

Spain Uses Recovery Fund on Migration Centers
The government increased spending by 29% at a time when Spain is facing economic dire straits and a sharp rise in the entry of illegal migrants.
The government increased spending by 29% at a time when Spain is facing economic dire straits and a sharp rise in the entry of illegal migrants.
Some political opponents of the Polish prime minister did not see this granting of EU funds as good news; indeed, they consider that it places the country in a dangerous dependency.
Compared to the American economy, Europe is slow to get through the post-pandemic recovery, but these GDP numbers show that it is actually happening—almost everywhere, that is. The paltry numbers out of Germany, Italy, and Spain, three of the largest economies in Europe, tell us that these three countries have become a drag on the European economy.
The critical situation in which Poland finds itself, receiving the brunt of the flow of Ukrainian refugees since the outbreak of the conflict with Russia, has certainly led the Commission to soften its position.