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Is Poland a poor country?


zetigrek
13 Dec 2012 #421
It can look pretty grim in places and exceedingly good in others

That exact sentence could apply to Poland too, yet you judge Poland in your posts really one-sidedly.
Ant63 13 | 410
13 Dec 2012 #422
I do not. I am very familiar with Poznan and the surrounding area. Poznan to me is a very attractive city. One criticism I would make is that too much money is spent on new buildings when you have such a wealth of beautiful historic buildings crumbling away. There are lots of things you do around Poznan, that can't in the UK and vice versa. It balances out on the whole. Poland is different in so many ways to England and I know so little about the rest of Poland, I have no right to criticise anything I do not know about or have not seen with my own eyes.

I am fiercely critical of your legal system because my partner who is Polish, is suffering at the hands of its archaic thinking. It needs to change and be on a par with the rest of Europe but it will take time and it needs organisations in Poland to speak out which I know is just starting to happen and as younger judges are coming through with more moderate thinking, change will accelerate.
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
13 Dec 2012 #423
Many people already have said that at the very beginning of the thread but were snubbed by the ones who say that defining things is in fact the way of ducking the answer. You see, people here don't want to hear answers, they want just to prove their preconceptions.

fair point.
But without coming to some consensus on these two terms, I fail to see how the discussion can continue towards any objective answer.
I for one think defining the word "poor" may be easier than "Poland" but that's just me.
zetigrek
13 Dec 2012 #424
Alright, any proposals?
TommyG 1 | 361
14 Dec 2012 #425
You are funny TommyG

Thank you:) You're too kind:)

When you grow up you will understand that England is one of the richest, most diverse, most tolerant countries in the world.

No it's not! When will you grow up and stop bashing Poland? We're all very aware of why you're acting so childish...

Do you honestly think I know nothing about Poland?

Yes. To say that you are biased and critical would be a huge understatement...

I cannot dispute your figures but can you provide some comparative figures for Poland?

Can I? Maybe... Will I? No...

Don't forget that Age Concern are producing these figures to suit their objectives.

So Age Concern are lying? Those people weren't admitted to hospital? They didn't die? Electricity is cheap and affordable for pensioners?

Rich country my 4SS... Rip-off Britain... welfare Britain... call it want you want but don't say that Britain is in some way superior to Poland because I will just laugh at you:D

I don't see how one average European country with so much poverty can call another European country poor... lmfao:D
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
14 Dec 2012 #426
Alright, any proposals?

On what it means to be poor?
I suppose one aspect of being poor means there is little chance for bettering one's financial situation. I guess being poor would mean being very limited or a lack of upward mobility. Of course there would be more to it than that but first I would want to know if others would agree that this is an aspect of being poor.
zetigrek
14 Dec 2012 #427
I suppose one aspect of being poor means there is little chance for bettering one's financial situation. I guess being poor would mean being very limited or a lack of upward mobility.

Then Poland is poor indeed.
Most Poles don't have too much savings.

Of course there would be more to it than that but first I would want to know if others would agree that this is an aspect of being poor.

Hard to say. It also can raise other questions, like:
1. about the pace of that "move". One generation? Two generation? Three generations?
2. What does that exactly mean? Fair chances in education or maybe how much money one is a able to save from an average salary?
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
14 Dec 2012 #428
Oh I would say definitely within one's own life span. (average to above average education + average to above average work ethic) x luck =* upward mobility within one's own lifespan.

* should

Opportunity should factor in somewhere as well but I'm a bit rushed at the mo.
zetigrek
14 Dec 2012 #429
Oh I would say definitely within one's own life span. (average to above average education + average to above average work ethic) x luck =* upward mobility within one's own lifespan.

Then we have another paradox: Poles were richer on the turn of the 80s/90s. Now it's very hard to have a breakthrough.
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
14 Dec 2012 #430
I guess that's true but I tend to think what I've written would only be one aspect of what constitutes what it means to be poor.

What I mean is, a decrease in upward mobility could be offset by an increase in stability as well as other things.
I think living in an unstable and/or uncertain situation should account for some aspects of poverty as well...ya feel what I'm sayin?
zetigrek
14 Dec 2012 #431
Then even a worse paradox: Poles were richer under communism! ;)

On a serious note now, of course I got it and the answer is that Poles are poor according to the standards you have provided. There is a little career choice, bad environmen for small business, market is already saturated and no place for new ideas. Young people are badly educated and unprepared for adult life, the elders have their ways and fear of challenges. The salaries are low, and the outlook is generally pesimistic. Huge unemployment, people going into debts, lack of industry which was distroyed in the 90s. It's not 3rd world but looks pretty bleak. However I'm not sure if the grass is greener elsewhere
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
14 Dec 2012 #432
Then even a worse paradox: Poles were richer under communism! ;)

funny....in a weird sort of way. However rationality would still say that upward mobility was more limited then and so the "poverty" scale would again have to shift, at least in that aspect of its measure.

