Can Bulgaria implement the 2030 Agenda as upper middle income country?
Published on Wed, 2016-08-24 14:37
Bulgaria has come a long way from its turbulent political and economic transition in the 1990s to becoming a member of the European Union (EU) in January 2007. Today, it is an upper middle-income economy of 7.2 million people with a per capita income of USD7,420. (GNI per capita, 2014). However, since 2008, economic growth has been sluggish and income gains of the bottom 40 percent of the population have been weak. Supported by prudent macro-fiscal management, Bulgaria showed resilience during the global economic crisis with reduced imbalances and a sound public debt level (27.6% of GDP in 2014). Yet, convergence has slowed and Bulgaria’s income per capita are just 45 percent of the EU average in 2013. Eurostat data show that in 2014, Bulgaria holds second place in the at-risk-of-poverty-or-social-exclusion scale: Romania (40.2 %), Bulgaria (40.1 %) and Greece (36.0 %). The crisis and the measures taken to freeze income exacerbated social inequality and the chances of nearly half of the population to get out of the trap of poverty and social exclusion. Given this situation, what must be done to implement the 2030 Agenda? Source: Bulgaria National Report, Social Watch Report 2016. » |
Reports from Bulgaria
2017 - Implementing the SDGs – from discussions to strategies and reforms
2016 - Can It Implement the 2030 Agenda as Upper Middle Income Country?
2012 - The environment is back on the agenda
2010 - Finance for development in times of crisis
2008 - Stagnation of socioeconomic rights
2007 - The new pension paradigm: will it work for all?
2006 - The challenge of redirecting reforms and resources towards the human factor
2003 - The big sale in the water supply market
2002 - The price of being agreeable to the IMF
2001 - European Union: opportunity or marginalisation?
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H |
SUSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER