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niemandhier 4 hours ago

I love the polish, but credit where credit is due:

„Poland is the largest beneficiary of EU funds 2014-2020, with one in four euro going to Poland“

https://www.gov.pl/web/funds-regional-policy/poland-at-the-f...

Update: The comments below this are strange.

I ment: „Poland gets money, Poland transforms it into more money”.

Is Poland more efficient in it than other countries? I do not know. Would Poland have generated less money without it ? Probably? Is an annual investment of the 2-3%of the GDP into a country a lot? I think so?

jillesvangurp 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Think of it as an investment. The rest of the EU also benefits from their hard work, and economic prosperity. Other countries in the EU have also enjoyed economic growth and support over the years.

I'm old enough to remember internal borders with passport checks in Europe, before the wall fell and Poland was still on the other side of that. Nice to see them moving on from that.

Thanks to the EU free movement of people, I've now studied, worked and lived in four different countries. I know people all over Europe. I currently live in Germany. Germany benefits a lot from the EU. Yes it costs money. But there's trade, access to skilled labour, etc. as well. And if you look at Poland, it's what sits between Germany and Belarus & Ukraine. So, there's a strategic relevance as well. Poland doing fine is good for everyone else in the EU.

dwedge 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> The rest of the EU also benefits from their hard work

I don't know. I want to agree with you, but a large part of the economic growth in Poland is off-shoring and cheap tax (~12% on contract) for tech workers. The average tech wage there now is pretty similar to the UK, and I don't really see many startups there - probably in part because of how bureaucratic their business system can be. I don't know if this influx of foreign money from off-shoring and surge in real estate pricing is sustainable or good in the long run.

Other than a massive influx of overdevelopment of flats in the cities (sometimes too rushed, I've seen reports of flat blocks subsiding because of cutting corners), I'm not sure where else the increase it.

Certhas 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Do you have any sources for the claim that a large part of growth is off-shoring?

Because that seems extremely implausible, and actually very insulting to the incredible success of Eastern Europe, before and after joining the EU, in closing the gap to Western Europe over the last 3 decades.

https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/gdp-per-capita-worldbank?...

dwedge 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The reason for the growth over different time frames can differ. Anecdotal, but most of the IT people I know from Poland worked for, as they call it, "big corpo" and generally it's offshoring either directly with companies such as DXC/Luxoft or n-ix, or through local offices (Akamai for example). If you look at the average salary in Poland (in general), and the average tech salary + the number of tech workers there, it's easy to say a large part of the GDP is tech.

Whether or not it's offshoring is a little less obvious, but I can't think of more than 2 or 3 successful Polish tech companies.

nme01 an hour ago | parent | next [-]

There are other countries in the world or even in the EU where salaries are lower than in Poland. Why don't they see the similar growth? I guess this is more nuanced than just lowered salaries can explain it. Surely, that's part of the equation but to develop highly innovative economy, one needs to start with something. That's how China started, how Korea started etc.

cuu508 an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

What is the average salary, the average tech worker salary, and the number of tech and other workers in Poland?

foobiekr an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

I’m so confused. At least in tech all the big companies I work with are hiring in Poland because it is about the same as India after losses around fake hiring and the quality averages better.

It is absolutely a huge offshoring target at least for the US.

dismalaf 36 minutes ago | parent [-]

Everywhere is an offshoring target for US tech. Tons of US tech companies have Canadian offices because Canadian rates are far below US rates.

ponector 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Large part is due to offshoring, but not the IT. Offshoring the manufacturing.

Also some companies are moving their offices from Poland to India now.

dmix 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

China was the offshore haven and built their own domestic economy off the expertise while still maintaining very low income taxes and 15% corporate tax for tech companies.

kakacik 36 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

You dont have money, you complain. You (as in your country) get the money, yet you still complain.

Sure, its not ideally distributed, but nowhete is. Such economic success will drag many parts of the country up. Yes, jobs not paid the best will have to commute from further. But compared to where Poland was 2 decades ago (been there many times), its great growth and success.

Plus you guys have correct mentality to by far the biggest threat to Europe - russia. Not so common in eastern Europe, russian-paid politicians are quite successful in some places. But of course Poland has a history with russia to remember so thats luckily not an option.

s_dev 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>Think of it as an investment.

An economic investment as well as one of solidarity. People forget that the EU is a peace project that ensures peace via economic cooperation. This nuance seems trivial but is actually massively important. I can see trust degrading in the US but being fortified across the EU.

Look at Hungary recently, they did a 180 not because of Brussels or Berlin saying they should. Hungarians are sceptical of both. However they do trust the Polish people who they see as genuine peers who are very pro-EU.

hcurtiss an hour ago | parent | next [-]

They didn't do a 180 at all. Tusk basically shares Orban's entire platform, particularly vis-à-vis the EU. Orban just got caught in corruption scandals.

dismalaf 36 minutes ago | parent [-]

Orban is a Russian asset. Tusk isn't.

truthaboutpl 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[flagged]

pegasus 2 hours ago | parent [-]

They did a 180 on their relationship with the EU, which was the context GP was discussing. Maybe not 180 but definitely over 90, let's say, unlocking billions in funds. Funny that you picked the one major issue that didn't see a big adjustment, and completely out of context.

brabel an hour ago | parent [-]

I think the comment was still correct. Very little will change in Hungary with the new government. I think it’s only a matter of time for them to pick a fight with the EU on some different matter given how the EU’s values (considering most of Western Europe) are still far from theirs.

s_dev an hour ago | parent [-]

>Very little will change in Hungary with the new government.

Things aren't going to improve magically in the next few years but the backsliding has stopped, improving things takes real effort and focus. At the end of Orban's regime Hungary is now officially the poorest country in the EU, even behind Bulgaria and Romania which is why so many Hungarians are upset with Orban.

I expect their economy to slowly tick upward over the next few years. Magyar has also stated his ambitions to join the Euro which is the opposite of Orban who wanted Hungary to leave the EU.

asdfman123 an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I wonder if that's part of why the US is a superpower: the richer states being forced to invest in the poorer ones.

In the early 20th century Texas for instance was a poor state, a recipient of federal funds, but now it's an economic powerhouse. (To be precise I still think it's a recipient of federal funding but it holds its own now.)

1718627440 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Think of it as an investment. The rest of the EU also benefits from their hard work, and economic prosperity. Other countries in the EU have also enjoyed economic growth and support over the years.

It is for as long, as the EU exists in its current form. The rise of anti-EU parties in both Poland and Germany makes it a risky investment.

grey-area 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Thankfully most people have learned from the absolute shambles of Brexit and either of these countries leaving is extremely unlikely.

c16 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Have they? https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c1428pev1n0t

Silhouette 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Be careful about reading too much into that. Our elections yesterday were for local and sometimes regional representatives - not our central national government. The result might still prompt a change in our unpopular Prime Minister but the high vote for Reform won't necessarily translate into voting for them at the next general election. We often see protest votes for alternative parties in local politics and everyone was expecting one this time.

Surveys here have been showing a trend towards greater public support for the EU. Its advocates have been pushing for closer integration and even talking of a referendum on rejoining. Although of course this also has to be viewed cautiously because the polls before the Brexit referendum had also pointed towards remaining and one of the biggest fans of the EU recently has been that unpopular PM who might not be in office for much longer.

pjc50 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Also Hungarian change of government has cut off some of the "dark money".

PunchyHamster an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There is pretty common trend of people complaining about X being bad coz EU but most of the time it turns into one of

* It was pretty sensible EU directive implemented badly by national govt * It was pretty sensible EU directive implemented okay but communicated badly * Outright lie about the problem and the scope of it.

