Muh immigration causes economic growth globalists BTFO.
Poland
https://cyprus-mail.com/2018/07/08/polands-quiet-economic-miracle/
> Poland is the only EU member-state that did not experience a recession during the economic downturn of 2007-08, having enjoyed continuous growth since the collapse of communism. Cumulative GDP growth between 2009 and 2016 was 26.9 per cent, five times the EU average of five per cent. It is the best-performing central eastern European economy in the union with forecasts suggesting this will continue with growth rates expected close to three per cent this year and 2019.
> Things keep getting better. GDP grew by 4.6 per cent in 2017 and forecast for this year is 4.2 per cent; exports increased by 10.2 per cent to a value of €203.7 billion last year and are in balance with imports. Foreign Direct Investment for 2016 was €12.6 billion, while the rate of inflation was a healthy two per cent in 2017 and is forecasted to reach 2.3 per cent this year. The unemployment rate, which was at 20 per cent in 2004, has steadily fallen and since 2017 is in single digits; this year it is forecasted to fall to a record low of 6.9 per cent.
https://thenews.pl/1/12/Artykul/372737,Poland-among-three-fastestgrowing-EU-economies-finance-minister
> Teresa Czerwińska was speaking after the EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, on Thursday raised its forecast for Polish GDP growth this year to 4.6 percent from an earlier estimate of 4.3 percent.
> Poland’s investment and development minister said last month that the Polish economy was set to grow over 4 percent this year.
> Jerzy Kwieciński said at the time he expected GDP growth in the second quarter to be close to the 5.2 percent in the first three months of this year.
> According to Poland’s Central Statistical Office, the country’s GDP grew 4.9 percent in the final quarter of 2017 and expanded 4.6 percent in 2017 as a whole.
Also Hungary is getting a massive BMW plant.
https://industryeurope.com/bmw/
> BMW has announced it will be investing €1 billion in a new car factory in eastern Hungary – a move that could position the country as a focal point for high-end car manufacturing in the region.
> The new plant will be based near the city of Debrecen and will have a capacity of 150,000 per year, according to BMW.
> Already, around one-third of Hungary’s exports consist of car manufacturing. And BMW is not the first major carmaker to set up manufacturing in Hungary: Daimler and Audi both have plants there, and as we reported last week the latter hare recently launched serial production of electric engines at its Hungary plant.