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What does the future of the EU's poorest country look like?
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What does the future of the EU's poorest country look like?

🇧🇬 / Bulgaria / #49

Johannes Eber
Nov 17, 2021
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What does the future of the EU's poorest country look like?
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Bulgaria has the world's highest Covid-19 mortality rate.

Bulgaria has the EU's lowest vaccination rate (fewer than a quarter of all Bulgarians are fully vaccinated).

Bulgaria is the EU's poorest country (45 per cent below the EU average) and Europe's 6th poorest country (only the following countries in Europe are economically worse off: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro). 

But Bulgaria has had hope again since the weekend. And this hope has a name: Kiril Petkov.

Twitter avatar for @lccanorLuis Cano @lccanor
Happy with the election results in #Bulgaria showing the power of movements turning into political forces. Yet, our movements keep contributing to the political philosophy crisis in #Europe: "Left, center, or right, it doesn't matter," - Kiril #Petkov
Tough Coalition Talks Loom In Bulgaria After Inconclusive ElectionsA newly formed anti-graft party appears to be winning Bulgaria’s general elections with more than a quarter of the vote, according to partial official results, opening the door to difficult coalition talks in a deeply divided parliament.rferl.org

November 15th 2021

1 Retweet1 Like

Together with his friend and caretaker finance minister Asen Vasilev, Petkov had founded the centrist party We Continue the Change (PP). In its first electoral outing, PP received just over a quarter of the votes in pole position to form the next government "and break a political stalemate in the EU's poorest country," as the Financial Times put it. 

Twitter avatar for @pollofpolls_EUPOLITICO Poll of Polls @pollofpolls_EU
Sunday's Bulgarian election resulted in a surprise victory for the party "We continue the change" of political newcomer Kiril Petkov. He now needs to enter into coalition talks, with no guarantees of success. Here is the results breakdown from
pollofpolls.eu👇
Image

November 16th 2021

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The stalemate so far: The opposition had twice beaten corruption-tainted centre-right premier Boyko Borisov's GERB party this year but could not manage to form a coalition. 

This is why PP was founded. To give a new nucleus around which to organise the opposition.

The election success shows that Kiril Petkov was right. 

But the upcoming challenges are enormous. First of all Petkov and his PP have to form a government with a coalition majority. Together with 

  • the populist There is Such a People (ITN) party 

  • the liberal Democratic Bulgaria and

  • the Socialists 

the parties would command more than 130 seats in the 240-seat legislature. 

All three parties have their problems. The ITN party leader Slavi Trifonov, a pop-folk singer, shuns political dealmaking. The Socialists have their roots in the Soviet era. The leader of Democratic Bulgaria just resigned after support for his party halved to 6 per cent in the latest election. 

There are some indications that the parties will pull themselves together. Because the people want so. Parvan Simeonov, executive director of research group Gallup International Sofia, told the Financial Times: 

"Bulgarians did not revert to GERB, instead they wanted the change to continue. More and more, what they want is just a stable government."

The main challenges for the upcoming government: corruption, Covid, energy crisis. 

Petkov promised to address all three points. He had already begun to make a name for himself with a tough stance against corruption in the interim administration formed after inconclusive elections in July. He wants to increase the vaccination rate emphatically (Petkov: "We cannot close Bulgaria again"). And he explained that the current energy problems should be eased via new sources such as gas from Azerbaijan and greater use of power sources like hydroelectric plants. 

Expectations are high. Bulgaria's starting position is so modest that chances are high that Petkov will move the country forward substantially. 

Notes: 

https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToSelection=true&time=2020-03-01..latest&facet=none&pickerSort=desc&pickerMetric=new_cases_per_million&Metric=Confirmed+deaths&Interval=Cumulative&Relative+to+Population=true&Align+outbreaks=false&country=IND~USA~GBR~CAN~DEU~JPN~BGR  

https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToSelection=true&facet=none&pickerSort=asc&pickerMetric=location&Metric=People+vaccinated+%28by+dose%29&Interval=7-day+rolling+average&Relative+to+Population=true&Align+outbreaks=false&country=~BGR   

https://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ani/bulgaria-ranks-sixth-among-ten-poorest-countries-in-europe-121102900329_1.html  

https://www.ft.com/content/7c0b64e5-1de1-48c8-9f7d-420467290ecb 

https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=GDP_per_capita,_consumption_per_capita_and_price_level_indices

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