Nearly half of the largest companies in Poland are controlled by the state

https://i.redd.it/2ojrn1ltkwvg1.jpeg

Posted by Themetalin

25 Comments

  1. I have a great idea. Let’s give the companies for free to the private sector and let’s watch them being bought by US and Germany. Also, can Leszek also bring up data for China?

  2. niemacotuwpisac on

    This may also indicate that in Poland, the private sector of companies that was supposed to control large part of the market doesn’t exist. Does this mean that capitalism failed because it didn’t create them?

    The state did, but the free market didn’t?

  3. Tankudoraiba on

    Yes, but also huge part of them are companies with high strategic value in the regard of stabilization of the country in the case of any emergency.

  4. Yes, and the UK in particular is waking up to the reality that it has little to no leverage when it comes to its own country’s strategic resources, utilities, and interests in general. Meanwhile, the national debt—which was apparently supposed to be wiped out after 40 years of rampant privatisation—is higher than it has ever been. 

  5. Character4315 on

    And that’s probably a good thing, otherwise you end up privatising the profits and sharing the losses. And it’s not even about communism as some American may say, it’s just to bring some balance, because capitalism to the extreme as we see these days is also very fucked up.

  6. Yea, and what conlusion we want to take from this statistic?

    Leszek B. ofc belives we need to sold all those companies to privat hands so his buddies and sponsors can get rich.

    I think its says that our wonderful entrepreneurs are not so great as our liberal govs told us and even if some of them made succes they immidietly sell their companies to foreginer investors becose they dont give a shit about national economy and thats why those big companies we have need to stay in state ovnership 🙂

  7. Gagan_Ku2905 on

    WIG20: 55-60% State Owned
    WIG40: 15-20% State Owned
    If you’ll look across Finland, Norway, Spain…their top 30-40 also have majority State share, more than 20%. Wherever the Oil and Energy is the major industry state enters the picture. It’s not a fair comparison with US, their top companies are tech.
    Switzerland for example also have roughly 30% state owner Banking. 51% state owned Telecom, whereas Poland has 0% state owned Telecom.
    He’s not technically incorrect, but it’s a complete picture and fair representation of reality.

  8. Afraid_Line_7948 on

    Orlen, Jeronimo Martins, PGE Polska Grupa Energetyczna, PZU, PKO Bank Polski, Totalizator Sportowy, Enea, Tauron Polska Energia, KGHM Polska Miedź, Grupa Azoty.

    These are Poland’s ten largest companies. Nine of them are 50% state-owned enterprises. All of them except Totalizator Sportowy and PZU are regarded as strategic, and every other country also has larger or smaller stakes in sectors considered strategic. It’s normal.

    We simply don’t have giants like the top 10 German companies such as Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz Group, BMW, Siemens, Allianz, SAP, and Deutsche Telekom – private companies with a global reach. Why is that, Leszek?

  9. honestly i kinda would rather have the critical infrastructure be bound to the state so they can’t just milk the people by doing unreasonable price hikes that people can’t refuse to pay

    still non-essentials seem to be better when privatized because in that case we get actual market competition with innovation and if companies do something stupid, then people have no problem with not paying for their products

  10. What Balcerowich thinks: „Let’s sell rest of public assets so private sector can develop it as much as it can.”

    What I see: „A lot public goods that were sold to private sector did not survive to this day as it was cheaper to dismantle factories and/or sell them to foregin capital which didn’t want competition.Meanwhile private sector wasn’t able to develop enough on it’s own without help of public sector to counter-balance this change… Let’s do it again with public companies that survied.”

  11. Could it be that the majority of the economy is composed of small companies, and overrepresentation of state ownership in big ones is actually an indicator of healthy, competitive market economy?