Easter Monday in Bulgaria: Tradition and Family Visits
Orthodox Easter Monday is the day following Easter Sunday and is observed across Bulgaria as part of the wider Easter celebration within the Orthodox Christian tradition
HOT: » Which party would you vote for (if you could) in the upcoming snap vote in Bulgaria on April 19?
The Euro sculpture is seen in front of the European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, on 04 August 2011. Photo by EPA/BGNES
Public support for Bulgaria's eurozone membership has been seriously dented over the last few months following the troubling developments in the monetary union, analysts say.
While at the end of last year the Bulgarian society was cut in two over calls for immediate introduction of the European single currency, recent surveys by the Open Society Institute and Transatlantic Trends 2011 have found out that those who oppose euro adoption now are a huge majority.
In July, just a quarter of the respondents favored the adoption of the single currency, down by nearly 10% in comparison with the beginning of the year. Opponents are also increasing - over half of the respondents said they were against the euro and nearly a quarter said they have no opinion on that issue.
"The Currency Board regime in which Bulgaria operates enjoys great public support, it is one of the most trusted institutions. The people prefer to use the lev instead of switching to the euro, even though the local currency is pegged to the euro," Georgi Angelov, Senior Economist with the Open Society Institute – Sofia, commented.
Obviously Europe is falling short of providing Bulgarians with confidence that it can handle the crisis stemming from unsupportable debt loads in countries like Greece, Portugal and Ireland and the looming crisis in Italy. Indicatively the highest levels of support for adopting the single currency were seen as far back as in 2008-2009.
Bulgaria's current center-right government however has consistently pursued European integration with enormous zeal and has made clear that the single currency woes and doomsayers' warnings of a possible crack-up will not give it a pause.
Finance Minister Simeon Djankov recently offered a rare vote of confidence in the single currency's long-term future, saying in an interview for the Wall Street Journal that the country remains committed to adopting the euro as quickly as possible.
According to him recent developments—specifically the government's progress in passing new fiscal-stability legislation and a cooling of calls for euro-area tax harmonization—had assuaged Sofia's concerns, meaning talks could restart in months.
The country has repeatedly changed the time frame for adopting the euro. Ambitiously scheduled initially for 2010, the country's entry into the eurozone was first set back for some time around 2012 with experts saying it is conditional on continued fiscal prudence and lower inflation.
The center-right government, which swept to power in the summer of 2009, was very enthusiastic about adopting the single currency only to be forced to put off plans after the country's 2009 revised budget gap exceeded the three percent EU threshold.
Now it is back in the game, saying it plans to apply to join ERM II in the second half of 2011 after it has, hopefully, demonstrated that this year's budget deficit will fall below the European Union's ceiling of 3% of gross domestic product in line with the Maastricht criteria.
The failure of previous governments to take that step earlier is often attributed in Bulgaria to behind-the-curtain maneuvers by European officials - Eurozone President Juncker and European Central Bank President Trichet in particular – who allegedly created their own tools for managing the EU.
Finance Minister Simeon Djankov's belt-tightening policy however has drawn criticism of creating the illusion of a healthy economy on the back of the people, who are three times poorer than the average EU citizen and are just getting poorer.
The Ministry of Finance has released a broad public dataset covering more than 7,000 public procurement contracts with a combined value exceeding 30 billion euros
Caretaker Finance Minister Georgi Klisurski said he expects fuel prices at gas stations to ease in the coming period, pointing to a sharp decline in international oil markets
Bulgaria’s new government borrowing for 2026 has surpassed the 1 billion euro mark following the latest successful auction of state securities, according to data cited from the Bulgarian National Bank
Bulgaria recorded only a modest and one-off increase in inflation following the adoption of the euro on January 1, with the effect estimated at between 0.3 and 0.4 percentage points
Data released by the Ministry of Finance, covering budget execution for February 2026 and preliminary estimates for March 2026, indicate a marked deterioration in Bulgaria’s fiscal position
In the 2026 edition of the Index of Economic Freedom, compiled by the Heritage Foundation, Bulgaria is placed 38th out of 176 countries, positioned between Costa Rica and Oman
Aniventure Comic Con Returns to Bulgaria with Star Guest Christopher Judge!
Global Fuel Shock: Oil Jumps Over 40% Since Iran War Began