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Bulgaria's EU Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response, Kristalina Georgieva. Photo by bGNES
Bulgaria's cabinet must seek professional advice for the management of the Silver Fund which is part of the fiscal reserve, according to the country's EU Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response, Kristalina Georgieva.
Speaking for Darik radio Saturday, Georgieva stressed that the Fund must be managed by people, who are independent from political decisions, and with the help of experts. She proposed to the cabinet to benefit from the experience of the World Bank where the retirement fund is overseen by independent experts in such aggressive way that there is plenty of money for everyone over the age of 50 to retire.
The EU Commissioner further pointer out the need to look for larger diversification of the resources in the Silver Fund, such as some of them being invested in State securities and having an aggressive and a conservative portion in the portfolio.
"We must be very careful to not put all our eggs in one basket. The aggressive part must be divided with great care – wealthy people all over the world are now very attentive when they invest," she said, adding that regardless of Bulgaria's good credit rating, the country is dependent on what is happening in Europe.
Regarding the thorny issue with bonuses for State servants, Georgieva stated that in successful administrations employees earn good money, but they work to the max and there is no need of additional incentives.
According to the Commissioner, the bonus scandal would end up being beneficial if it leads to acceleration of the retirement reform.
Bulgaria's Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister, Simeon Djankov recently proposed changes to the governance of the Silver (Retirement) Fund that would enable a more active management of the collected funds and the investment of up to 70% of it in government securities.
Scope Ratings has completed its latest review of Bulgaria and confirmed the country’s long-term credit rating at A- with a stable outlook, alongside short-term ratings of S-1/Stable
At the turn of the year, Bulgaria is preparing to enter 2026 without an approved state budget
In Bulgaria, the common perception that investing is reserved for the wealthy remains widespread, but recent analysis by Freedom24 shows that households can begin investing with modest amounts of 50–100 BGN (approximately €25–50) per month
The euro has been in use since 1999 as a non-cash accounting unit and since 2002 as physical currency.
Pension insurance contributions will not increase in 2026, while pensions themselves will be updated from 1 July under the Swiss indexation formula, resulting in an expected rise of 7–8%.
The digital euro is a crucial tool for strengthening Europe’s financial and strategic independence and will complement physical cash amid the rapid digitalisation of payments.
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