One example: The people complained that "EU will force them to pay to scrap solar panels"

The truth: Some countries added price of recycling into price of the solar panels, some didn't. Those that did had free recycling, those that didn't needed owner to pay a fee when scrapping it. So, naturally, buying solar panel from country with no fee was cheaper and scrapping it in country with fee was free. EU noticed that loophole and forced countries into including the fee in panel cost:

The truth: Poland applied it by just applying fee to panels bought before the rule unification

The lie number 1: EU forced that implementation on Poland. Nothing was forced, that way of "fixing it" (vs eating the cost was what Polish govt chose

The lie number 2: (and I have no idea where it came from) "You will have to scrap your panels made before this date AND pay for it".

Sometimes I suspect most of that is just russian propaganda using anything to undermine EU

Zanfa 33 minutes ago | parent [-]

> Outright lie about the problem and the scope of it.

One of my favorites was “EU is banning juice”, when the definition of juice was being standardized and local producers of fruit-flavored sugar water couldn’t keep selling their beverages as “juice” anymore.

moritzwarhier an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Thinking about that risk increases said risk.

Also, for Germany, and I assume, other EU countries, cohesion and economic strength of the EU is the most important value that exists.

jorvi an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Okay, but Poland taking all / most of the credit is just strange in that light.

an hour ago | parent [-]
[deleted]
eloisant an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yes, this is an important aspect of the EU, and other countries like Spain and Ireland benefited in the same way.

And it's a good thing, but I wish Eastern European countries would recognize this and become more of a team player instead of shitting on EU.

Poland waited for Trump 2nd term, threatening the take some of the EU territory by force to finally transition from buying US weapons to buying from other European countries.

fmajid an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Not to mention a stronger economy means stronger defense against the Russian threat.

SilverElfin 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I’m not very familiar with deep EU politics. But I’ve heard a lot of complaints from colleagues in countries like Germany and the Netherlands about feeling like their taxes mainly help countries like Poland.

While what you’re saying may be true, and this prosperity may be good for all of Europe, I think there is a lot of resentment about who the beneficiaries of the EU structure are.

mrspuratic an hour ago | parent [-]

This is how it works. Ireland was a net beneficiary until 2018, and now it is a net contributor (one of only 10 net contributors). These are decades long investments, Poland joined in 2004. Per capita Poland is not the "greatest" beneficiary but I don't think that will help win any arguments for those already resistant to facts or reasoning. https://www.euronews.com/business/2024/12/09/eu-budget-who-p...

Forgeties79 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Think of it as an investment. The rest of the EU also benefits from their hard work, and economic prosperity. Other countries in the EU have also enjoyed economic growth and support over the years.

This is something I tell people I am generally politically/socially align with (liberals/progressives) when they start talking about “handouts for red states.” California and other areas were not developed on their own, they required years of sustained federal investment and interest in the area.

It obviously goes without saying that conservatives in the US need to stop demonizing taxes so much for the same reason/they need to recognize that as the some of the largest beneficiaries of federal tax dollars they are cutting their nose to spite their face (I believe Kentucky is still the most subsidized state in the US).

All of us should want our states cooperation with the federal government so we can all rise together, and we need to view investing in our neighbors as a collective good.

jandrewrogers an hour ago | parent | next [-]

The argument that red states receive handouts is essentially a myth. Almost the entirety of the "handout" is social security/medicare based on where retirees live (notably the sunbelt), where military bases are located (rural areas of less populous states), and where most Federal land management offices and employees are located (the mountain west). Ironically, it counts Federal employment as "welfare" with more steps.

Two of the three are intrinsically tied to the locale. You can't move the National Forests to Manhattan. They closed the military bases in the most expensive areas like California decades ago to save money so they are mostly located in flyover country now.

Social Security actually is a welfare handout but retirees are choosing to move to red states. Unless one is arguing to forcibly prevent retirees from moving to the sunbelt, Social Security dollars will disproportionately flow into those states.

There is no red state "handout".

Forgeties79 17 minutes ago | parent [-]

A cursory search indicates an even split of red/states put in more than they get, but that 7 of the top 10 receivers of federal aid are red states. But ultimately my point doesn’t hinge on the ratio: everyone should support solid investments in all states.

You can give all the caveats you want but my point is it doesn’t matter what the reason is, these states rail against taxes and the federal government despite leaning heavily on their investment and “donor states” need to see it as a positive for all of us.

Why does it matter if it’s national parks or military bases or whatever? Do you think these states would gladly give it up so they can “liberate themselves from federal intervention” or whatever? Fat chance.

bregma 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

People need something to resent or hold in disregard. Government and taxes are a good target. The problem only really begin when someone actually tries to reduce or eliminate that target. It's the old "be careful what you ask for, you might just get it".

PopAlongKid 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>This is something I tell people I am generally politically/socially align with (liberals/progressives) when they start talking about “handouts for red states.” California and other areas were not developed on their own, they required years of sustained federal investment and interest in the area.

If they were to ask where you think this "federal investment" funding came from, what would you reply?

brookst 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It’s a fair point, but there is a significant difference between investment in infrastructure and education versus just supporting states that are intentionally degrading their infrastructure and education.

Upwards spiral versus downwards. Money pours in for both cases, but only one is really an investment.

truthaboutpl 3 hours ago | parent [-]

[flagged]

simonh 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Much of it would come from borrowing, which would be paid back using tax revenues in later years from the regions developed using that investment. Just like most investments.

tsunamifury 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Equating investments in California with the welfare state that is Louisiana is a take

Danox 21 minutes ago | parent [-]

The West Coast of the United States, California, Washington, and Oregon. will just move on like the rest of the world is moving on away from the United States. Turning your back on infrastructure useful infrastructure medicine education, science, schools is not a winning hand long-term.

If you look at a map of the American South Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia will just move on. Actually it’s already happening and has been happening for the last 30 years. Other parts of the American South are however, stuck more firmly in the past and getting further behind and that also applies to some of the Midwestern states.

Louisiana has another ongoing long-term problem the gulf of Mexico is eating away at the bottom half of the state lands end is moving further north that involves scientific observations oh boy thems fighting words.

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Preferably your taxes in particular.

Forgeties79 an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]

leereeves 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> California and other areas were not developed on their own, they required years of sustained federal investment and interest in the area.

In a similar way, Western Europe benefited from a lot of investment after WW2, while Eastern Europe didn't receive the same investment then.

So the recent investment OP mentioned is just balancing the scales.

Danox 35 minutes ago | parent [-]

World War II significantly contributed to the development of the West Coast of the United States mid century. San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Seattle harbors became crucial to the war effort in the pacific, leading to industrial expansion and the establishment of the UC system and the junior colleges in California, which eventually led to Silicon Valley, also the large water projects built 50-60 years earlier and the the transcontinental railroads built 50 years prior also didn’t hurt the expansion and growth of the West Coast of the United States either.

Building useful infrastructure, in the can do America of the past worked, the parasitic AI data centers currently, however, appear to be a financial dead end.

That era of America appears to be gone at the Federal level, infrastructure, schools, science, medicine, college, vaccines, voting etc. etc. don’t appear to be on the current menu.

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

A rising tide lifts all boats

totallykvothe 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[flagged]

spwa4 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

[flagged]

syntex 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

You've some wrong assumption. One is that you are wrong about Poland / Greece wages. In 2026 Polish worker actually earns more than a Greece worker for the same role. Something like 25% more in Poland

Also Polands power grid is quite old and hasn't kept pace with demand. The grid operator last year had to reject thousands of requests for new connections

throw0101c 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> So yeah ... best of luck if you're a car factory worker in France or Germany.

