Milioni di giovani polacchi hanno lasciato le loro città natali e si stanno organizzando la vita a Varsavia, Breslavia o Cracovia. Anche se dicono che quelli che sono rimasti lì "vivere come ciambelle al burro"loro stessi non pensano di tornare. Soprattutto le donne, e questo – secondo l’esperto – porta a conseguenze gravi. – "Un contadino cerca moglie" non vengono dal nulla, questi sono problemi reali – dice a Interia il demografo e gerontologo sociale, Prof. Piotr Szukalski.

    Nessuna giovane donna con una mente vuole vivere in un Bantustan cattolico romano.

    https://wydarzenia.interia.pl/kraj/news-nie-wroce-mlodzi-uciekaja-z-rodzinnych-miast-skutki-beda-bol,nId,22604909

    di Gamebyter

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    6 commenti

    1. Certain_Draft2866 on

      A farmer better start paying fucking ZUS instead of finding a wife

    2. XWasTheProblem on

      Yeah, unfortunately for many careers, especially for fields like tech or finance, you either have access to one of the Large Four (Kraków, Warszawa, Wrocław, Poznań), are experienced enough to be allowed to work remotely – assuming the roles you’re looking for allow that – or you are kinda just fucked.

      Source – programmer who lost his job last year, the closest of the big cities to me is Kraków which is 120 KM per direction, and it just so happens the best road is a paid highway with two toll booths.

    3. Corpo-Rat90 on

      This will change in time people think living in a hole in the wall in the city is amazing until they realize paying the same amount for a home in the country will give them a better life style. The issue is connections and commute to those bigger cities and the train line in małopolska from the krakow area will fix that, the fact you go around saying these small towns are all farmers is funny and shows you never lived in one lol

    4. mohawkal on

      It’s the same in every country. Rural towns and villages don’t have the same opportunities as cities. Education, employment, entertainment, is all found in cities. There’s nothing to keep younger people living in a rural place. If anyone figures out how to fix it, they’ll be rich.

    5. Diss_ConnecT on

      I live in a place like this, where out of my 25 classmates maybe 4 or 5 stayed after we finished school. The houses are cheap compared to any big cities, but your career options here are: store clerk in a market or 12h shifts in a factory 7km out of town. Other vacancies would be like 1 doctor a decade, 1 new teacher every 5 years, 1 office job at the town hall every 3-4 years, one of the two hairdressers will soon retire so maybe someone could open a new saloon in her place then and so on. If you aren’t lucky enough to be looking for a job when someone retires you can either leave or buy a car and commute to the nearest city, which is half an hour drive if you’re working on the outskirts close to the main road, or above one hour if you have to get to a place within the city. There’s nothing to see and nothing to do after work, there are two bars that serve beer and onion rings. Pros are, once you land a job you can most likely keep it until retirement and even longer and life here is cheap so minimum wage is absolutely enough to survive. If you want anything more from your life than going to work you’ll probably hate and returning home to watch Netflix, you need to move.

    6. stalineczka on

      In the meantime, I really want to go back to my hometown

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