most important innovation cen-
tre of the region, with an important bridgehead role in foreign capital inflow and 
investment within the CEE countries. 
The question is whether or not Budapest will become a regional financial centre. 
According to a number of banking experts Budapest could only hope to successfully 
apply for the position of a subordinated offshore-style regional financial centre. 
Subject to these conditions, services require a smaller amount of capital and highly 
qualified employees will come into prominence. To carry  out all this, it is necessary to 
strengthen the banking system with businesslike state intervention, but the exact date 
of the integration into the European Union may influence the development of the 
Hungarian banking system and the international role of Budapest, too. 
In evaluating the competitiveness of the Hungarian banking system, it can be said 
that the banking sector has been strengthened since 1994 and it has become a more 
profitable sector. However, progress in banking is significant only compared to the 
previous state of the banking system: by international standards, the quality of the sec-
tor is still very low. The proportion of outstanding claims, despite the significant 
decrease, is still higher than in any country of the European Union. 
Despite the general recovery in banking, the sector has remained polarised. In 1995 
70% of profit after tax was produced by banks with foreign ownership that at that time 
accounted for a quarter of the market. Their profitability and efficiency were that of 
banks with Hungarian ownership. Following the crisis, bankruptcies, consolidation and 
the redistribution of the banking market was begun and banks with backgrounds of 
foreign ownership have gained stronger positions. The strengthened competition 
decreased the interest margin and put the value of the non-interest incomes, such as 
charges and premiums, within the revenues of banks. 
In summarising the experiences of Hungarian banking it can be said that the open-
ness of this sector compared to others contributed more to the modernisation and 
competitiveness of the Hungarian banking system. Until now the activity of foreign 

Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
84 
ZOLTAN GAL 
banks has been dependent on their subsidiary companies, which have to become estab-
lished in Hungary before starting their operations. Recently the question has been 
whether the Hungarian banking system is ready to liberalise itself in order to fully 
open its market and stand its ground in the future competition within the European 
Union. 
NOTES 
By the end of 1997, IEB, MKB, CIB, Unicbank and Creditanstalt (Bank Austria) had opened quite a 
few new offices in the provinces. ING Bank acquired 14 offices of Dunabank and HYPO-Bank 
increased its branches by 14 offices within 18 months. 

While the share of the five largest banks in 1990 was 83% of the total banking sector assets, by 1997 the 
five largest and oldest banks' share had decreased to 54%, and the ten largest banks, including newly 
established and more dynamic institutions, accounted for 72% of banking assets. 

In other banking institutions such as the State Treasury, representative branches of NBH, regional head-
quarters, single branches, representative or cash office, correct spatial differences derive from the num-
ber of banks or branches. Regional centres (Gy6r, Pecs) and greater county seats (Kecskemet, 
Szekesfehervar) usually have the complete range of these institutions. 

As regards number of branches, 17 banks operate 23 branches in Gy6r but together with OTP and the 
representative of Raiffeisen Landesbank of Burgenland, the number of branches was 43. In Pecs similar-
ly 17 banks appeared with 25 branches, but the number of branches stood at 46, including the OTP 
branches (6) and mutual savings banks (17). Concentration of services is higher here because of the cen-
tral position of Pecs extending over South Transdanubia. There are several reasons why banks open 
branches in Pecs. Not only its economic environment but the highly qualified population with a multicul-
tural background, and historical inner city areas with touristic interests provides a distinguished urban 
milieu for branch development. 
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Gál, Zoltán: The Hungarian Banking System and Regional Development in Transition (1987–1997). 
In: Spatial Research in Support of the European Integration.  Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1999. 69–85. p. Discussion Papers. Special
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WACHTEL, P. (1997) 'A kiilfoldi bankok szerepe a kozep-europai atmeneti gazdasagokban, I-II.' (Role of 
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