Comments
2 ostraparka26 answered
Any economy that does not grow through exports suffers. Everything is getting more expensive every day, because this is being talked about and the prices on the stock exchanges are not always rising. Invest in gold, this is the ever-rising asset. My village is on average half the depopulated other mass gypsies, my house has collapsed because no one has been walking for 15 years and is very old.
3 LovelyNikki answered
The lev has been pegged to the euro since it existed. In practice, at the moment, instead of saying 0.51 euros, we are saying 1 lev. What reasons can the author point out for 10-20 percent inflation? In my opinion, nothing will change for the worse, on the contrary: the fees for conversion from lev to euro, with which we are now inevitably burdened, when shopping from abroad or if a person wants to travel in Europe and needs cash in euros.
4 TruffleButtr answered
We will suffer from the euro. The people here used to carry their money in bags, then when we gave the drachmas and caught the euro, everyone roared. The euro is enslavement. You work for the same salary, that is, from 20 leva you go to 20 euros, but a barn of 60 stotinki becomes 1.20 euros :) or at least that's what happened here.
5 tygrys772 answered
I have been told that in Spain, when the euro was introduced, everything has risen sharply in a short time, and salaries have remained the same. Then, little by little, time and wages have caught up with prices and the old ratio has returned.
6 tati answered
I live in Europe, I deal with pounds and the euro, I am not a proud patriot, but I think that if we accept the euro it will get worse. The problem is not only in the euro as a currency, but also in our political oligarchy and as our people's psychology in general. So we will Bulgarianize the euro, that again the oligarchy will make the schemes, will get even richer, and the people will become poorer again. For example, Mr. Ivan from BGN 500. will go to 250 euros, but his bread instead of 1 lev. will cost 1 euro. Draw your own conclusions. We touch whatever we touch.
7 nika2687 answered
In France, for decades, the poorest sections of about half the people wanted to return the franc. These people suffered the most. That is why I think that the poorest will suffer a lot, and in Bulgaria the percentage of the poor is quite high. Until №3, why don't you think about the people who don't have to exchange money and don't go for walks and don't shop from abroad? What will they do, how will it affect them? Because those who travel and shop do not have a problem with the price of the currency, but for the poor it is very important how much bread and yogurt they can buy with their income. To increase bread or electricity by 10% for the poor is a huge problem.
8 lostofnight answered
Isn't it as clear as day? If politicians drape so much about it, then they and only they and the oligarchy will benefit from it.
9 emeraldru answered
To number 6: As far as they told me in Germany, when they introduced the euro, various thugs tried to make money from the air, that is, to sell the bread of 1 brand for 1 euro ... but they did not succeed and dropped out quite quickly. from the market.
10 sexylola4 answered
to the top the bad thing is that in Bulgaria the numbers of the thugs pass unlike in Germany.
11 carrie_07 answered
Until number 7, I see no reason to have any price increase at all. In order for bread to become more expensive, there must be an objective reason, for example grain production to decrease, electricity may become more expensive if we start building the Belene NPP, for example, or coal runs out or some similar reason. Speculators may try to make quick money, but I don't think they will. If that was the case, what would stop them, for example, from making bread cartels and saying even now: from tomorrow we will start selling bread at BGN 10, what are they waiting for the introduction of the euro.
12 bradknight13 answered
Come on, you're worried about unborn Petko from now on. Let me reassure you, there will never be a euro in BG. Do not believe what you are exposed to on Bulgarian television. Our bankers and politicians want a lot, but those who decide don't want us and just give your uncle Boko various vague promises, where the camel is her camel. We will adopt the euro when Turkey joins the EU, ie in a cuckoo summer.
13 jaobok answered
From 6 to 9. The Germans have laws, have regulations and are executive. There is nothing to lie about, Bulgarians are thugs. Bulgaria is a very corrupt country with corrupt institutions under the control of former mutts and cops. The poor person always pays the bill, so it will happen that the poor will become even poorer.
14 feliciakiss answered
Well 12 ... I hope you're right.
15 AmberDavis answered
12 If we allow Petko to be born, he will immediately start soiling his pants in brown, and it is impossible to return the native to where he was born.
16 Ambar_Squirtx answered
number 7, I'm not number 3, but the poorest strata always take it the most, no matter what happens and in which country you are. I sympathize with them, but I can't change things, so I think mostly about my own interest. Besides, things don't depend on me or you, so we're just writing here. Looking at the eurozone countries, they have not suffered exactly from the euro. The lion is still tied to him. Yes, in the event of a change there will most likely be some depreciation, but gradually things will return to normal and we will avoid a lot of problems and fees related to currency conversion.
1 whataburger answered
I am interested in how you see the old properties in the deserted villages in the future.