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    25 Kommentare

    1. BrilliantExternal236 on

      In PPP. Our nominal GDP per capita has still a long way to go 

    2. Old-Crow5343 on

      Ta, a z tego GDP średni Polak e całym życiu nie zobaczy nawet 0.0001%.

    3. Hot-Disaster-9619 on

      Nie wierzę w to i nawet dane mnie nie przekonają xd Przecież to jest niemożliwe. Japończycy mają gigakoncerny, a my Dino i jakieś januszexy.

    4. Downtown-Theme-3981 on

      PPP is crappy statistic, made so people can feel better. Mostly because „gobal goods“ have similiar prices everywhere.

    5. This comment section is, unsurprisingly, 100% polish.
      The news could be that Poland is the richest country in the world and all of it would be just complaining 😀

    6. One_Volume_2230 on

      We work really hard to hard , lot of private sector small businesses is exploiting workers with extra hours not paying as much as national policy says. Overtime isn’t controlled at all.

    7. Noobunaga86 on

      So what? GDP means that the machine is working, but it says nothing about how really rich is the country and it’s people. Also, GDP is really a capitalist bullshit, the real important factors measuring how good any country is doing is it’s health system, safety, how happy are people living in given country, how good are social services, how good the education is and is it free, is there healthy food in the markets, how affordable are houses/flats etc. GDP is basically a metric showing how good we are as a factory. But other people/nations are getting rich off of our work. US has much bigger GDP and the level of living there is so much lower than in Poland.

    8. GDP (PPP) is quite a good measurement of the standard of living of ordinary citizens, but it doesn’t really matter in a comparison of national economies and their global influence, since global commodities such as oil, copper and rare materials have the same prices everywhere (with some small difference here and there).

      When it comes to geopolitical influence of a state, what matters is how many of these commodities you can buy with your national currency, rather than how many loaves of bread.

      That’s one of the reasons why Japan is wealthier than Poland, and will continue to be so in the foreseeable future.

      Nevertheless, it’s true that Poland has had one of the fastest-developing economies since 1989, which is really impressive.

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