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SGEconomy5 days ago

AI in Hungary could unlock productivity gains of €15 billion, McKinsey says

A McKinsey report suggests that increased deployment of AI in Hungary could generate €15 billion in productivity gains by 2030. The report highlights both opportunities and challenges associated with AI adoption, including potential cost transformations, improved service delivery, and uncertainties regarding the realization of productivity benefits. Executives from various Hungarian companies discussed these implications during a roundtable discussion.

BUDAPEST, June 16 : Increased deployment of AI could unlock €15 billion ($17.42 billion)  in productivity gains in Hungary by 2030, McKinsey said on Tuesday.

AI could help Hungary close some of its productivity gap with European neighbours, the consultancy said, while warning that Hungary could fall further behind if AI adoption lags.

Following are key points from a roundtable discussion of the McKinsey report with top Hungarian executives.

* Andras Becsei, OTP Bank deputy CEO: While AI could curb human resources expenses, it could boost operating costs and capital expenditure - meaning the overall impact could be a transformation, rather than reduction, of costs.

* Peter Nagy, Magyar Telekom deputy CEO: AI agents are handling 20 per cent of customer calls, and that is expected to increase. AI has helped cut the time to bring new services to market to around 30 days from 90, while allowing the company to allocate half of its network monitoring staff to more complex operations.

* Gabor Orban, Richter CEO: More time is needed to see how much of the hype around AI is justified and whether the productivity gains can be unlocked. The pharma industry has seen several similar upheavals in past decades, such as genomics or digitisation, which have yet to live up to their promises.

* Gergely Bacso, Allianz Hungary CEO: Labour costs are only one part of the issue — AI is also a matter of global competition. Cost savings for a U.S. company can be several times more than what a Hungarian one could achieve. Competition will be intense and if Hungary does not act it risks losing out to foreign players for whom adopting AI is more profitable.

($1 = 0.8613 euros)

Read the full article at Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
Source document: McKinsey Report on AI in Hungary

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Channel NewsAsia (CNA)Party-alignedCenter5 days ago
AI in Hungary could unlock productivity gains of €15 billion, McKinsey says

A McKinsey report suggests that increased deployment of AI in Hungary could generate €15 billion in productivity gains by 2030. The report highlights both opportunities and challenges associated with AI adoption, including potential cost transformations, improved service delivery, and uncertainties regarding the realization of productivity benefits. Executives from various Hungarian companies discussed these implications during a roundtable discussion.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information from a McKinsey report and includes quotes from multiple business leaders discussing AI's economic impact. There is no evident ideological framing, loaded language, or one-sided sourcing. The content remains neutral and focused on economic projections and CEO

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  • organisation McKinsey Report on AI in Hungary

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  • organisationMcKinsey Report on AI in Hungary