If it makes you feel any better the Polish car factory worker will probably lose their job to a Chinese car factory worker.

raverbashing 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> best of luck if you're a car factory worker in France or Germany

You mean the ones who fought tooth and nail for comfy jobs within unions with barely no way to fire anyone? And now are wondering where the jobs and the money went?

Tesla workers rejected IG Metall as the union of choice for their factory because all they want to know is send faxes and keep companies wrapped around in red tape like a mummy

spwa4 an hour ago | parent [-]

Actually most of the jobs went back to Germany, just ask US car workers. Where the company headquarters are mattered more than those unions. I guess that's why Trump is angry. German management are just not respecting the almighty god of capitalism.

(of course the US has been sabotaging all car sales with the only potential exception of Tesla and Trump has not changed)

paganel 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

That’s the thing, Poland got wealthier because it became an extension of German industry, with some IT stuff thrown in. Czechia would have also been in the world’s top 20 had they had a larger population, as they’re even more dependent on said German industry.

spwa4 an hour ago | parent [-]

Well, yeah. I get that being the stupid backwater of a huge capitalist union is still better than communism. However, it's not working out so well for (now mostly ex-)factory workers in Germany.

Entire cities are emptying because of this. Leaving the old behind, of course.

paganel 14 minutes ago | parent [-]

> However, it's not working out so well for (now mostly ex-)factory workers in Germany.

I fully agree with this, the whole EU enlargement/post-Cold War thing is insanely complicated from a societal pov, there's no silver bullet, for ever positive you can instantly find a negative just as big etc etc, that's why I find this obsession with EU funds quite besides the point, i.e. because the reality on the ground was, still is, in fact, a lot more complicated.

For example in our (Romania's) case EU accession came with even a larger increase in PPP value compared to Poland, but that also came with a huge, huge depopulation problem (neighbouring Bulgaria suffers from the same thing), which cannot be put into PPP numbers. Like I said, positives and negatives.

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

So many false claims in one post. Impressive levels of delusion.

AlexandrB 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Don't know about the other points, but 2 is spot on. Germany now has the most expensive electricity in the EU[1].

[1] https://www.globalelectricity.org/electricity-prices-by-coun...

> Germany leads Europe—and the world among major economies—with residential electricity prices reaching €0.3835 per kWh (approximately $0.41/kWh) in the first half of 2025, according to Eurostat data. This represents a 34% premium above the EU average of €0.2872/kWh.

spiderfarmer 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Since you're citing prices from early 2025: In the second half of 2025, electricity prices for household consumers in the EU (expressed in purchasing power standards (PPS) per 100 kWh) were highest in:

Romania (49.52 PPS per 100 kWh) Czechia (38.65) Poland (37.15)

Lowest in:

Malta (14.09) Hungary (15.10) Finland (18.77)

Residential electricity prices in Poland are 145.01% of the world average electricity price and 98.14% of the average price in Europe.

https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/Poland/electricity_prices...

The biggest problem is that prices are still tied to the price of gas:

https://ieefa.org/resources/europes-electricity-prices-are-s...

cgeier 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

citation needed

paganel 3 hours ago | parent [-]

[flagged]

lpcvoid 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]

jari_mustonen 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

[flagged]

shevy-java 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The question is not whether it is an investment or whether it is not.

The question is whether growth is objective and fair or whether it is not.

For comparison of wealth in Poland, ALL net-subsidies would have to be deducted, because this is essentially wealth taken from other countries, and distributed to poorer areas in the EU. I am not disputing that this leads to more growth; I am disputing the "country xyz is now rich" while not even mentioning the subsidies. And that reuters article does not mention that at all.

It also has to be mentioned because the crazy bureaucrats in Brussels want to aggressively expand eastwards. They think that the richer areas in the EU need to pay for that expansion. I simply fail to agree with that "logic" at all and I also consider it hugely unfair to richer areas. The richer areas made good decisions; now this is being negated by bureaucrats in Brussels. That is unfair. (This is not meant against Poland, but against the constant expansionistic agenda from Brussels.)

gmerc 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Economic zones are NOT zero sum.

finghin 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I agree, but people are very weary of these things because of the (correct) belief that their appropriation is guided by unaccountable bureaucrats. It stands in need of justification that Europeans feel they never got to hear

dgellow 3 hours ago | parent [-]

> but people are very weary of these things because of the (correct) belief that their appropriation is guided by unaccountable bureaucrats.

People believe this because every single member state is using EU institutions as a punching bag whenever they have issues locally. The people have no idea how the EU work, they only hear about it when used as a bogeyman

sdwr 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

And the EU wants to insulate itself from Russia with friendly, ideologically-compatible countries. Can't put a price tag on safety

rob74 3 hours ago | parent [-]

That also works the other way around: Eastern European countries wanted to join the EU (ok, more importantly NATO, but also the EU) to make sure they never ever again slid into Russia's "sphere of influence". Notwithstanding certain populist EU-skeptic right wing parties that don't seem to mind that anymore (some would say because they are financed by Russia), that's generally still true...

nkmnz 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I agree, but subsidies aren't free as well. Simply making the overall cake bigger doesn't necessarily pay out for everyone - some have to foot the bill.

phicoh 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Why not? If the increase in cake size is bigger than the subsidies then it can be a net win, even for the people paying the subsidies.

It also ignores the fact that absent the EU, countries would still have a lot of subsidies.

rob74 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

OTOH, the more developed EU countries want the less developed countries to be reasonably well-off, so they can keep buying stuff from them. E.g. 56% of Germany's exports went to other EU countries in 2025. And, while Trump and Xi Jin Ping are around, that's only going to become more important...

tw1984 3 hours ago | parent [-]

"56% of Germany's exports went to other EU countries in 2025" - because those products are no longer competitive in the open market.

rob74 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Yeah, they're so uncompetitive that Trump had to introduce tariffs to keep them out. China is a different topic, but I wouldn't generally call German products uncompetitive...

vovavili an hour ago | parent [-]

Trump introduced tarrifs because of insane economic and political illiteracy and for no other reason.

paganel 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The Holocaust was a decision taken by one of the two pillars of the EU, Germany, so countries nowadays being rich or poor has nothing to do with past “good” decisions of those countries populaces. And before anyone commenting that the Holocaust and the German economy are two orthogonal subjects, just look at the corporate history of German industry giants VW and Bayer.

egeozcan 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> The richer areas made good decisions; now this is being negated by bureaucrats in Brussels

Imperialism and stealing from Jews were also among those "good" decisions. Yes I know it's not all bad, but neither is it all good. It's very reductionist to describe the imbalance like this.

lukan 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

"I'm old enough to remember internal borders with passport checks in Europe"

Did you recently crossed borders? On many the checks are there again, because of fear of immigration terrorism or something, so the people could see, politicians were doing something to make them feel safe (but what I could see when passing borders, especially between poland and germany, were looong lines of trucks, so much for free flowing goods).

Not sure of the current situation, though, but last summer and autumn was horrible with checks (probably still better than what was before, but having experienced the real open border situation, having them restricted again is frustrating).

11mariom 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Not the same extent like it was before… Now most of the times is just slowed down traffic (quick glance who's in car and move on), and more than that I was maybe stopped two times for quick chit-chat (where/why I'm heading). And I crossed, multiple times, borders of DK (they had checks since 2018?), DE, A, IT, CH, CZ…

Quick ID check happened once - when I was traveling with bus across border.

