logo
EU gives green light for Bulgaria to join euro

EU gives green light for Bulgaria to join euro

Euractiv2 days ago
EU finance ministers gave the final green light on Tuesday for Bulgaria to adopt the euro on the first day of January 2026, nearly 19 years after the country joined the European Union.
"We thank all institutions, partners and everyone whose efforts made this landmark moment possible. The government remains committed to a smooth and effective transition to the euro in the interest of all citizens," Bulgarian Prime minister Rossen Jeliazkov wrote on X.
In adopting the legal texts necessary for the move, EU finance ministers officially set the euro at 1.95583 Bulgarian lev.
"Joining the euro area is much more than just about replacing lev with euro. It is about building a brighter and more prosperous future for Bulgaria and its citizens at the heart of Europe," EU economy chief Valdis Dombrovskis said after the approval, adding that the common currency will bring new opportunities, investments, jobs and growth.
The European Commission last month said the EU's poorest country had fulfilled the strict conditions to adopt the euro, while the European Central Bank (ECB) also gave a positive opinion.
The rocky road to the euro
Bulgaria's journey to joining the eurozone has had a stormy political backdrop with seven elections in three years - the last in October 2024.
But recent polls show Bulgarian society remains divided on the euro, with experts attributing the scepticism largely to fears of rising prices and declining purchasing power.
President Rumen Radev shocked many when he proposed holding a referendum on the matter but that was given short shrift by the Bulgarian parliament.
Since June, protesters have gathered in Sofia to call for "keeping the Bulgarian lev". A symbolic protest camp with several tents has been set up near the presidency and the Bulgarian National Bank in the capital.
Far-right opposition parties have used the issue to promote anti-EU narratives.
Proponents in Bulgaria, however, insist the move will help improve the country's economy, and reinforce its ties to the West and protect against Russia's influence.
"The political benefits are becoming increasingly significant, as the protests against the euro seem to bear the mark of the Kremlin," 43-year-old musician Veselin Dimitrov told AFP in Sofia.
Euro club gets bigger
The green light comes as the euro has been gaining in value against the US dollar as President Donald Trump's protectionist trade policies shake trust in the US currency.
The euro was launched on 1 January 2002 with 12 countries, including France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Greece. Since then, it has expanded to include Slovenia (2007), Cyprus and Malta (2008), Slovakia (2009), Estonia (2011), Latvia (2014), Lithuania (2015) and Croatia (2023), bringing the total number of countries to 20.
Bulgaria wanted to adopt the euro sooner but Brussels judged its inflation was too high to meet the necessary criteria.
EU states that want to join the single currency must demonstrate that their economy has converged with other eurozone countries and that they have their finances under control.
The conditions include holding inflation to no more than 1.5 percentage points higher than the rate of the three best-performing EU countries.
When Brussels gave its backing in June, it said Bulgaria's average inflation rate during the 12 months to April 2025 was 2.7%, just below the needed level.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Poland formally asks EU to investigate Elon Musk's Grok AI chatbot
Poland formally asks EU to investigate Elon Musk's Grok AI chatbot

Euractiv

timean hour ago

  • Euractiv

Poland formally asks EU to investigate Elon Musk's Grok AI chatbot

The Polish deputy prime minister has written to Tech Commissioner Henna Virkkunen asking the EU to launch an investigation into Grok, the AI chatbot integrated into Elon Musk's social media platform X, under the Digital Services Act (DSA). Earlier this week the chatbot was reported making a flurry of antisemitic and hateful outbursts, including posts that appeared to celebrate Hitler – soon after which X said it had taken down the offending posts. In the Polish deputy prime minister's letter to Virkkunen – dated 9 July and seen by Euractiv – Krzysztof Gawkowski wrote: "What we are seeing from X right now could be considered as a major infringement of the DSA." His letter also calls out Grok for posting "offensive remarks in response to users' questions," including against the Polish government. "Grok's responses were erratic and full of expletive-laden rants which could be described in many cases as defamation," he added. Gawkowski spoke on Polish radio yesterday, saying the government would be asking the Commission to investigate Grok. It has now taken the formal step of sending a letter which includes Poland's Digital Services Coordinator in CC. While X has faced extensive DSA investigation already – aspects of which led to a preliminary breach finding last July – the Commission has failed to fine the platform or reach a final decision on any of the probes. Asked about Grok on Wednesday, Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier told Euractiv that it is in touch with national digital services authorities on such issues. "Grok is integrated into a designated very large online platform under the DSA," he noted, adding: "X therefore has the obligation to assess and mitigate any potential risks stemming from the tool." The Commission's spokesman, however, did not confirm whether it will open a separate investigation in light of Poland's concerns yesterday. A follow up request for comment today had not been answered at the time of writing. (nl)

The hypocrisy of the left has gone too far
The hypocrisy of the left has gone too far

