Exclusive: As Britain’s birth rate plunges to a record low, a controversial experiment in Hungary is drawing quiet but intense interest from Whitehall mandarins. Documents obtained by this paper reveal that UK demographic policy makers have been studying Budapest’s multi-billion-pound fertility programme for months. And what they’ve found is a state-backed baby boom that comes with a dark underside: millions funnelled into families with no accountability and a government that openly ties reproduction to national identity.
Hungary’s fertility rate has climbed from 1.23 in 2010 to nearly 1.6 today—a modest rise but a rare uptick in a continent where birth rates are collapsing. The magic bullet? Viktor Orbán’s government has poured over 5% of GDP into a suite of tax breaks, housing subsidies, and loans for couples who have children. The centrepiece: a 10-million-forint (approx. £25,000) loan for newlyweds, which is forgiven in thirds after their first, second, and third children.
But here’s the rub. The programme is explicitly linked to Orbán’s ethno-nationalist agenda. “The survival of the Hungarian nation is the survival of Christian Europe,” he declared in 2019. The loans are only available to married couples, and single parents are excluded. The policy has sparked accusations of discrimination against Roma and immigrant families, who often cannot access the subsidies.
UK sources confirm that officials from the Department for Work and Pensions have held confidential briefings with Hungarian embassy staff. The Treasury has also commissioned a cost-benefit analysis of the loan model. “There’s a sense of panic in Westminster,” said a senior civil servant who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The ONS is projecting a population decline by 2030. Everything is on the table.”
But the Hungarian experiment has a cost that British taxpayers might balk at. The programme has added billions to Hungary’s deficit, and critics say it has widened inequality. “This is not a sustainable solution,” said economist Zsuzsa Ferge of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. “It’s a cash injection for the middle class, but the poorest families are left behind.”
Meanwhile, corruption allegations swirl. In 2023, European prosecutors opened an investigation into the misuse of EU funds meant for family support. Auditors found that some companies awarded contracts for “family-friendly” projects had ties to Orbán’s allies.
Back in London, the debate is heating up. The Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary has called for a parliamentary inquiry into the feasibility of a similar scheme. But the Treasury remains cautious. One source close to the Chancellor told me: “We’re not going to copy a system built on exclusionary values. But we’d be idiots not to look at the data.”
The data, however, tells a messy story. Hungary’s birth rate uptick has been modest and may be levelling off. Meanwhile, emigration of young people continues, offsetting any gains. “They’re buying births, but they can’t buy loyalty,” said Migration Policy Institute analyst Camille Le Coz.
As Britain stares down its own demographic abyss, the lesson from Hungary may be that state-backed baby making is a gamble that pays off only if you’re willing to bet on the nation’s identity—and ignore the bodies left behind.
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government declined to comment for this story. The Hungarian Embassy did not respond to requests for comment.











