Greek pensioners have seen their payouts slashed so much, some of them are moving to one of the poorest countries in Europe.
Take George, 75, for example. After his wife died five years ago, he rented out his apartment in Thessaloniki, the country’s second-biggest city, packed his bags and moved to Sofia, Bulgaria’s capital, where he says his monthly €800 ($905) pension allows him to “live like a king.”
“Of course there are difficulties with adjusting and friends,” said George, who didn’t want to give his surname, fearing he’ll be pursued by Greek tax authorities. “But with the money I have, I can return to Greece often, and I also have the opportunity to travel.”
Greece, which is among retirement destinations for other Europeans, is finding that its own citizens—like George—are now looking to live out their senior years in the country’s cheaper northern European Union (EU) neighbor after seeing their pensions cut at least 20 times during its protracted debt crisis.
They may be glad they made the move as pensioners again find themselves in the crosshairs of Greece’s potential clash with creditors, its first since exiting its bailout in August. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras risks creating the impression of backsliding on reforms as he tries to avoid implementing pension cuts that are scheduled to come into effect next year.
Greece’s budget, submitted to the European Commission on October 15, includes a scenario without pension cuts agreed to and pre-legislated in 2017 after months of back and forth negotiations. The government believes the country can meet its target of a budget surplus before debt service of 3.5 percent of gross domestic product without such cuts. A decision on the matter will be taken by the end of November, according to a European official.
Bulgarian lure
IN the meantime, Greek pensioners are making a rational choice by moving to Bulgaria. In 2017, according to Eurostat data, Greece’s cost of living was almost double Bulgaria’s—which was the lowest in the EU.
Although there is little data to show how widespread the phenomenon of Greek retirees heading north is, anecdotal evidence suggests it may be picking up. Gasoline costs €1.15 per liter in Sofia, compared with about €1.60 in Athens; a home Espresso coffee costs €2.30, while the same brand in Greece has a €4.70 price tag; and metro ticket costs 80 cents, compared with €1.40. Cell-phone charges are half those in Greece.
“In general, life is 30-percent cheaper than in Greece, and that’s if you choose to stay in Sofia, Burgas or Plovdiv,” said George. “In smaller towns or villages, life is even cheaper.”
No contest
Bulgaria joined the EU in 2007 and has grown at an average annual rate of 2.4 percent since then. That year was the last that Greece’s economy grew before a sovereign debt crisis wiped out a quarter of its economic output, sent unemployment soaring and left the country at times teetering over the abyss of a euro-exit.
Bulgaria, the ex-Communist nation of 7 million people, remains the EU’s poorest member state. By July 2019 it hopes to join ERM-2, the waiting room for entering the euro area. It fulfills the formal criteria to become the euro region’s 20th member given its solid public finances, although inflation zoomed up to a five-year high of 3.6 percent in September, which could complicate its path.
Still, those price rises aren’t enough to concern Nikos. The 71-year-old Greek national, who also didn’t want to give his surname, points to bread costing 60 euro-cents, restaurant meals rarely exceeding €10 and rent of €200 for a one-bedroom apartment in a good neighborhood for why he’s living out his retirement in Bulgaria.
Nikos has seen his pension slashed by 45 percent during the crisis to 1,100 euros, and could see it cut further if Greece’s euro-area creditors compel Tsipras’s government to push ahead with more pension cuts.
“I still live very comfortably here despite the big drop as prices in all goods and services are much lower than Greece,” said Nikos. “I now rarely come to Athens. My son often visits, and he always finds and buys things that are more expensive in Greece.”
Image credits: Kostas Tsironis/Bloomberg