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

BUDAPEST, June 16 (Reuters) – 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.
* 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% 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)

Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Alexander Smith

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