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I am in Bulgaria and, for those unaware, the Euro is coming and, quite frankly, I'm already sick of it.
For at least a few years I've been reading about it, and Bulgaria was always failing to meet some criteria, but the final phase is here. People have protested, lots of noise has been made, but as usual, the plebs will be shafted.
Every day, I see debates about it, people arguing on Facebook if it's good or bad, and then the endless media pieces about how it's either going to explode real estate prices or kill them. Endless experts going back and forward.
The real estate agents, the vultures they are, are having a field day spreading FUD about how the Euro will explode prices, and people are trying to smash buy flats for fear that it will then become expensive.
Meanwhile, what I can say anecdotally is this: places are already using the Euro as an excuse to raise prices, and they are probably doing it so that they don't get accused of price gouging after the Euro arrives.
Here, I can't blame the Euro per se, but it's a good pretext to hike prices. The Leva (Bulgarian currency) is already pegged to the Euro anyway, so I don't see what kind of amazing benefits it will confer to the average person.
Case in point, my haircut has cost 14 leva (about 7 euros) for almost a decade. 6 months ago, the price had been increased to 20 leva (10 euro), and the most recent hair cut was 30 Leva - 15 euro).
I don't care really, it's not a lot, but it's the same little bit of increasing everywhere. In percentage terms, it's quite a jump. If I treated my clients like this, I wouldn't bloody have any left!
My kids school fees are going up 10%, and it looks like other schools are also doing 10% - every year prior they have increased 5% and, while I can't prove it, this feels like a 'fuck you' tax.
As a result, I'm moving the kids to state schools and if it's shit, I'll home school them, not like the educatuon quality is amazing anyway.
On top of this, I'm sure things will get more expensive because they have done every single time the Euro was introduced, whether from greed, or just rounding up decimal places. Experts sitting there smugly saying how the gov will be on top of it all and whatnot is pure waffle. The gov here, like in many places, is shit and will do nothing, all they;re good for is raising taxs and trying to dig themselves out of the fiat debt-pit they created themsevels.
So yeah, it does make me a bit sad, just something else to be forced on people, rules for us, not for them.
Still, this is why we stack, and I quite often take great joy in knowing that I am building my non-KYC stack safely away from the legacy bank systems
The euro is undoubtedly the cancer of Europe, and now it has reached Bulgaria as well, well, there is something worse on the table, the digital euro.
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the gift that keeps on giving lol
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Fortunately, we are positioned in Bitcoin...
normal people still don't know what's coming
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @nichro 19h
I was certain that with all the issues Europe is facing, the crusade of the Euro money had peaked. Sad to see it has not.
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Still remember when it happened in Spain. As an example the price to take a coffee changed from 0,60 € (equals to 100 pesetas, previous currency in Spain) to 1€ apparently just to round up.
Obviously, salaries did not change at all.
Good luck!
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all this could be solved if they just rounded down instead of up lol
how did the rounding up (or down) of salaries work? ive seen workers express worry that their saleries will be converted at a crap rate and they will end up with less. i can totally see somerthign like that happeneing
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Salaries were converted to the fixed rate and was not a problem. The main issue was all products becoming more expensive in the following weeks/months.
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that's something at least. im just bracing myself for the hit
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Man, I feel this on every level. Same story, different country. The Euro isn't coming to make your life better — it’s coming to consolidate control. Always sold as “convenience,” “stability,” or “progress,” but in practice, it’s just another tool to squeeze the middle class and protect the debt machine the elites created.
You're spot on — the Leva has been pegged to the Euro for years, so all this price hiking isn’t about real economic shifts; it’s pure psychological manipulation. Businesses front-run the transition, governments look the other way, and the plebs pick up the tab… as always.
But this is exactly why Bitcoin exists. The rules of their game are rigged. They can change the currency, inflate, tax, and surveil — but they can’t touch sats you own in cold storage. Sovereignty isn't given — it’s taken.
Keep stacking. You're opting out of a system that was never designed to serve you anyway.
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life really would be a lot more bleak without bitcoin to offer an exit
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Hey! I'm in Romania and yep, we’ve definitely heard about Bulgaria switching to the Euro. I totally feel you on the price hikes - same thing happened in Greece when they adopted the Euro. I remember being there that summer… people were crying, completely desperate. It wasn’t the Euro’s fault though - it was how their government handled the transition and all the other economical things. From what I’ve learned over time, the Euro can be a really good thing for a country - if the government does its job properly. Right now, I honestly don’t know if Romania or Bulgaria wins the corruption contest… so “Nazdrave!” to that. 😅
Anyway, let me try to ease your mind a bit. At this moment if we compare prices in Euros, Bulgaria and Romania are pretty close. If we compare based on RON vs. LEVA, Bulgaria actually has better prices. So don’t panic too much - it's just a sort of alignment. Having the Euro can help your country in the long run. It means economical stability for everyone - as you cannot reference a currency as you do now for most of things. It also improves your international economic position, makes imports/exports easier, attracts investors and helps the workforce. Also, both the government and citizens will be able to access loans at better interest rates. So on the short-medium term, the main beneficiaries of this move will be citizens - lower inflation (those 10-15% increase every year on everything), cheaper credits (we have around 9% on everything now, you have around 4%). Yes, prices will go up at first - unfortunately that’s part of the process and it happened everywhere, when they turned to Euro. But if things are managed well, the long-term benefits can outweigh the initial chaos, cause there will be some chaos.
