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Gyula Harbula, circa 1989. |

Gyula Harbula in 2004. |
After 15 years of change Hungary is focusing on the future
Gyula Harbula, Hungarian hotel manager, speaks in Budapest with EBRD press
officer Axel Reiserer.
It may be a measure of how much the last 15 years have changed Hungary’s
national psyche. Once renowned for loudly exclaiming égeszségünkre (“cheers!”)
and smashing their glasses of delicious pálinka when celebrating, Hungarians
these days display a distinctively business-like attitude. Coping with the
challenges and opportunities of a thriving market economy has left little room
for excessive partying. Sobriety is the new cool in a country which used to
lead the world in cirrhosis of the liver.
Even the 15th anniversary of the end of communist rule hardly evokes any
sentiments. The country would much rather face the future than poke at its
past. Not that the Hungarians have no reason to be proud of their contribution
to the end of communism: It was here that the Iron Curtain was first
dismantled, in August 1989, and exit permits were issued to tens of thousands
of East German citizens. This was the death knell for the geriatric regime in
East Berlin. However, amidst a government crisis in Budapest this particular
anniversary passed barely noticed, despite a high-level “thank you” visit by
Germany’s chancellor Gerhard Schröder.
For Gyula Harbula, CEO of hotel operator Accor-Pannonia, the mood of
industrious concentration is entirely appropriate: “1989 was a dream come
true. It was a very exciting period in politics and business, when we regained
our liberty and freedom. But life is more complicated.” While acknowledging
the enormous progress Hungary has made since then Harbula also points out that
much remains to be done: “I do not think we are a modern society yet. We
sometimes lack flexibility, and our education and training systems are
sometimes insufficient.”
Harbula joined the company he now heads in 1965. At the time, Hungary was
attempting its first, cautious steps towards reform of socialist doctrine,
introducing elements of competition. So it happened that Pannonia, founded in
the late 1940s to focus purely on operating restaurants, after the communist
takeover and nationalisation of private enterprises, ventured into the hotel
business in 1966 on government instructions.
The idea was to create a competitor to the then monopolist HungarHotels.
Pannonia began with hotels in the Lake Balaton region, later adding lodging in
Budapest. The company expanded in the early 1980s, when Austria extended soft
loans to Hungary in exchange for facilitating travel between the two
countries. When communist rule ended in 1989, Pannonia operated 43 hotels, 100
restaurants and bars and had 4,500 employees.
Today the company runs 22 hotels with 1,500 staff.
Between these two figures lies the story of comprehensive change which so many
other companies and their employees had to master in Central and Eastern
Europe in the past 15 years. In the early 1990s Pannonia sold its restaurants
and smaller hotels to private investors, before it was privatised in 1993. The
French hotel giant Accor bought 51 per cent and created an investment holding
company, with partners including the EBRD, which today holds 99 per cent in
the re-named Accor-Pannonia.
The new partners brought in capital – but also insisted on completely new
management and technical systems. All the hotels were refurbished. “Today we
have the same standards and productivity as competitors in the West,” says
Harbula.
Despite intense competition in the Hungarian tourism business, the
restructuring bore fruit. In 1994 the company reported results before tax of
HUF400 million – in 2001 the results were more than 12 times higher with HUF5
billion. After a worldwide crisis in tourism precipitated by 9/11 the company
is now back on track, successfully targeting individual and business
travellers rather than tour groups.
The EBRD, as a shareholder, has played an important role in the restructuring
of the company, Harbula says: “The Bank has always been very active and
brought new views and approaches. Taking a long-term view, the EBRD gives a
company room for development.”
Looking back over the past 15 years, Harbula admits that adapting to the rules
of a market economy has not always been easy. “But in Hungary, at least we
were not unprepared. Even in the period of darkness we always maintained
private entrepreneurship – at least on a small scale. Hungarians have a strong
sense for entrepreneurship,” he says. “We were very optimistic in 1989 and I
think most people are very happy with the changes. But life has become more
complicated. Competition means that there is much more pressure. Our dreams
were perhaps faster than reality.”
And Harbula´s dream for the new Hungary? “Twenty years ago I dreamt of the
freedom to travel to Austria for two weeks. Now my dream is that we will
achieve in 25 years what Austria has become in 50 – a stable democracy with a
high standard of living, a strong economy and a clean environment.”
2 November 2004
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