Law /
Real wages drop in Poland [28]
According to the Central Statistical office (GUS) wages increased in the first three quarters of this year by 3.6 percent, with prices rising by four percent in that period.
The Dziennik Gazeta Prawna daily writes that real wages will fall by up to 0.6 percent in 2012, the first time living standards have fallen since 1992, as the economy in Poland was reeling from the effects of free market reforms introduced after the fall of communism. (pg)
so is the above true? If so, looks like Poland is not avoiding the recession.
Also 50 zl hr for teaching - zus and tax is pretty bad money for a city like warsaw.
Pay is twice that in Berlin and rent is a lot cheaper than warsaw.
It's all in the first link in the first post.why are people so nonobjective on this thread,who cares if two or three people earn more than they did last year, is the thread not about Poland in general and not just three British boys bragging about how much money they can make.