Back in a days it was a lot, lot slower and more detailed.

brabel an hour ago | parent | next [-]

If you miss the old days, try the bus from Vilnius to Minsk. It’s a full on border control just like in the times of the Soviet Union. Only 35 km away from an European Union capital city.

lukan 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

"Back in a days it was a lot, lot slower and more detailed."

Oh for sure, I have childhood memories of the really dark time, but it is way worse now, than it was back in 2015. I missed flixbus connections because of intense checks and changed vacation plans avoiding long waiting times at borders within EU (my recommendation, cross at night).

Haemm0r 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Flixbus are a primary target for those inspections...

archleaf 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Is this something new within the last year? I just travelled on Flixbus across Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland and received no checks.

Is it only certain countries?

ben_w an hour ago | parent [-]

> Is it only certain countries?

Every country can choose independently, and for each border. From a cursory search, it appears e.g. Poland currently only checks the borders with Germany and Lithuania. You'd have missed any checks on your specific trio, if this list was true at the time:

https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen/schengen...

_DeadFred_ an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Your current state is how Canada used to be from the US. Early 2000s we just showed drivers licenses. Went camping, up to Nelson. Then it got less friendly (US side) then passports required. To the point we stopped going. It sucks when politicians make our world smaller as in 'we have access to less' instead of smaller as in 'it's a small world after all'.

jandrewrogers an hour ago | parent [-]

Not just Canada but all of North America. I used to go into Mexico with my friends as a teenager to find trouble. No passport or adult supervision required.

I'm surprised how quickly people have forgotten that North America was a giant open border zone until very recently. You only needed a passport to travel overseas. In hindsight that was actually a pretty unique arrangement.

eloisant an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Try going to Switzerland by car (from France for example), and you'll see what an actual border check is.

Pretty different from having a chance to be stopped by a random check while crossing.

CupricTea an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

I was just in Europe this February. I took a bus from France to Germany and customs checked the passports of everyone on board.

cromka an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> I love the polish, but credit where credit is due

> I ment: „Poland gets money, Poland transforms it into more money”.

I have noticed that absolutely every time Poland's success is mentioned, someone from EU steps in to downplay it. A self-serving bias. Seriously, that type of comment is absolutely everywhere. Any YouTube video. Any Reddit post. In last couple days I have seen it about dozen times, last time today here: https://www.reddit.com/r/ArchitecturalRevival/comments/1t6k7...

And each time it's some unsubstantiated remark, not once do those people actually bother to check what the actual amount of subsidies did Poland receive over the past 22 years, or how does Poland fare against other EU members. They always imply that ALL THIS SUCCESS is thanks to EU.

For the record: Poland received in total about as much as its yearly budget is in 2026. Other recent EU members also received more-less the same or, per-capita, much more! Did you bother to see how other EU countries developed in that time?

Growth-wise, since 1990, Poland's economy grew substantially each year (even before joining the EU in 2004) and is only behind China: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F5Z8u1mWMAAHtUU?format=png&name=...

Seriously, look at that damn map. Find other EU members on that list.

Ergo, Poland must be doing something EXCEPTIONAL if its combined growth FAR SURPASSES not only any other recent EU members but ALL BUT ONE country worldwide? It can't just be that relatively small amount of the EU money, or the EU membership itself, can it?

So, for f*ks say, how about western EU shuts up and acknowledges IT'S NOT ALL THANKS TO THE EU, will it?

I am personally a big fan of the EU, but those downplaying comments are so annoying I can't but think it's some sort of jealousy. Credit where credit is due to POLES themselves.

You could just as well claim the growth is thanks to NATO membership because, if you look at Ukraine and Belaraus, it's quite plausible as well.

ricardobayes an hour ago | parent [-]

Based on my limited experience, Polish are incredibly workaholic and work-focused people. It's really no surprise they elevate themselves economically.

nickburns an hour ago | parent [-]

And intelligent, hence the Nazi stereotype.

tossandthrow 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yes, this is how European social welfare works. And it is fantastic! Because the entirety of the EU is benefitting from it. Polish people have larger spending power, interesting and safe places to visit, etc.

This is not a "present" given to Poland. This is ensuring a better life for all Europeans.

pavlov 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

In the 1980s, EU money was flowing to Spain, Portugal and Greece. And people complained about that too.

But the result is inarguably positive. Those countries had only recently become democracies after decades of military dictatorships or otherwise unstable third-world style governments. Today they're the most dynamic economies in the EU in many respects, and their democracies are well established and functioning.

The EU doesn't get nearly enough credit for how it transformed the continent. People have forgotten how nearly all European countries were in a very bad shape after WWII. Fascists had remained in power in Spain and Portugal. Soviets were orchestrating communist takeovers in countries like Italy. It's a small miracle that the liberal democratic economic order won so quickly and decisively.

nunobrito 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

That is incorrect for Portugal. We didn't took part on the WWII and came out with a rich country that kept growing on double-digits. Eventually it was attacked simultaneouly by the US/Russia proxies for 10 years until 1974.

It was after that US/Russia sponsored this communist takeover of our country that the new puppet governments have thrown the natives into extreme misery until someone from the EU decided to reduce the levels of corruption and misery. We simply swapped one master for another and hasn't been good for our land.

So please don't compare our country to whatever "solutions" brought by the same entities who caused our problems in the first place. We needed almost 50 years to remove socialism from this country and reduce the venezuelan/cuban style poverty forced upon us.

logicchains 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>Today they're the most dynamic economies in the EU in many respects

In what sense are they "dynamic economies"? Their GDP per capita has barely increased at all over the past two decades, they're mired in debt, and haven't produced a single new company that's significant on the global stage.

a_humean an hour ago | parent | next [-]

Spain is currently the fastest growing state in Europe, is the largest source new job creation in Europe, and is currently benefiting from its large scale investments in renewables and grid infrastructure sheltering it from the worst of the Iran war.

emigre 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Inditex, Mercadona, Movistar?...

TacticalCoder 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> The EU doesn't get nearly enough credit for how it transformed the continent. People have forgotten how nearly all European countries were in a very bad shape after WWII.

The EU is very turning major capital cities into complete shitholes. My city of youth, Brussels, is now a 3rd world hellhole where religious extremism (and not a christian one) reigns undisputed king and where drug-dealing cartels are running the show.

I fled that city.

> It's a small miracle that the liberal democratic economic order won so quickly and decisively.

We'll see how well the economic order "won" once there won't be enough money to pay for pensions and once islamists are going to take political power. 25% of Brussels is now bearded men and veiled women (and that number was near to 0% when I was a kid: so in my lifetime my native city turn from 0% to 25% muslims): if you think this shall lead to anything else than the "economic order" we're seeing in islamic country, you're a fool.

France is currently importing about 500 000 people per year, mostly from muslim countries, and it's estimated only 10% of these people are ever going to find work.

I find the EU's stance totally myopic and they're destroying the western culture with totally uncontrolled immigration, while handing the keys to the kingdom to religious extremists.

You mention WWII and fascists and communists: we got rid of those. But only to replace those with islamist extremism, which have already taken several cities, like Brussels.

So, no, the war against deadly ideologies ain't done yet and it's way too early to claim victory.

It's also quite thick to claim amazing "dynamic economies" when in USD the EU hasn't seen any grow since the 2008 financial crisis, at the same time where both the US and China skyrocketed. The EU is barely countering inflation and it's doing that at the cost of massive public debt increase.

I don't have the same reading of you at all as to what's happening in the EU.

I see the EU falling into both irrelevancy and islamism (btw islamism is already a major talking point of the next french elections, where two candidates are critizicing the "entrisme islamique" for the subject becomes very hard to ignore).

