r/europe 2d ago

Map Annual inflation rates in July 2025 (%)

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111 Upvotes

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23

u/Lex2882 1d ago

I can confirm Romania is that bad , as someone who traveled there from Deutschland, France, Poland, Hungary, Romanian prices from food to hotels are much more expensive and of lower quality, hopefully they get their act together.

21

u/Realistic-Bag-6881 Transylvania 1d ago

No hope for that, we are doomed , big deficits, big debt, low productivity, ageing population

2

u/Intelligent-Bit4250 The Netherlands 1d ago

This is also, unfortunately, due to the European Union in part. Many Romanian people come to work in Western European countries, who also suffer from ageing populations and need those people very much. But Romania and other Eastern European/poorer countries in EU get left to pay the bill.

This is why people in like the Netherlands and other EU countries are so annoying when they complain about EU. Western European countries have nothing to complain about, we have all the benefits of EU. It’s no more than fair that are net payers to the system, because the system is to our benefit. We should help the poorer regions to build up their economies so long term they don’t have to come to us, like in Poland is slowly starting to work.

1

u/Realistic-Bag-6881 Transylvania 1d ago

I also have the tendency to that comparison between benefits received from EU vs social state of a country . Just imagine that there are at least 4 millions Romanians abroad and these are people in their prime , majority of them don’t want to come back. It is that bad that last time they did a census they couldn’t even count properly how many people are still living in the country. It is one of the worst population decline in modern time not caused by a pandemic or war. Just social decline.

1

u/Intelligent-Bit4250 The Netherlands 23h ago

Yeah I can completely imagine. Same is true for Balkan countries, it’s a real problem. I strongly believe EU needs to step up or watch these countries shift away from us politically.

5

u/Lex2882 1d ago

Oh wow.. it's like the perfect storm, surely something can be done, what are the politicians doing ? Fishing ?

16

u/Realistic-Bag-6881 Transylvania 1d ago

They are protecting their interests , in Romania there are 2 classes of people: private sector = slaves who get hit by all the burden and there are the politicians, magistrates, judges, institutions, etc who don’t pay any shit even if the country would default on its debts.

10

u/IWillDevourYourToes Czech Republic 1d ago

and there are the politicians, magistrates, judges, institutions, etc

Doesn't the public sector also have 2 classes: the slaves working their ass off for minimum wage (those who don't have good connections) and the "nobility" who barely works at all and earns above average wage (connections, nepotism)

8

u/Realistic-Bag-6881 Transylvania 1d ago

You nailed it.Sounds familiar?

5

u/IWillDevourYourToes Czech Republic 1d ago

Pretty much

1

u/Lex2882 1d ago

Well.. if that's the case then , I truly feel sorry for your country, let's hope drastic changes will change the course of your country, because it is such a beautiful country.

2

u/Shadow_Gabriel Romania 1d ago

Vacation tour in Africa and real estate fraud.

7

u/RudeAd1887 1d ago

My brother in christ, just look at the apartment prices. You could get villas in spain for apartments in Cluj. It's insane. Average salary in Ro is 500 euros btw.

2

u/Low_discrepancy Posh Crimea 1d ago

Why don't you mention the average salary in Cluj?

Average salary in the county is 1300 euros. In the city the average salary would of course be even higher.

Second highest after Bucharest.

https://actualdecluj.ro/salariul-mediu-net-din-cluj-ajunge-la-aproape-1-300-euro-cel-mai-mare-din-tara-dupa-capitala/

Talking about average salary in Romania and talking about house prices in one of the most expensive cities in Romania isn't exactly comparing apples to apples.

0

u/IWillDevourYourToes Czech Republic 1d ago

Shhhhh... speculants, developers, and real estate investors clearly don't have enough yet. It's gonna trickle down eventually trust me

3

u/Bimbaphabibi 1d ago

Unfortunately, the situation in Hungary won’t improve much in the foreseeable future because Orbán and his government have started their usual pre-election handouts, which will be burdening us, the taxpayers, with inflation and tax increases. We can only hope that we’ll get rid of them in 2026.

1

u/xelio9 1d ago

We as Italians know very well about your inflation rate, you have no idea how big is the trend in finance to buy Romanian's bonds right now

1

u/Borovichka 1d ago

Why?

1

u/xelio9 1d ago

High yield obviously, well, higher than many other countries