Why Nobody Wants To Live In Poland

economics, money, poland The most important building in modern Poland might not be a factory, a bank, or a government ministry. It might be an airport terminal. Because for years, one of the defining images of post-2004 Poland was not people rushing in. It was Poles flying out. To London. To Dublin. To Berlin. To Oslo. That sounds strange, because on paper Poland is one of Europe’s great success stories. The OECD says Polish GDP per capita has doubled since 2005, and the European Commission says Poland was one of the EU’s fastest-growing economies between 2022 and 2024. And no, literally nobody wanting to live in Poland is not true. At the start of 2024, nearly 936,000 foreign nationals were living there, and in 2024 Poland still issued around 180,000 long-term residence permits to non-EU citizens. But that is exactly what makes the story so revealing. Poland grew. Poland modernized. Poland got richer. And still, for a huge number of people, the instinct was to look west. In today's video, we look at Why Nobody Wants To Live In Poland… Keep watching to see economics, money, poland Also check out:    • Why Living In Saudi Arabia Has Become Impo...   #economics #money #economicsdarkside