The Prague Post - Poland cools on Ukrainians despite their economic success

EUR -
AED 4.295425
AFN 76.560928
ALL 96.786201
AMD 447.355274
ANG 2.093595
AOA 1072.540131
ARS 1643.87053
AUD 1.804994
AWG 2.105313
AZN 1.986227
BAM 1.963688
BBD 2.356978
BDT 142.533145
BGN 1.956759
BHD 0.44092
BIF 3450.373665
BMD 1.169618
BND 1.516284
BOB 8.086378
BRL 6.368689
BSD 1.170206
BTN 102.811981
BWP 15.629646
BYN 3.985894
BYR 22924.516551
BZD 2.353089
CAD 1.643015
CDF 2473.742192
CHF 0.926472
CLF 0.028487
CLP 1117.535692
CNY 8.332352
CNH 8.330547
COP 4517.650264
CRC 588.365898
CUC 1.169618
CUP 30.994882
CVE 110.820796
CZK 24.283623
DJF 207.864571
DKK 7.468621
DOP 74.066037
DZD 152.141562
EGP 55.67219
ERN 17.544273
ETB 173.456752
FJD 2.660706
FKP 0.8733
GBP 0.87019
GEL 3.163835
GGP 0.8733
GHS 12.982005
GIP 0.8733
GMD 84.212607
GNF 10150.563919
GTQ 8.963042
GYD 244.825055
HKD 9.088851
HNL 30.64426
HRK 7.532576
HTG 153.125739
HUF 389.840803
IDR 19379.345332
ILS 3.874565
IMP 0.8733
INR 102.916049
IQD 1532.199831
IRR 49211.685033
ISK 141.605362
JEP 0.8733
JMD 188.065432
JOD 0.829314
JPY 175.632267
KES 151.172979
KGS 102.282781
KHR 4707.713514
KMF 493.579321
KPW 1052.701651
KRW 1657.703593
KWD 0.357471
KYD 0.975146
KZT 628.343969
LAK 25374.866374
LBP 104739.308954
LKR 354.571231
LRD 214.27156
LSL 20.281513
LTL 3.453578
LVL 0.707491
LYD 6.350955
MAD 10.734172
MDL 19.740862
MGA 5280.826372
MKD 61.613324
MMK 2455.469157
MNT 4205.382456
MOP 9.368772
MRU 46.868062
MUR 52.868834
MVR 17.906412
MWK 2031.044957
MXN 21.566104
MYR 4.936522
MZN 74.736316
NAD 20.281738
NGN 1714.741763
NIO 42.820387
NOK 11.769631
NPR 164.498062
NZD 2.043144
OMR 0.449719
PAB 1.16997
PEN 3.960349
PGK 4.924097
PHP 67.861006
PKR 328.777036
PLN 4.247381
PYG 8274.165413
QAR 4.258873
RON 5.085848
RSD 117.14773
RUB 94.172357
RWF 1693.607141
SAR 4.386599
SBD 9.63458
SCR 17.555523
SDG 703.532464
SEK 11.01768
SGD 1.512439
SHP 0.877517
SLE 27.041798
SLL 24526.308113
SOS 668.437553
SRD 45.897575
STD 24208.735111
STN 25.000589
SVC 10.239085
SYP 15208.133286
SZL 20.281291
THB 38.03613
TJS 10.765869
TMT 4.093664
TND 3.41881
TOP 2.739366
TRY 49.017926
TTD 7.942769
TWD 35.82213
TZS 2867.389132
UAH 48.720696
UGX 4058.319044
USD 1.169618
UYU 46.988545
UZS 14251.797926
VES 235.347824
VND 30801.895069
VUV 143.390562
WST 3.285486
XAF 658.577073
XAG 0.021562
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.160952
XCG 2.109054
XDR 0.819396
XOF 657.325251
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.425603
ZAR 20.290712
ZMK 10527.969671
ZMW 26.471125
ZWL 376.61658
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    15.3

    +2.03%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    16.56

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    51.14

    +0.76%

  • GSK

    -0.0100

    43.77

    -0.02%

  • NGG

    0.8700

    75.9

    +1.15%

  • RELX

    0.2000

    45.22

    +0.44%

  • BP

    -0.5600

    32.78

    -1.71%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    11.48

    +0.7%

  • CMSD

    -0.1199

    24.09

    -0.5%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.72

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.69

    +0.17%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    68.75

    -0.16%

  • JRI

    -0.1600

    13.78

    -1.16%

  • BCC

    -1.6000

    70.84

    -2.26%

  • AZN

    -1.0000

    83.83

    -1.19%

Poland cools on Ukrainians despite their economic success
Poland cools on Ukrainians despite their economic success / Photo: Wojtek RADWANSKI - AFP

Poland cools on Ukrainians despite their economic success

Warsaw's central business district is booming alongside Poland's economy, but those teaching yoga and taking coffee orders in bustling premises under glass and steel office towers are often Ukrainian.

