Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Bulgaria's Government Falls Before The Euro Switch, And The Real Crisis Is Trust


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Bulgaria's prime minister resigned after mass protests, reopening the risk of yet another snap election.
  • The timing is dangerous: the country still plans to adopt the euro on January 1, 2026, and a messy transition could hit prices and confidence.
  • The deeper story is a long war over rules, accountability, and whether the state protects citizens or protected networks.

    Bulgaria woke up to a political vacuum after Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov stepped down, ending a coalition that had been in office since January and was meant to steer the country into the euro.

    The resignation followed weeks of nationwide protests that swelled into the largest demonstrations many Bulgarians have seen since the end of communist rule in 1989. The immediate trigger was money.

    The government floated a 2026 budget that would raise social-security contributions and lift taxes on dividends to pay for higher state spending. Officials said the country needed stronger public services.



    Many protesters heard a different message: ordinary workers and small investors should pay more, while the parts of the state they distrust most would get more resources. That suspicion did not appear overnight.
    A Euro Countdown Clouded by Political Turbulence
    Bulgaria has spent years trapped between two realities. On paper, it is a European Union and NATO member with modern institutions. In practice, many citizens believe enforcement can be selective, corruption can be durable, and accountability arrives late, if it arrives at all.

    The anger intensified around high-profile cases that critics describe as pressure campaigns, including the detention of Varna's mayor, Blagomir Kotsev, on corruption allegations he denies.

    For foreigners and expats, the euro deadline is the key. Bulgaria 's lev has long been tied tightly to the euro, so this is not a leap into the unknown. But the practical changeover still depends on steady government.

    Retailers must show clear conversions. Regulators must police opportunistic markups. Ministers must communicate rules in plain language. If coalition talks fail and a caretaker cabinet takes over, execution becomes harder.

    Now the president, Rumen Radev, must manage the constitutional handoff. The largest party, GERB, gets the first chance to form a government in a fragmented parliament of roughly nine parties.

    If it fails, Bulgaria could return to elections again. The risk is not only political fatigue. It is a euro launch managed in improvisation, when the public is already primed to doubt the motives behind every price tag.

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  • The Rio Times

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