Let’s hope Bulgaria uses this opportunity wisely. Romanian government was ... weak and didn't catch this opportunity when we met all criteria back in 2015. They wanted us to be struggling with expensive credits and everything. Rumors in our country are that from 2027 we will also begin the migration to Euro. Hang in there! It will be better for you afterwards. Update us again in June 2026. Meanwhile, stack sats!
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im not sure the gov will do a good job but hey, no going back now! Since im not Bulgarian, i actually don't qualify for any credit anyway, that's ok tho, i just go old school and put money aside and keep on stacking :)
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32 sats \ 1 reply \ @398ja 17h
I remember 20+ years ago, when it was first introduced, with the false promise of stability... Germany had taken some economic measures to artificially devalue the Deutsche Mark prior to the introduction of the euro, in an attempt to maintain price stability. Italy, Greece etc experienced exactly what you are describing... The relative price stability that you've long experienced is over.
Here in the UK, the new Labour government lifted the vat exemption on private schools, making them 20% more expensive overnight. The school fees have now become untenable for many families. The consequence is that already overwhelmed public schools will be flooded with the private school kids drop outs. Public schools here are so bad, that your kid would be far better off home schooled...
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i hear Peter Mcormack talk about that a lot on his pods. back in the day i was in standard public school in the Uk and it was pretty normal, just the usual situation with catchment areas and some schools being much worse etc
still, these days, at least homeschool is quite viable and there are a ton of resources.
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When the Euro arrived in Spain, all the prices went up.
Some of the business owners said, that they changed the prices only to round up and make easy with giving back the change to the customers..
Try to forget about the FIATs coins,and focus on savings in SATs. Good luck and welcome to Europe!
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14 sats \ 1 reply \ @nichro 19h
Not gonna lie, for the first third of the post, I thought you were saying the Euro Cup was coming to Bulgaria and causing all kinds of troubles for the locals hehe
Interesting to read about the effects and dynamics of changing currencies though. When was the last time a country adopted Euros?
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lol, i'd much rather have the Euro Cup!
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32 sats \ 3 replies \ @Diego 30 May
Thanks for the insight. Is there much BTC adoption in Bulgaria? Can you do in person p2p?
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not from what i've seen, i think in Sofia , the capital, there will be more places. i saw there was a bitcoin bar, Joe Nakomoto went there. next time im in the capital i will check it out for sure
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Last year there were a couple of restaurants in Sofia that accepted bitcoin and you could use a local food delivery company and pay with bitcoin.
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love to hear things like this
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Thank you for your sincere testimony of what many feel but few are able to articulate. The euro, rather than the cause, becomes the perfect catalyst to justify price abuses, shift the burden onto citizens, and disguise greed under a narrative.
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Thanks, it will allow for a lot of financial abuse. we'll get used to it after a while and then just have a slightly more expensive new reality
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The rapid rise in cost of living must be alarming.
Is there anything you can do to get extra income?
Keep digging
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to be honest, the main price increases we see and feel are on food, and this has been around since covid, now we see more smaller thigns creeping up.
in terms of what i can do, i just look for more clients, and basically try to find more work.
Now school has finished, i won't have to pay the various costs i will double my monthy sat DCA and have a weight lifted off the porverbial shoulders
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Great read thanks
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @anon 30 May
You are missing a point. It is a free market. Euro or not, businesses will always want to raise the prices until there is demand. If there are customers to pay the higher prices then the price will be raised. Euro or not.
Ranting will not help you. People limiting their purchases can move the markets.
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The point is the government is forcing things on people and that allows for market distortions. it causes massive pain and reduces people's purchasing power, simple as that.
without the handy pretext of the euro, businesses wouldnt be able to get away with just randomly jacking shit up 10-20% becuase people wouldn't pay, the correct market response.
Now they won't have a choice as many will just say 'oh, it's the euro' and justify it to themselves to take the hit. same shit happened in covid.
When random things get a third more expensive in 6 months for no reason other than 'the euro', im not going to do a fucking happy dance am I. Do a little cheer for free market economics. I would, but this isn't free market economics, it's governments fucking things up economics.
Sadly, in the face of it, having a rant and doing some stacking is all that is to be done.
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Price hikes everywhere fear pushing real estate buyers government does nothing people get squeezed again.
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people mass buying real estate to use as a piggy bank is a direct result of fiat and it's one of the worst consequences imo
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