No growth since 2008 (in USD and inflation adjusted). Hardly any company in the Top 100.

A failure of a continent.

pavlov 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I’m not interested in debating the anti-Islam diatribe. If your lived experience is that “bearded men and veiled women” have destroyed the halcyon paradise of your childhood, then that’s fundamentally a nostalgia-based emotional argument.

But I’ll clarify that I wrote that Spain, Portugal and Greece specifically have become dynamic economies in the context of the EU. Spain has grown at a consistent 3% for a decade. Of course the far-right argues that it’s the wrong kind of growth because it’s fueled by immigration (backwards-looking political movements prefer zero growth and a shrinking population if it means less people of the color they don’t like).

indiangenz 5 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

The bearded men have increased the crime rates in Spain, France, UK, Germany, Sweden etc. This is crystal clear if you look up statistics. Just in the last week there was a Aloha Snack Bar stabbing in Barcelona. Poland has low crime rates specifically because they have strict border controls.

You are free to personally visit Brussels to see what a shit hole it is.

3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]
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flir 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I'm getting strong H. P. Lovecraft vibes here. Just so you know.

3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]
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kspacewalk2 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I think this is the hidden reason why the American alt-right/far-right/MAGA/techbro types hate the EU with so much apoplectic rage. For all its problems, big-picture-like it actually works to gradually coalesce a huge rich continent with a bigger population than the US into something increasingly more coherent, and if it continues to work it will mean that the Western world now has two heavyweight leaders, not one. For people who tend to view the world as a giant zero-sum dominance competition, this is of course a big threat. One more big player = one more competitor.

(The techbros hate it for a different, if related, reason - they aren't nearly as successful at capturing regulators, astroturfing and controlling discourse, and otherwise taking charge of that second entity as they are with the hapless US federal government).

roenxi an hour ago | parent | next [-]

> (The techbros hate it for a different, if related, reason - they aren't nearly as successful at capturing regulators, astroturfing and controlling discourse, and otherwise taking charge of that second entity as they are with the hapless US federal government).

I'd propose a different reason - the techbros disassociate with the EU because if someone want to work in tech that means getting fairly intimate with US culture, companies and markets. There is a reason this conversation is happening on a message board backed by a US company (moderated to US standards, I might add) - the Europeans don't have the ecosystem to sustain something similar.

If Europe were capable of building the ecosystems needed to fielding a large number of competent tech companies then techbros would start turning up there too.

TitaRusell 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Europe is the birthplace of democracy, socialism, feminism and secularism.

Ofcourse Christ conservatives hate it.

Jensson 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

And remember Christianity come from the middle east.

kspacewalk2 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Jesus would have foreseen the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz before launching a war of choice on the Persians.

truthaboutpl 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Good thing we are a Democratic Republic :)

kortilla an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Don’t make shit up about people you don’t understand.

>American alt-right/far-right/MAGA/techbro

Bucketing these all together doesn’t even make sense. A “techbro” has completely different reasons to dislike the EU (regulatory regime unfriendly to tech startups) than some MAGA focused on US competitors.

As someone from the tech industry, I’m disappointed in the EU as it falls further and further behind on innovation. I love the EU though and frequently visit it (which is not something a MAGA would do).

eowln 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

So your measure for success is how people get to put a piece of paper in a box every four years whilst their issues get ignored.

dnnddidiej 4 hours ago | parent [-]

What... are you really belittling democracy

eowln 3 hours ago | parent [-]

That’s not what I said. I said there are more important things to increase the wellbeing of the citizens of a country than democracy. In other words, a country can use democracy as a tool to destroy itself.

wussboy 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Maybe. But I don't think you will find any of those things without strong democracy.

purpleflame1257 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Counterpoint: China from Deng and onwards is an autocracy with rapidly improving material conditions

unmole 38 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Singapore says hi.

tw1984 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

which things? care to be more specific?

CodeNest 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

[dead]

Vaslo 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

So you’re taking from others who earned it and give it someone that didn’t? Got it.

wqaatwt 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

As noted in the other comment Poland is not even getting that much money per capita, it’s just a fairly large country.

They are still getting half of what Belgium is getting and unlike the overwhelming majority of bureaucrats in Brussels Polish farmers actually produce something useful.

smallnix 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yes, in the EU they call it 'sharing'

toasty228 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

That's like the entire point of the EU yes, most people agree it's better than what we used to have, considering how it went in 1914 and 1939 for example

tossandthrow 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Money is a claim on future work - it only works if the system works.

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shimman 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

This is what capitalists literally do with workers. It's not like capitalists are creating anything valuable, they're just leeches extracting wealth.

I rather have workers get the money than more corporate welfare.

andsoitis 4 hours ago | parent [-]

> It's not like capitalists are creating anything valuable,

Some capitalists create enormous value, some destroy it, some are essentially passive recipients of returns generated by others.

Capitalists provide real productive functions like capital allocation, risk-bearing, founding, governance, monitoring, etc.

shimman 3 hours ago | parent [-]

No capitalists just provide money, something other entities can as well. Often better too.

Capitalists are completely useless when they have no workers, so I don't understand your points outside of "wow capitalists require a lot of workers to exist."

Hence the rush towards LLM systems, the dream of perpetual labor machine is too enticing.

There is also no risks for capitalists, do we live on the same planet where the stated US economic policy isn't to socialize the risks and privatize the gains?

Jensson 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> There is also no risks for capitalists

So you argue no capitalists ever lost money? It happens all the time, the risk is real.

andsoitis 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]

-mlv 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

They're also the 3rd smallest net recipient of EU funds per capita:

https://i.imgur.com/VlRkDMy.png

Jensson 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

You mean 13? You have to count the net contributors as well or its very misleading...

riffraff 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

But that's not really meaningful in a "largest economy" point of view.

Quarrel 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

WTF is up with Luxembourg on that graph?

It is a tax haven, with one of the highest GDP / person in the world, why is it, by magnitudes, the biggest recipient of EU largesse / person??!

NoboruWataya 20 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

I presume this is because of the EU institutions there and that expenditure to maintain those institutions counts towards receipts (and this effect is then exaggerated due to Luxembourg's small population). Certainly no one in the EU is under any illusion that Luxembourg is poor, much less vastly poorer than the next poorest EU country.

FinnKuhn 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Lots of people who work in Luxembourg don't live there so anything "per capita" is a bit misleading.

Additionally a lot of the EU's institutions are based there or have offices there, some of which might count as investments as well.

Lastly, everything there is really expensive. So you need to invest a larger amount to achieve the same thing as elsewhere.

Quarrel 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

These are reasons why it might not be the largest provider of funds per capita, not why it would be by orders of magnitude the biggest recipient.

I have been to Luxembourg and to Hungary, Bulgaria & Greece - the otherwise obvious contenders for "poorest" in the EU and Luxembourg should not be in the picture.

SiempreViernes an hour ago | parent [-]

If it gets funds for restoring one railway bridge or something of that sort the fact the population is tiny makes the per capita investment look huge, just usual tiny country effects.

swiftcoder 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

A bunch of foreign companies also incorporate their EU subsidiaries there (presumably due to some tax benefit). I imagine that distorts their GDP quite badly as well.

-mlv 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Small population plus lots of EU institutions.

wowoc 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Exactly. Which proves that people who keep saying that Poland's growth is only due to EU's money should finally stop.

