Nearly 20% of Households in Bulgaria and Greece Face Winter Without Adequate Heating
Nearly one in five residents in Greece and Bulgaria struggle to keep their homes warm
@Pixabay
In June, Bulgaria's services sector saw a monthly production increase of 0.6 percent, while Eurostat data showed a decline in the EU for the same period. Production in the Eurozone's services sector dropped by 0.8 percent compared to May, with the overall EU figure falling by 0.9 percent. This follows May's figures where services output in the Eurozone decreased by 0.1 percent, and the EU saw a slight rise of 0.2 percent.
Germany, in contrast, faces stagnant economic growth. Forecasts that previously predicted a 0.4 percent increase in gross domestic product for 2024 now expect zero growth. The Ifo Institute in Munich projects that Germany's economy will grow by 1.5 percent in 2026. According to Timo Volmershauser, head of economic forecasts at Ifo, Germany is in a structural crisis, with insufficient investment, especially in the industrial sector, and stagnant productivity.
Meanwhile, Bulgaria's services sector showed stronger performance, recording a 4.2 percent year-on-year growth in June. This ranks Bulgaria fifth among EU countries in terms of services sector production growth.
The Bulgarian National Bank announced extended operating hours at its cash desks today and on Saturday, December 20, in response to heightened public demand
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 three leading telecommunications operators in Bulgaria inject more than 640 million BGN (≈327 million EUR) annually into the development of networks and services
The euro has been in use since 1999 as a non-cash accounting unit and since 2002 as physical currency.
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