Russian propaganda and inflation prevent Bulgaria from joining the Eurozone in 2025

Russian propaganda and inflation prevent Bulgaria from joining the Eurozone in 2025
Russian propaganda and inflation prevent Bulgaria from joining the Eurozone in 2025
--
High inflation and wavering public support, partly due to Russian disinformation, mean the country will almost certainly fail to meet its goal of joining the eurozone in 2025, writes the European editor of Politicotitled “Bulgaria Can’t Join Eurozone in January. Here’s Why”.

“Behind an imposing wooden desk in Sofia, in a complex that once housed a statue of Lenin, the man who chairs the 20-member group of eurozone finance ministers chooses his words carefully,” the European media wrote.

“I am firmly convinced that Bulgaria will join the Eurozone in 2025,” says Pascal Donohue. “The question is when your country will adopt the euro as its currency. Not if.”

Surrounded by the country’s prime minister, deputy prime minister and foreign minister, his presence carried great European political weight. A month later, the coalition government collapsed and the three ministers were removed from office. Donohoe’s visit, which was meant to bolster Bulgaria’s faltering bid to become the 21st country to use the euro, turned out to be ill-timed.

Experts and politicians who spoke to Politico are convinced that the target date of January 1, 2025 will not be met – not only because of political turmoil in Bulgaria, but also because of ongoing inflation and a lack of public support.

“We are in the middle of a political crisis,” commented the Bulgarian socialist MEP Petar Vitanov. This would make it “impossible” for the country to join the eurozone by the beginning of the year. Its sixth national election since 2021 is being held in June.

“We really don’t know what the next government will be and whether this will be one of its priorities,” he said.

Even before the government fell, the country had been signaling that it might miss its planned entry date. Then-Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov said in January that the goal was “not sacred”.

Bulgaria originally intended to join the single currency in early 2024, but last year had to postpone that goal by a year because it did not yet meet the criteria for joining.

According to Chintia Alcidi, senior research fellow at the Brussels-based CEPS think tank, January 2026 “at the earliest” would be more realistic given the technical challenges of moving to a national currency.

Several political leaders, including the country’s central bank governor, have raised the prospect of entry in mid-2025 if the January entry date cannot be met – hence Donohoe’s careful wording that he expects membership “in 2025.” .

Officials and experts involved in the technical aspects of the accession told Politico that joining in the middle of the year is atypical. Countries usually join at the beginning of the year for administrative reasons.

Bulgarian MEP Eva Maydel of the centre-right EPP group said she was “optimistic about a 2025 accession date”, adding that “it could be January 1, it could be later”.

Affected by rising prices

Joining the eurozone is a typically EU secretive process where countries are assessed by the European Central Bank before EU finance ministers, MEPs and heads of government discuss the matter.

The “convergence criteria” a country must meet to qualify include a stable exchange rate, meeting government deficit and debt ratio targets and bringing national legislation into line with EU law.

The next ECB report on Bulgaria – which will determine whether it is ready to join – is expected before the summer.

Inflation continues to be a problem

To join, Bulgaria must achieve average inflation of no more than 1.5 percentage points above that of the three “best performing” EU countries – a vague category that creates a “grey area” about the exact amount of inflation needed.

The most recent country to join the EU in 2023, Croatia, benefited from selective data selection, having been allowed to join despite a higher percentage.

“The only obstacle for Bulgaria is the inflation criterion,” says Zholt Darvash, senior research fellow at the Brussels-based Bruegel Center for Economic Research. “It is in a good fiscal position – low public debt, low public debt, controlled budget deficit.”

The country’s current inflation forecast of 2.9% in 2025 “suggests that Bulgaria could join in 2026,” Darvash said. He added that there was “some room for manoeuvre” on whether the same “grey area” that allowed Croatia to join in 2023 could be used to shorten Bulgaria’s accession deadlines, but added that this “must be justified”.

In theory, Sofia will request a new convergence report from the ECB by the end of this year, which will have low enough inflation to be able to join in mid-2025. But in practice, EU officials who will be involved in the technical process , question whether this would be feasible.

Russian disinformation

Among the political class in Bulgaria, eurozone membership is an easy sell. But the public is proving more difficult to convince.

In a Eurobarometer survey last year, Bulgarians expressed lower-than-average support for accession and higher-than-average concern about issues such as price-fixing during the transition.

Senior EU officials have told Politico that Russian-sponsored disinformation has contributed to this unpopularity.

“I still believe that the majority of Bulgarians would prefer to be part of the Eurozone,” commented MEP Vitanov. “Here I am not only blaming Russian propaganda. Yes, it exists. But in general, those who lag behind are the Bulgarian politicians”.

Aside from the results of taming inflation, Bulgaria is in a relatively strong position to join the eurozone, several experts and officials say.

The country’s currency, the lev, has been tied to the euro since 1999, and Bulgaria has been in the EU’s banking union since 2020 – steps which MEP Maydel said showed a “very, very clear commitment” to joining.

Concerns about Bulgaria’s accession timetable have not stopped senior EU officials like Donohoe from continuing to beat the drum.

Last month, the country also received approval from the eurozone countries, when their heads of government praised Bulgaria’s progress.

But despite the EU’s sustained public support for the January 2025 target, senior officials admit it almost certainly won’t happen.

As one of them put it: “It’s out of the question.”

The article is in bulgaria

Tags: Russian propaganda inflation prevent Bulgaria joining Eurozone

-

NEXT Government allows private investor to build Mom and Me Hospital