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Warshaw's region is at the same level, but Western Poland, not anytime soon. Taking PPP GDP per capita for measure,

  • in 2002, the region including Warshaw (Mazowieckie) was in the lead with 14,714 PPS, with regions further West ranging from 7,915 PPS (Opolskie) to 10,700 PPS (neighbouring Śląskie at the Czech-Slovak-Polish triple border) -- while in East Germany (excluding Berlin), the range was from 14,081 PPS (the third of Saxony-Anhalt around Dessau) to 16,091 PPS (the third of Saxony around Leipzig).

  • By 2006, that changed to: Mazowieckie 19,700, Western regions of Poland 9,900-13,100 PPS (higher extreme now Dolnośląskie, the Southwestern region including Wrocław), East Germany 17,800-20,700 PPS (lower extreme now Brandenburg-Nordost).

  • The growth rates in four years are in the same range: from 18.3% (Zachodniopomorskie, in the Northwest corner) to 31.7% (Dolnośląskie), resp. from 18.8% (Brandenburg-Nordost) to 30.5% (the third of Saxony around Chemnitz).

  • Would they keep growing at the same rate, the most well-off and fastest-growing Western Polish region (Dolnośląskie) would close up with the least well off and slowest-growing East German region (Brandenburg-Nordost) in 2018.


*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.
by DoDo on Fri Jul 17th, 2009 at 05:12:55 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Checking the whole list, regions in East Germany are at a similar level as the poorest regions of Southern Spain, Belgium, the UK, continental France, and the poorest region in Austria (Burgenland at the Hungarian border, 19,400 PPS) and West Germany (the fourth of Lower Saxony around Lüneburg, 19,900 PPS); but above the poorest in Southern Italy, Portugal or Greece. Western Poland is still below even the poorest Italian, Portuguese or Greek regions, but not the French Outre-Mer region of Guyane (11,600 PPS).

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.
by DoDo on Fri Jul 17th, 2009 at 05:37:12 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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