
Bulgaria becomes 21st member to adopt euro after EU green light
Bulgaria's switch from the lev to the euro comes nearly 19 years after the country of 6.4 million people joined the European Union. 'We did it!' Bulgarian Prime Minister Rossen Jeliazkov said. '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,' Mr. Jeliazkov said on X.
In adopting the legal texts necessary for the move, EU finance ministers officially set the euro at 1.95583 Bulgarian lev.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and European Central Bank head Christine Lagarde congratulated Bulgaria after the ministers' approval. 'We are delighted to welcome you,' Ms. Lagarde said. 'The euro will strengthen Bulgaria's economy and bring big benefits for Bulgarian people and businesses,' Ms. von der Leyen said on X.
'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.
The European Commission last month said the EU's poorest country had fulfilled the strict conditions to adopt the euro, while the ECB also gave a positive opinion.
Mixed feelings
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.
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 U.S. dollar as President Donald Trump's protectionist trade policies shake trust in the U.S. currency.
Only 12 countries were part of the single currency area – including France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Greece – when the first euro bills and coins were rolled out on January 1, 2002.
It gradually widened with Slovenia joining in 2007, Cyprus and Malta in 2008, Slovakia in 2009, Estonia in 2011, Latvia in 2014 then Lithuania in 2015.
Croatia was the last country to join in 2023, bringing the total 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 area must demonstrate that their economy has converged with other eurozone countries and that they are focused on sound public spending.
The conditions include holding inflation to no more than 1.5% points higher than the rate of the three best-performing EU countries.
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