Dubai Telegraph - Poland cools on Ukrainians despite their economic success

EUR -
AED 4.191496
AFN 72.476882
ALL 93.923894
AMD 419.379666
ANG 2.04342
AOA 1047.153941
ARS 1693.609543
AUD 1.651225
AWG 2.057226
AZN 1.948735
BAM 1.954632
BBD 2.295129
BDT 140.396134
BGN 1.929833
BHD 0.430295
BIF 3389.838519
BMD 1.141318
BND 1.474538
BOB 7.891286
BRL 5.907803
BSD 1.139519
BTN 107.810599
BWP 15.443775
BYN 3.340604
BYR 22369.837299
BZD 2.291731
CAD 1.621642
CDF 2585.085695
CHF 0.923052
CLF 0.026739
CLP 1052.375138
CNY 7.754059
CNH 7.751811
COP 3916.102522
CRC 519.38496
CUC 1.141318
CUP 30.244933
CVE 110.180841
CZK 24.259803
DJF 202.918786
DKK 7.474527
DOP 67.902665
DZD 152.000126
EGP 56.069202
ERN 17.119773
ETB 182.323302
FJD 2.560777
FKP 0.861285
GBP 0.861324
GEL 3.013167
GGP 0.861285
GHS 12.899295
GIP 0.861285
GMD 83.937083
GNF 9985.098433
GTQ 8.692361
GYD 238.357616
HKD 8.950846
HNL 30.479775
HRK 7.533611
HTG 148.932314
HUF 355.823058
IDR 20508.347267
ILS 3.401186
IMP 0.861285
INR 108.331929
IQD 1492.808266
IRR 1570453.884101
ISK 143.806236
JEP 0.861285
JMD 179.472029
JOD 0.809209
JPY 185.638872
KES 147.777779
KGS 99.808541
KHR 4584.453898
KMF 493.049448
KPW 1027.186806
KRW 1771.474477
KWD 0.353523
KYD 0.949633
KZT 546.053813
LAK 25557.732998
LBP 102042.844348
LKR 382.891279
LRD 206.816457
LSL 18.64866
LTL 3.370016
LVL 0.690372
LYD 7.320627
MAD 10.709403
MDL 20.134972
MGA 4834.112326
MKD 61.616291
MMK 2396.183309
MNT 4088.269449
MOP 9.204702
MRU 45.516864
MUR 53.859371
MVR 17.645312
MWK 1975.919677
MXN 19.969533
MYR 4.661939
MZN 72.873706
NAD 18.64866
NGN 1574.848345
NIO 41.918432
NOK 11.311582
NPR 172.429013
NZD 2.01062
OMR 0.438838
PAB 1.139519
PEN 3.894574
PGK 5.003039
PHP 70.127731
PKR 316.868318
PLN 4.298912
PYG 6929.860424
QAR 4.164619
RON 5.241621
RSD 117.354945
RUB 89.809162
RWF 1669.644323
SAR 4.281542
SBD 9.204778
SCR 15.269501
SDG 685.363624
SEK 11.082817
SGD 1.477326
SHP 0.852109
SLE 28.301814
SLL 23932.876797
SOS 650.954491
SRD 42.804574
STD 23622.983039
STN 24.475729
SVC 9.971044
SYP 126.152298
SZL 18.645862
THB 37.994236
TJS 10.52901
TMT 4.006027
TND 3.376621
TOP 2.748021
TRY 53.254027
TTD 7.73438
TWD 36.348722
TZS 2995.963743
UAH 51.067495
UGX 4176.50515
USD 1.141318
UYU 45.735066
UZS 13679.828306
VES 710.177872
VND 30033.78921
VUV 136.904603
WST 3.173938
XAF 655.307175
XAG 0.019557
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.084469
XCG 2.053673
XDR 0.815313
XOF 655.565396
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.320589
ZAR 18.702525
ZMK 10273.23091
ZMW 20.539731
ZWL 367.504004
  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    21.9

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0528

    21.64

    -0.24%

  • RIO

    0.6400

    94.93

    +0.67%

  • BTI

    -0.9800

    61.76

    -1.59%

  • BCE

    -0.7500

    21.51

    -3.49%

  • AZN

    -1.3300

    189.62

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    31.67

    +1.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.2900

    18.68

    +1.55%

  • NGG

    -0.8900

    82.87

    -1.07%

  • GSK

    -0.3900

    52.42

    -0.74%

  • VOD

    -0.4650

    13.225

    -3.52%

  • BCC

    -1.6300

    77.63

    -2.1%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.96

    +0.77%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    36.95

    -1.08%

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."

A.Al-Mehrazi--DT