On a serious note now, of course I got it and the answer is that Poles are poor according to the standards you have provided.

I wish I didn't agree with you but until I hear/read something compelling that adds up to the contrary, I'm afraid there's no alternative.....well don't we make a cheery duo?
zetigrek
14 Dec 2012 #433
However rationality would still say that upward mobility was more limited

financially yes. An ordinary labourer in a factory was earning the same money as was the manager of that factory :)

well don't we make a cheery duo?

I think it's not only us two :)
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
15 Dec 2012 #434
So then after financial mobility were eliminated, we'd have to see if other forms of "mobility" were or were not available? Social? Cultural? What are your thoughts?
milky 13 | 1,656
15 Dec 2012 #435
I accept this definition.

People should read the thread before commenting, there is a lot of repetition on here. I'm not talking about the last few comments.
A lot of concrete apartments are turning 60 years old,hence, would be declared unsafe, in countries that do inspections. So how many Poles live, in what legally may be considered unsafe buildings? 15 million 20 million? People are taking out 35 year mortgages to purchase these concrete"accidents waiting to happen". Only capable of happening in a poor country.
Avalon 4 | 1,067
15 Dec 2012 #436
A lot of concrete apartments are turning 60 years old,hence, would be declared unsafe, in countries that do inspections.

You really do keep changing your tune. I told you this years ago. You said that (in your words) there were millions of properties standing empty, left by the Poles who had gone to work in the West. You stated that there was a massive over-supply of apartments. Now you seem to realise that the current housing stock is old and in dire need of replacement. Who is going to do this Milky? the State? or the investors you hate so much.

Re-read what you wrote in July of 2010, you were wrong then and you are still wrong now.
zetigrek
15 Dec 2012 #437
we'd have to see if other forms of "mobility" were or were not available? Social? Cultural? What are your thoughts?

My grandma had 7 years of pre-war elementary school (aftrewards, at age 14, she needed go to work to support herself and her parents). Her son have an university degree.
milky 13 | 1,656
16 Dec 2012 #438
there were millions of properties standing empty, left by the Poles who had gone to work in the West. You stated that there was a massive over-supply of apartments.

Did I? Millions? No way, Ted.

Who is going to do this Milky? the State? or the investors

I would imagine nobody. Poland will just sweep the rocks under the carpet, unless there is a domino rally. Gong by how the hosing crises is being dealt with at the moment, I would imagine that the government /Developer bandits will just line their own pockets, in the guise of democratic progress, just like the scam grants, they will get the tax payer to finance vulture capitalist. I can't see Poland coming together to deal with the block crises as they are too obsessed with technologies of distraction, and the money just isn't there to finance the sharks but they(bandits) will make millions in the pretense of patching the holes in the rotten bucket.
Avalon 4 | 1,067
16 Dec 2012 #439
the money just isn't there to finance the sharks but they(bandits) will make millions

Is this supposed to make sense?
milky 13 | 1,656
16 Dec 2012 #440
Well!! they will squeeze the tax payer. The bandits are making a fortune in Ireland re-buying their properties from NAMA. Does it make sense? No, Just money.

Milky seems to be missing the fact that everything is relative.......

Yea yea yea petrol, house prices, electronics,cars,??? relative me arse
newspaper article (Dec 2012) which roughly stated the following…

After 20 years of paying the minimum social insurance in Poland / the UK:
ZUS in Poland: Pay £180 now & receive £120 pension per month
NI contributions in the UK: Pay £15 now & receive £600 pension per month
pam
16 Dec 2012 #441
I will admit IF your figures are correct, that a pension in Poland is very low.
I have no pension provision whatsoever, because in the past i have never been able to afford it. Most people i know are in the same position, i am far from being an exception.

Really looking forward to my retirement!
Which article were your figures from? I would be interested to read it.
LEICA 4 | 18
16 Dec 2012 #442
Does anyone know,I have paid Polish Zus for the last twenty years if i go back to the UK as i was born in London can I Claim a UK pension.

