While a majority of Poles want their country to join the European Union, less than one quarter want to abandon their national currency and adopt the euro as soon as possible
Published:
27 February 2001 y., Tuesday
While a majority of Poles want their country to join the European Union, less than one quarter want to abandon their national currency and adopt the euro as soon as possible, according to a poll released Monday.
Only 23 percent of Poles said they are ready to part with the zloty two years after joining the EU, the earliest possible time new members can adopt the euro after membership, according to a PBS poll published in Rzeczpospolita daily Monday.
A higher percentage of Poles, 29 percent, said they did not want to adopt the euro at all.Some 23 percent of respondents said they would prefer to wait longer before joining the monetary union. Twenty-five percent of respondents did not have a view.
Half of those who opposed dropping the zloty expressed traditional attachment or the view each country should have its own currency, while 27 percent said having its own currency will help Poland's economy develop.
PBS polled a statistically representative group of 1,012 people on February 10-12.
Šaltinis:
Agence France Presse
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Statistics Lithuania has calculated that, based on provisional data, FDI in Lithuania in 2009 amounted by 5.3 % more than in 2008. Also, direct investment of Lithuanian enterprises abroad grew by 13.9 % in 2009.
more »
Concerns about foreign fish being sold in Europe and what to do about the future of Europe's fisheries industry were aired in a hearing held by the Fisheries Committee on 8 April.
more »
EU opens public debate on its agricultural policy, the prelude to a major reform in 2013.
more »
The European Commission today launched a €35 million call for eco-innovation projects to be funded under the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme.
more »
Bank SNORAS group company Finasta Holding recruits all funds management and investment companies of the group in the Baltic States.
more »
The European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Commission are jointly holding a high-level conference on financial integration and stability at the ECB’s premises in Frankfurt am Main.
more »
Today, the European Central Bank (ECB) is publishing its fourth Report on Financial Integration in Europe, which notes the return towards integration in the European financial markets.
more »
World Bank Group financial commitments since July 2008, just before the full fury of the financial crisis hit, reached US$ 100 billion today as the institution helped countries respond to and recover from the global downturn.
more »
On March 31, 2010, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund concluded the Article IV consultation with Serbia.
more »
The International Monetary Fund and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development have launched a new project to improve macroeconomic statistics in 23 African countries. DFID will provide US$7.5 million over the next five years to support the project.
more »