Another argument: Poland's GDP had already been growing at a similar pace before it joined the EU (but after it got rid of communism).

luke5441 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The largest EU benefit is that it makes democratic and rule of law backsliding unlikely. So if you invest money in Poland you can be reasonably sure that it won't get stolen from you. Hungary was a demonstration that this works over the long term.

rvnx 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

In the EU, money gets stolen from you in a more subtle way. For example, the COVID situation, with unlimited money-printing was a tax on the people who had savings, and supporting a specific subset of the economy, or, delaying the tax in the essence.

There is no lesson of "democracy" to give. At best it is a guided democracy, and this is very generous.

For example, VPNs are going to be forbidden, and the free speech compared to the US is a little toy.

Elections are often a facade in many EU countries.

In France for example, it's always the "right" (btw you can be socially or jailed if you support them by using the wrong words) against the existing party, and communists are begging it's better to vote for the existing party, than support the newcomers.

It's a loop, this is why there is this joke that voters are "beavers", because at every elections they are asked "build a dam" against competition.

There is the same beaver thing, over and over again for 30 years.

Even people that are actually elected you have nowhere your word near their decisions (and even less near Von der Leyen and similar people).

Poland understood long time ago that it needs a safe country, and that they need to make sure that the people in their country are fine and safe before helping the whole planet.

Hungary and Poland are a little bit in the same boat, their relative independence saves them (e.g. refusing the EUR currency, refusing some policies) that allows them to have more leeway to support the local people, while benefiting of the funds from the EU and Schengen.

The EU prevents your money from being stolen, except when the EU itself decides to withhold or deduct it. Hungary has lost over a billion euros in ECJ daily fines...

If you push it even further, this is forgetting about the hundreds of billions that are centrally distributed to third-parties (and this is just Ukraine!). So, your money, our decision.

p-e-w 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> The largest EU benefit is that it makes democratic and rule of law backsliding unlikely.

On the contrary. Since the EU has no meaningful penalty mechanism other than withholding funds, and enormous capacity for shared damage absorption, once a country passes a certain threshold of development membership in the EU actually encourages government misbehavior including democratic backsliding, because it insulates the government from many potential adverse consequences.

For example, governments around the world have to fear violent revolution. But in the EU, the shared desire for law and order is so strong that the rest of the members are likely to support a member state in repressing such a revolution with essentially any degree of brutality, regardless of the condition of that state’s democracy, because the alternative (a successful coup in an EU member state) is impossible to contemplate.

wowoc 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Yet you can see crowds of young anti-woke Germans on X claiming that Poland's been growing only because of their (i.e. the Germans') money.

Also, the reason you've given doesn't explain why it worked so much better for Poland than for Czechia, Slovakia and a few others.

patcon 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> doesn't explain why it worked so much better for Poland than for Czechia, Slovakia and a few others.

It's hard to see the other paths they could be on tho. One person's failure is another's raging success. It might be a bit like the way we take a peace for granted, because we can't internalize the cost of all the ways it could have been worse.

yetihehe 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Yet you can see crowds of young anti-woke Germans on X

There are also crowds of young anti-woke Poles claiming that Poland should leave EU because we would be better without it and claiming that EU is puppet of Germany. I've also seen opinions that Israel is a puppet of Poland, aimed at Israelis. If you want to, you will see all opinions you could imagine.

jkestner 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I wonder how many of those accounts are sock puppets like we have in American social media.

Jensson 2 hours ago | parent [-]

If you look at election outcomes you can see there are a lot of real ones, no need for sock puppets.

bell-cot 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> Yet you can see crowds of ...

The "logic" of xenophobic nationalism is that narratives are selected for how well they (1) cast "us" as victims, (2) cast some convenient "others" as villains, and (3) fire up "our" feelings of hatred. Neither logic nor truth are particularly desirable - and narratives which are particularly defiant of logic and truth may be a way of virtue signaling within xenophobic national social circles.

mazurnification 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yes - main benefit of EU is regulatory stabilization and open market. Ironically also this was working also before joining EU (most of the adjustment happening as requirement to join EU and implemented before joining).

PunchyHamster an hour ago | parent | next [-]

A lot of it also was behind a requirement to basically "fix your shit".

You could get the money but you had to get bureaucracy to be right and transparent to cut down on fraud, and that helped the rest of the govt to have less fraud.

lo_zamoyski 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Much of the stabilization was due to the strong domestic market. Recall that Poland was the only country to avoid the 2008/2009 recession. It is tight global integration that causes recessions to spread.

airstrike 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Brazil also famously avoided the 2008-09 recession to a great extent, to name one example.

Tight global integration is not a bad thing. Even if we took at face value your argument that a strong domestic market protected Poland in that case, you can't cherry pick the one instance in which lower-than-expected integration was beneficial without also considering all the other times in which it was harmful.

lo_zamoyski 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Indeed. The self-congratulatory narrative around "EU funds" is obnoxious and ignorant. As you say, Poland's economic growth was similar before it had joined the EU. (Many economists then thought Poland's accession in 2004 was premature and should have been postponed.) Causes were cultural (there is a strong, traditional entrepreneurial streak in Polish culture) and related to the economic reforms undertaken during the transition from the centrally-planned economy of the socialist period. People need to remember that Poles did not choose the communist regime after the War. It was thuggishly and violently imposed onto Poland by the occupying Soviets. Poles merely endured a provisional acceptance of the regime, because they had no choice.

Furthermore, as the GP hints, EU funds earmarked for Poland don't necessarily remain in Poland as investment. Much of that money circulates back into the pockets of contributing countries. You have to look at the entire paper trail to understand where money is actually ending up.

Also worth noting: Poland didn't receive a dime of reparations after the War. Germany (and with later contribution by the Soviets) had unleashed such mind-boggling destruction on Polish cities, towns, cultural inheritance, industry, etc. that only the so-called Swedish Deluge matches or exceeds this devastation.

The EU presents certain clear economic benefits for member countries. Nobody disputes that. But the patronizing and paternalistic narrative of some countries - reminiscent of their goofy rationalizations for their occupation of that region during the 19th century - need to go away.

ElevenLathe 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Can't agree more. Given its geography and population, one would expect Poland to be a major economy, but it's been occupied or even completely erased from existence for large stretches of industrial modernity. The period since 1989 is the longest stretch of true sovereignty that Poland has had since the 18th century.

The fucking krauts (both the German/Prussian and the Austrian/Hapsburg varieties) can and should toss them a few złoty for economic development as recompense for the horrific treatment they've dealt Poland over the centuries. It would be nice if the Russians would too, but that's not the reality we currently live in.

4ashJu 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Not really, the old smaller European Community should be restored and Poland can become the 51st US state for buffer purposes.

Times were much better.

ElevenLathe 37 minutes ago | parent [-]

"Not really" what?

mamonster 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

>Also worth noting: Poland didn't receive a dime of reparations after the War.

Poland received virtually all of the lands that were considered Prussia though.

lo_zamoyski 14 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

If you peer into the (un-tendentious) history of much of those lands, you might take a slightly different view of them... But perhaps more to the point, Poland lost nearly half of its prewar territory, east of the Curzon line. Poland is territorially smaller today than it was before WWII.

4ashJu 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Indeed it received Pomerania and the industrial center Silesia. Russia got East Prussia.

Probably worth more than the EUR 1 trillion fantasy figure that Polish right wingers demand.

inglor_cz an hour ago | parent [-]

It also "received" several million of its own people killed, including the highly educated Jewish community. While we are crunching numbers, let us not forget that loss of human capital matters in economy as well.

wswin 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You greatly overestimate its significance. The benefits are roughly 1% of the GDP. In 2023 Poland netted 8.2 bn€ [1]. The GDP was 751 bn€.