Thanks in advance
Foreigner4 12 | 1,768
16 Dec 2012 #443
My grandma had 7 years of pre-war elementary school (aftrewards, at age 14, she needed go to work to support herself and her parents). Her son have an university degree.

Interesting.
I am prone to question things, I just can't help myself. One question I have (of many) what the comparative values of those educations are. However, on the face of it, I think I see the point you've made quite clearly.
Vincent 9 | 886
16 Dec 2012 #444
can I Claim a UK pension.

You would probably have to pay 20 years worth of UK national insurance stamps first.
jon357 74 | 22,197
16 Dec 2012 #445
Does anyone know,I have paid Polish Zus for the last twenty years if i go back to the UK as i was born in London can I Claim a UK pension.

As Vincent says, you'd need UK stamps for a UK pension, however any shortfall in income that you would suffer by being on a Polish pension would be made up by the minimum income guarantee.
milky 13 | 1,656
19 Dec 2012 #446
Poland is nearly the poorest EU state
Poland is nearly the poorest EU state (photo Piotr Lewandowski/sxc )
According to the Eurostat data, the position of Poland in the EU is not very good. Our country is wealthier than only 3 states, even though 6 months ago we were wealthier than 4 EU states.

The Eurostat has informed that the level of affluence in Poland, i.e. GDP per capita, taking into account the purchasing power parity, amounted to 64% of the EU average.

According to the data the "Rzeczpospolita" daily got hold of, the situation is worse than in Poland only in Latvia (58%), in Romania (49%) and in Bulgaria (46%), even though 6 months ago we were higher in this rank also than Lithuania. Now, however, Lithuania has got 66% of the average.

Source:
niezalezna.pl

Poland
At €5,756 per inhabitant, Poland is ranked 28th in Europe, just behind the three Baltic countries and slightly ahead of Turkey. Compared with its western neighbors, Poland still lags behind. Even in the affluent capital district of Warsaw the inhabitants' purchasing power of €9,969 p.a. is approximately €5,400 less than that of people in the rural district of Görlitz, the weakest district in Germany.

In general, the study shows a strong polarization in Poland. Purchasing power in the various districts ranges from €3,626 per inhabitant in the Brzozowski district (Powiat) to €9,969 in Warsaw. In 24 districts, purchasing power is at least 20 percent above the national average. At the same time, 71 districts have purchasing power that is 20 percent below the Polish average.

The most affluent districts in Poland are the capital, Warsaw, its surrounding districts (Pruszkowski, Piaseczyński, Warszawski Zachodni and Grodziski), Gdansk and Sopot, Plock (one of the oldest cities in Poland), Lubinski (in Lower Silesia) and Wroclaw (the fourth largest city in Poland). The district of Krakow is only ranked 22nd among the districts. Lodz, the third largest city, is ranked even lower in 32nd place.

In the poorest urban and rural districts, the inhabitants have only slightly more than €3,000 p.a. at their disposal on average. These regions are mainly situated along the Ukrainian border in the far southeast of Poland. The structural problems of this region impact directly on the purchasing power of its inhabitants. Nonetheless, consumers here have more than twice as much at their disposal as their neighbors in Ukraine, the country with the fourth lowest purchasing power in Europe. In these border districts of Poland, purchasing power per inhabitant ranges from €3,600 to €4,200, whereas it is as low as approximately €1,300 per inhabitant in Ukraine.
TommyG 1 | 361
25 Dec 2012 #447
Poland

You have to try and bash Poland, even on Christmas day. You are such a loser...
f stop 25 | 2,503
25 Dec 2012 #448
the situation is worse than in Poland only in Latvia (58%), in Romania (49%) and in Bulgaria (46%),

that's not very good.
kcharlie 2 | 165
25 Dec 2012 #449
Depends what you mean by poor.

If you compare it to a country like Norway, then yeah, it's pretty poor, with an aging infrastructure and with people getting a relatively low income for long hours of work.

If you compare it to a country like Mali or Afghanistan, then Poland's streets are paved with gold, with free healthcare, more than adequate infrastructure and a relative absence of serious starvation, malnutrition or disease.
gumishu 15 | 6,147
25 Dec 2012 #450
there is malnutrition among poor children in Poland and there are programmes that address this, if only one parent is working for a minimum wage the situation of a family with children is not to be envied charlie - why do you think young people don't want to have children

there is malnutrition among poor children in Poland

natablicy.pl/650-tys-niedozywionych-dzieci-w-polsce,artykul.html?material_id=4deb51a416f1da6537000000

Polish Red Cross data


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