Poland has been ranked sixth among 23 rich countries in an index compiled by The Economist comparing how well economies have done during the pandemic.

The weekly newspaper examined changes during the pandemic in five economic and financial indicators: GDP, household income per person, share prices, investment, and public debt in relation to GDP.

Based on those factors, it found that Denmark, Slovenia and Sweden had fared best, while Spain, the United Kingdom and Japan were worst. Poland was in joint sixth place alongside Ireland, just below Chile and Norway and above the Netherlands and the United States.

Poland performed particularly strongly in regard to its public debt, which rose only 5 percentage points in relation to GDP. Only three other countries – Norway, Ireland and Denmark – had lower figures. Likewise, the 3.1% increase in Poland’s GDP was bettered only by Ireland, Chile, and Norway.

By contrast, Spain saw GDP shrink by 6.6% and debt-to-GDP increase by 22.3 percentage points, while for Britain the figures were 2.1% and 21.9 percentage points respectively.

Poland’s 3.3% increase in household income per person and 25.4% increase in share prices were both the ninth best among the 23 countries included in the index. Poland did, however, see investment fall 7.1%, which was among the worst outcomes of any country.

Why is Poland’s economy emerging so strongly from the pandemic? A comparison with the UK

Main image credit: Adam BorkowskiUnsplash/

Pin It on Pinterest

Support us!