[1] https://www.pap.pl/en/news/poland-largest-recipient-eu-funds...

etiennebausson 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

You are naming a year outside those he named, it might influence significantly the result.

tgv 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

1% of the GDP is a considerable amount of money. The GDP is not a country's profit, not even its revenue. If we stick to 2023, Poland had a budget deficit of 5% of the GDP, which makes 1% a very welcome gift.

kakoni 14 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Finland has been an EU net contributor since 2001. Now it has among the highest unemployment rates in the EU and is going through austerity, while Poland is visibly building and converging. I understand the logic of cohesion funds, but from Finland it increasingly feels like: we cut, Poland builds.

grey-area 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The EU is working as intended then.

Even without funds distributing EU cash, a common market works as a leveller this way and pulls up the poorer countries, because if you can live work and operate anywhere, people naturally pick the cheapest and easiest places to start a business serving the EU.

Spain and Portugal were the previous beneficiaries and everyone benefits really as jobs are created everywhere.

This is far better than a situation where larger economies dominate all others forever.

rqalkj 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I don't understand the number of people here who repeat the official EU elites line.

Would you say that The US and Mexico should be forced to implement free movement of people, goods, services and industry with a new North American Union capital in Mexico city?

If not, what is the difference?

Mind you that Polish workers are the next in line to be screwed if Ukraine joins the EU.

pjc50 an hour ago | parent | next [-]

NAFTA was pretty beneficial until people went nuts about it.

wiseowise 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> Mind you that Polish workers are the next in line to be screwed if Ukraine joins the EU.

So when German workers got screwed when Poland joined EU it was fine, but Poland is where you draw the line?

DrBazza 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> „Poland is the largest beneficiary of EU funds 2014-2020, with one in four euro going to Poland“ https://www.gov.pl/web/funds-regional-policy/poland-at-the-f... Update: The comments below this are strange.

The comments are questioning what you wrote, which implies without evidence, that a small amount of EU money relative to Poland's own GDP, in just 6 years, is somehow entirely responsible for Poland's growth.

joenot443 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Since you seem to be implying causality here, I would assume that the other major beneficiaries have enjoyed a similar period of growth?

po1nt 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

If there was a correlation you would see the same trend in Slovakia, Hungary and such

toasty228 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Well, you do see the same trend in gdp per capita in Slovakia. The problem is that Poland has 30m more people.

https://georank.org/assets/img/charts/economy/poland/slovaki...

wqaatwt 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Per capita Slovakia and Hungary are getting way more than Poland so its the other way around if anything (of course the Baltics are a good counterpoint)

realusername 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Slovakia growth wasn't doing too bad, for Hungary we know the reason why it's the poorest EU country, Orban stole everything.

ahoka 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Conservative estimates put the embezzled amount around 60,000,000,000 Euros. The upcoming government says it’s at least the double of this.

riffraff 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Which you do, except they're a lot smaller than Poland.

wowoc 4 hours ago | parent [-]

The article on AP literally has a graph showing outsized growth of Poland compared to these countries (measured in GDP per capita).

toasty228 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

"GDP measured in constant 2021 international dollars, adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP) to account for differences in the cost of goods and services across countries"

Meh, idk what magic maths they pull, but any other sources I find do not corroborate their graph.

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/352708343/figure/fi...

https://dimiter.eu/Visualizations_files/cee/gdppc_country.pn...

riffraff 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

that is a graph of growth, but they started from different baselines, e.g. Hungary was famously known as "the happiest barrack in the communist camp".

Slovakia and Hungary have trailed % growth compared to Poland, but they are far richer countries now that they were 20 years ago, and the GDP per capita for Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia is quite close to each other[0].

I'm not trying to say Poland didn't do well, it did! I'm just saying the advantages of being in the EU outweigh any national merit by a lot, which should be quite self evident.

[0] GDP, nominal, per capita: 31,336 / 28,430 / 31,242 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nomi...

yeahforsureman 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Not surprised to see "German" quotation marks in this petty complaint...

LeonidasXIV 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Polish people have such a fear of Germans, thinking Germans are constantly scheming to screw Poland over. Whereas most Germans barely know Poland even exists.

As someone who has lived in both countries its such a hilarious anxiety.

i000 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Indeed hilarious considering my grandparent still remember being put into a german nazi concentration camp.

goralph an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It’s been barely two generations since the death camps. My grandma, who is still alive, can tell you stories of seeing trains take half her village away.

Intergenerational trauma is a real psychological phenomenon.

A „hilarious anxiety” is an incredibly naive world view.

5upplied_demand an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> As someone who has lived in both countries its such a hilarious anxiety.

What's hilarious about it? It seems pretty well-rooted given the actual history of the two areas.

- 1939: Germany invaded in 1939, officially starting World War II.

- 1941: Germany occupied the rest of Poland after attacking the Soviet Union, which had previously occupied Eastern Poland.

- Teutonic Order/Prussia: Throughout the 13th–16th centuries, the Teutonic Order fought numerous wars against Poland.

- Medieval Period: Records show invasions by Margrave Gero (963), Margrave Odo I (972), Emperor Otto II (979), and multiple campaigns by King Heinrich II between 1003 and 1017.

inglor_cz an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Germans probably won't attack anyone anymore, that is true.

But Germans making huge mistakes out of misguided idealism is still a problem. And given the size and influence of Germany, the rest of the continent has always to process those mistakes as well.

Danox 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Poland had a relatively clear idea of what they wanted to do once the Russians were out unlike some of the other countries in the eastern block, and it didn’t hurt that some of their neighbors to the north Lithuania, Estonia, and Latvia also had pretty good idea of what they wanted to do once they were out from under the Russians, it’s just too bad that the Ukraine when they had the brief chance, they didn’t take advantage of it hopefully they’ll get a second chance.

postepowanieadm an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

And 90 cents of every euro returning to the Old EU. Not to mention tax avoidance schemes, western companies transfer their profits out.

tryptophan 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There are many countries in the EU that get many more funds per person than Poland and have much worse outcomes.

Some moron always show up with the "but it was all the EU subsidies" talking point, which is quite frankly part of racist tropes of eastern Europeans being dumb and worse than westerners. Could you imagine them accomplishing anything on their own? That's ridiculous. It's us, the western saviors, who did this with our penny subsidies!

trwired 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Perhaps I wouldn't use such harsh words, but it is a noticeable phenomenon when interacting with _some_ Western Europeans that if Poland's success comes up in a conversation, they immediately "offer insight" that it was in fact all outside help that made it possible. (There are also, in fact, some folks further east of Poland, who like to repeat that narrative as well, but it doesn't happen nearly as often as with Westerners.)

And yes, my own take why this does happen is that there was certain order to the region in the past centuries - the West was modern and wealthy, the East was backwards and poor and all was in its natural place. This new situation is unfamiliar and needs a sort of explanation that would preserve the balance somehow. In short, they cope.

another-dave 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Some moron always show up with the "but it was all the EU subsides" talking point, which is quite frankly part of racist tropes of eastern Europeans being dumb and worse than westerners. Could you imagine them accomplishing anything on their own? That's ridiculous. It's us, the western saviors, who did this with our penny subsidies!

Ireland were in a similar position for instance (received €40bn in EU subsidies in the first 45 years of membership; now a net contributor).

hobofan 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I'm wondering how much of the net contribution comes from tech companies and how it compares to the loss of taxes due to Ireland acting as a tax haven for tech companies.

EDIT: Net contributions seem to be $3bn/year (total, independent of tech) while loss for other EU countries due to corporate tax evasion is $6bn/year.

toasty228 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

idk who's racist but you didn't research this topic even 5 minutes on google apparently, you see the exact same trends everywhere, the GDP per capita rose pretty much in the same manner in Poland vs Slovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria for example.