Euractiv

time6 hours ago

  • Euractiv

The hypocrisy of the left has gone too far

Loránt Vincze has been an EPP Member of the European Parliament since 2019 on behalf of the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (RMDSZ). He is the EPP coordinator in the Committee on Constitutional Affairs, the International Secretary of the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (RMDSZ), and Chair of the EP Intergroup on Traditional Minorities, National Communities and Languages. The political left in Europe has mastered the art of selective principles. They champion the rule of law – until it no longer serves their narrative. They demand institutional transparency and an ethics body – as long as the committee of "independent experts" is made up of NGO representatives from their own ideological corner. They defend civil society and non-governmental organisations – so long as those organisations follow the GMW ideology: Green, Migration, and Woke. But let's be honest: what they really want is for GMW-aligned NGOs to receive unchallenged access to EU funds. They talk of accountability while turning a blind eye when these same organisations use public money to lobby the very institutions that fund them – only to return and ask for more. We value the work of NGOs, grassroots organisations, and civic groups that genuinely contribute to dialogue and problem-solving in their communities. NGOs can be ideological, and that's part of healthy democratic debate. But public authorities must not treat those aligned with left-wing causes as more legitimate than conservative ones. Increasingly, grant applications are disregarded unless they explicitly endorse GMW priorities, narrowing pluralism and undermining trust in the fairness of EU funding. This is not principled politics. This is not public service. This is GMW fundamentalism, a form of ideological extremism no less harmful than any coming from the far right. It's rigid, intolerant of dissent, and deeply disconnected from the everyday concerns of European citizens. In Brussels, the political arena has become dominated by this double standard. The so-called 'EU bubble' often demands the political downfall of the centre-right and the right. The message is clear: there is room only for the approved narrative, only for the acceptable ideology. But the left must come down from its moral high horse and step into the real world – the world outside the plenary chamber and beyond the Brussels think tanks. Go and meet the people. Speak to workers, farmers, small business owners, teachers, and families. Listen to what they care about. You'll quickly find that the GMW ideology might stir debate on social media, but it's not what keeps people up at night. Their real concerns? Rising living costs, educational opportunities, access to healthcare, decent wages, honest entrepreneurship, dignified pensions, peace and security. Ironically, many of these are traditionally seen as centre-left issues. But today, they are better addressed by the European People's Party (EPP) and its commitment to the social market economy – a model rooted in responsibility, solidarity, and practical solutions. The centre-right represents the backbone of Europe: families, communities, entrepreneurs, farmers. These are not abstract interest groups; they are real people with real lives and real hopes. And we fight for them. It seems to surprise when the EPP Group pushes back. In truth, we should do it more often – and more firmly. We are Christian Democrats . We stand for European values, for the European way of life, for subsidiarity, for national responsibility in European coordination, and for a strong Europe that acts with purpose in a rapidly changing world. For the EPP, citizens and communities are at the centre – not ideology. And when policies are put to the test in the European Parliament, outcomes may surprise you. In fact, voting records show that in the past year, during final votes there were more than twice as many majorities formed between the Socialists and the right against the EPP than between the EPP and the right against the Socialists. Numbers aside, the EPP will not shy away to get a majority behind rightful decisions. In the end, the verdict on the left's hypocrisy will not be rendered by editorial pages, political spin, or virtue-signalling speeches. It will come at the ballot box – by citizens who are tired of being lectured, and ready to be heard.

Sweden rejects EU plan to fund budget with tobacco tax
Sweden rejects EU plan to fund budget with tobacco tax

Euractiv

time6 hours ago

  • Euractiv

Sweden rejects EU plan to fund budget with tobacco tax

Swedish Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson has strongly opposed an EU proposal to use revenue from higher tobacco taxes to help fund the bloc's next long-term budget, calling it "completely unacceptable". The proposal, referenced in a document from Germany's International Affairs Liaison Office in Brussels and submitted to the German parliament, suggests new EU revenue sources for the 2028–2034 budget could include levies on electronic waste and tobacco. Though not yet officially confirmed by the European Commission, the idea adds to growing pressure from at least 15 EU member states to raise excise duties on tobacco products. As Euractiv reported last month, the European Commission is considering a 139% tax hike on cigarettes, along with steeper levies on alternative products such as e-cigarettes, nicotine pouches, and heated tobacco. Sweden now joins Italy, Greece, Romania, and Bulgaria in opposing the move, primarily to defend snus – a moist tobacco pouch banned in the EU since 1992 but legal in Sweden under an EU accession treaty exemption, which allows domestic sale only if it is not marketed elsewhere in the bloc. In a post on X, Svantesson called the proposal would result in 'a very significant tax increase on white snus,' and that the Commission wants the tax revenue 'to go to the EU and not to Sweden.' She said she had raised the issue with Commissioner for Climate, Net Zero and Clean Growth, Wopke Hoekstra, who is also responsible for EU tax matters and pledged to 'continue to fight for Swedish snus.' Sweden has positioned itself as a model for tobacco harm reduction, citing a smoking rate of just 5% and a decline in smoking-related cancers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store