avi pfp
avi
@avichalp.eth
what explains this?
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Royal pfp
Royal
@royalaid.eth
I think the majority of that was @rafi
1 reply
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rubinovitz pfp
rubinovitz
@rubinovitz
They saw communism and they’re never going back
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mvr 🐹 pfp
mvr 🐹
@mvr
All because woj was early investor into the faircaster launch Probably somewhat related is that Poland joined the EU in 2004, signed in 2003
0 reply
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3 reactions

Ryan pfp
Ryan
@ryanfmason
Government sponsored jobs programs, I’ve heard it takes 10 full time Polish salaries just to put in a lightbulb!
1 reply
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dusan 🎩 pfp
dusan 🎩
@ds8
they like the letter "z"* so they drew it on a chart *jerzy szczeczinsky
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Daikie.eth pfp
Daikie.eth
@daikie
Poland was a big WW2 causality. They basically had no economy left by the end of it. Catalyst for massive growth Also, they joined the EU in 2004 and have had lots of expats working in countries with higher wages and sending it back to Poland. Eventually that does add up.
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HH pfp
HH
@hamud
A decent chunk was from EU Investment
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David Goodman pfp
David Goodman
@dh6oodman
1. Highly educated population. 2. Retention of Zloty vs Euro. 3. Foreign investment in technology base. 4. Intelligent governance. I’ve worked with Polish devs for HW/SW for a decade. Unbeatable.
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​woj pfp
​woj
@woj
low taxes, low energy costs, free trade with european union, great school system, lots of chips on the shoulders, big logistics industry, solid game industry, lots of goated programmers, no african immigration, no crime poland is the greatest country in the world to live right now that being said, we have challenges that will be reflected in this graph soon: - energy costs skyrocketing (EU taxing coal) - EU forcing Poland to adopt to the same immigration scheme - higher labour costs (no longer a poor country) - russian aggression can fuck us up any time
1 reply
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JR ↑ pfp
JR ↑
@juli
Imo the people are hard workers and want to build up a great polish country - without ambition to help the whole world or standout as most social country. I also believe labor costs are a massive factor whether economies grow or not. After ww2 labor costs were cheap in Germany & Western Europe and everyone was hungry to get a better life. With more wealth and social security baked into the system, the incentives changed to wealth maintenance (& it’s become important to have workforce immigration for wealth building; beware of social security immigration though). Today, there’s still many polish people earning money in Germany etc. and bringing in home, hiring local talent to build business. Germany and Sweden has little quality immigration, no cheap labor but high regulatory burdens. Other (relatively rich) countries like UAE still don’t care much about people and get “cheap, hard working” labor (from India/pakistan) to grow the country, local people & “quality migrants” pay for it & enjoy it
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darkragelight.eth pfp
darkragelight.eth
@darkragelight
Walesa promised a second Japan
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