Of course these countries have 5-10m inhabitants so in term of raw GDP and industrial power they can't compete

https://georank.org/economy/bulgaria/hungary

https://georank.org/economy/poland/slovakia

https://georank.org/economy/bulgaria/poland

vovavili an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The Baltics and the Balkan states probably get just as many handouts as Poland, and still show lesser rate of economic growth.

odiroot an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Definitely not the largest per capita though. There's a lot of people in Poland.

tiborsaas 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> I ment: „Poland gets money, Poland transforms it into more money”.

It's not trivial that this works. In Hungary we messed this up big time, hopefully it can get fixed now.

0xDEAFBEAD 37 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>credit where credit is due

Eh, as an American I've spent many hours reading Europeans railing against the United States here on HN.

Not once has a European ever given the US credit for the Marshall Plan.

I actually look forward to seeing the EU become the global hegemon so they can learn about how much "fun" it is. The US can sit in the stands eating popcorn just like Switzerland.

weezing 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Per capita tho it isn't the largest beneficiary. The funds were just well spent.

surfmike 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Since one of the major donors is Germany, I also like to consider this as reparations for WWII. I wish people in Poland would realize more how generous the EU has been to them.

truthaboutpl 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Migrant donations with fake / fabricated Biedronka receipts and all! TYTY

mark_sz 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

But be fair: Poland had to rebuild after WWII and 40+ years of communism.

When Western countries got money via the Marshal Plan:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Plan

Poland had... "friendly" Soviets "supporting" their country for almost 44 years...

ceejayoz 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_rising_tide_lifts_all_boats

testing22321 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

In 2023 they got a measly 10% (8.2Billion) of the GM and Chrysler bailout that will never be repaid ($85Billion)

The EU gets huge benefits for that investment, the CEO of GM gets a multi-milion dollar pay packet.

seydor 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Oh no, other countries have been in that position but it did not go well

jakubadamw 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It’s a factor that’s not any more significant than the Marshall Plan was in your Wirtschaftswunder in the 1970s, which, oddly enough, a lot of Germans have no issue attributing to a domestic merit alone. Funny how that works!

If it was the EU contributions that were the dominant force here, Germany could… simply do the same and prop up its own struggling economy with money printed by the ECB. Instead, it prefers to see it crumble under an obese welfare state that largely funds inactive third-world fake asylum seekers. So clearly, there’s way more nuance to economic success than simply having funds redirected from one account to another.

2958a-123 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Britain received more from the Marshall plan and did a little worse. The Marshall plan also did not involve the US having completely free access to Germany economically and move all their companies to Germany for cheaper wages.

If you talk about asylum seekers (which may be a valid point), notice also that German social security institutions are filled to the brim with Eastern European claimants.

jakubadamw an hour ago | parent [-]

> Notice also that German social security institutions are filled to the brim with Eastern European claimants.

Utterly false: nationals of Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania account for approximately 4.9% of all SGB-II Leistungsberechtigte (~256,000 of 5.24 million as of December 2025).

> The Marshall plan also did not involve the US having completely free access to Germany economically and move all their companies to Germany for cheaper wages.

This is such a bizarre point. The openness of the common market goes both ways, you do realise that, right? For more than the first decade after the accession of the Central Eastern European countries to the EU, Western European countries saw an influx of workers that were well educated (or skilled in trade professions), which helped fill the gaps in their labour market. So if you were going to try to draw an analogy here, you’d also have to point out that the US didn’t import millions of Germans after the war into its own labour market. Well, barring some rocket scientists who had built weapons of mass destruction and death for Hitler.

Anyway, yes, that’s how the common market works: companies can move operations to countries where labour is cheaper (in Poland), but other companies have encouraged labour to move where they already operate (in Germany). And what’s forgotten in this discussion is that the cohesion subsidies are in fact a form of compensation for the inherent imbalance that a pure common market would exhibit. That’s why it took years in negotiations for those poorer countries to decide under what terms they’re actually willing to open up their markets, and in many cases it’s been a very controversial issue.

ltasdh 5 minutes ago | parent [-]

You are arguing from the point of capital and the industry. West Germany was fine without an influx of educated Poles. The capital and the industry benefit, not the employees.

You are by the way underestimating the credit that the Marshall Plan gets in Germany. It is taught in schools and not commonly denied.

wslh 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Countries don't mechanically convert inputs into development. There are many examples of countries with large capital inflows and/or strong capabilities that still fail to become strong economies. Corruption is one of the major frictions that prevents those resources from translating into broad economic success.

William_BB 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This is such a bad take. I'm impressed how often this gets parroted online.

Next time, please check how many Poles left Poland for western EU since they joined.

inglor_cz an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It seems to be almost universally agreed across the former Soviet Bloc that Poland indeed used the EU funds more wisely than anyone else.

self_awareness 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Well, Germany had their own EU funds when they raided other countries. Today, noone bats an eye?

At least Poland does it legally.

pkfz 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

No one can deny EU funds have helped, but putting credits only there is pure misinformation. Take a look at what part of GDP are EU funds and what is the size per capita. Hard work and open market were actually the biggest contributors to the development of Poland.

nubg 23 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Cue the butthurt Germans, decimating their own bread and butter industries by ridiculous policies like diesel and nuclear bans, immigration straight into the welfare state, then complaining that others - who did not commit economic suicide - fare better. Note that Germany vastly profits from the EU as well, as it allows Germany to push e.g. their established supermarkets into Eastern Europe, undercutting any competition. This is never mentioned when talking about "largest beneficiaries of EU funds"

ltasdh 8 minutes ago | parent [-]

We have to distinguish between the German industry and corporations and the German people. The German people do not benefit from Aldi expanding into Poland.

lifestyleguru 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> „Poland is the largest beneficiary of EU funds 2014-2020, with one in four euro going to Poland“

The lion share of this budget has been defrauded, fraud is only slightly less widespread than in Hungary. Piles of (only) documentation are produced by professionals then funds are funnelled to the families of local authorities. Honestly I'm confused, maybe that's indeed how EU funds are suppoused to work?

mensetmanusman 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It's important to understand the difference between handouts and investments with an expected ROI.

It's unfortunate that 0th order thinking jumps to this framing, it's one reason I always laugh when people talk about SpaceX taking 'government handouts' without these folks realizing the 100x ROI the government got out of their investment. All investments are 'hand outs' but not all 'hand outs' are investments.

Clear thinking at a large enough scale will prevent a populace from self destructing due to stupidity about this topic.

victorbjorklund 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Honestly, it’s not why their economy has grown. That money is just wasted on government projects? Has it hurt? No, but it is a small amount when it comes to the entire Polish economy.

kevmo 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Government investment works. That's why America's billionaires are mostly just people stealing as much of it as they can.

AtlasBarfed 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It's a first line buffer state against Putin.

Think of it as defense spending

otterz 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Buffer implies it's void of meaningful content. An unfair word to describe an industrialized nation and member of the top 20 largest economies.

Detrytus 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

[flagged]

cromka an hour ago | parent [-]

> Polish economy grows despite EU membership, not because of it.

LOL. Seriously, LOL. You think GDP growth would be HIGHER if not for the access to the common market? What the hell are you talking about?

As a Pole, I see such statements as absolutely ridiculous, brain-dead.

keiferski 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Now compare that number to this number:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_material_losses_during_...

And don’t forget the Partitions and The Deluge, too.

Crazy how people just like to pretend that wealth acquired before 1950 somehow just appeared there naturally.