Text size:

Economists and entrepreneurs agree: Refugees from the Russian invasion of Ukraine have proven a huge boost to Poland's economy -- but now their contribution may be at risk.

A law governing Ukrainians' protected status expires at the end of the month and President Karol Nawrocki has yet to sign off on a bill to renew it, threatening a million people with legal limbo.

At the ElFlex yoga and fitness centre, the young women stretching and balancing in complicated poses under the coloured lights maintain their poise, but concern is rippling through the community.

Gym owner Lisa Kolesnikova, 28, grew up in the Ukrainian city Zaporizhzhia, but she built her business in Poland.

She now owns two yoga studios and has franchised two more. Two years ago most of the customers and all of her staff were from Ukraine or Belarus. Now, that's changing.

"Polish clients come to us, and the girls now conduct training in Polish. They like us and, in fact, I have never encountered any negativity," she told AFP.

- Economic success story -

For Kolesnikova, who employs eight people, the idea that Poland might call into question the residency rights of hundreds of thousands of hard-working Ukrainians is absurd -- but not for nationalist politicians like Nawrocki.

In March 2022, in the immediate aftermath of Russia's full-scale invasion, Poland's parliament passed a law granting protected status to Ukrainians. It has since been amended and extended.

Last month the newly-elected nationalist president refused to approve the latest version, demanding it be changed to prevent Ukrainians from receiving Poland's 800-zloty (190-euro) per child monthly benefit.

A new draft is ready, but Nawrocki is still keeping the Ukrainians and their employers guessing. If he doesn't sign off by September 30, Ukrainians will see their legal residency expire.

On Thursday the president said he was still studying the amended bill. "If it hasn't been changed, I'll reject it again," he said, in an interview with the new site Fakt.

At the parliament in Warsaw, lawmaker Michal Wawer of the right-wing Confederation party, which sits in the opposition in parliament, told AFP his movement hopes the president will indeed stop the bill.

"I don't think it would be a social catastrophe," he said. "Each of these Ukrainian citizens will be entitled to apply for legal residence as an immigrant or as a refugee.

"They will be just treated in the way that every other foreigner in Poland is treated."

Entrepreneur Oleg Yarovi, a 37-year-old Ukrainian who owns a chain of coffee shops, does not agree.

"As someone who understands how much the Ukrainian community spends investing in the Polish market, these are very illogical steps being taken. It is simply something political, populist," he said.

"The Ukrainians who came here invested millions in Poland. We are currently selling one of our premises and every day if I take seven calls from people who are interested, six are Ukrainians."

- 'Real concern' -

In June, consultants Deloitte estimated in a report to the UN refugee agency that the work of Ukrainian refugees now accounts for 2.7 percent of Poland's GDP.

Ukrainians are more likely to be employed than Poles, and native workers are moving into higher-paid roles.

Since Russia's 2022 invasion, Poland's Ukrainian population has topped one million. Yet Poland's total population is shrinking and unemployment in July was just 3.1 percent, the fourth lowest in the European Union.

"They integrated into the labour market in Poland very quickly. They managed, found work," said Nadia Winiarska, an employment expert from the Lewiatan Confederation business association.

"It is not true that Ukrainian citizens in Poland primarily rely on welfare," she told AFP, complaining that the political debate in Poland does not take into account the scale of Ukrainians' input.

But anti-refugee politicians say they are speaking up for ordinary Polish opinion.

"I don't agree that they are well integrated," Wawer told AFP. "There is a problem of building entire companies, an entire society that does not require its citizens to use Polish language or to accept Polish cultural norms."

Some business leaders accuse Russia's online propaganda networks of boosting anti-refugee sentiment.

"I hope the Polish people won't buy it," said Andrzej Korkus, CEO of the EWL Group, a major employment agency. Referring to the law, he said "we're coming to the end of September and still it's not signed. There's real concern."

V.Sedlak--TPP