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Friday, March 27, 2026

Andrew Moran: Poland — The Very Model of a Modern Major Economy


From communist hellscape to free market symbol.

Borscht. Knife in the Water. Frédéric Chopin. Among the world’s 20 largest economies? Poland is famous for many contributions to humanity, but being a major economy may not be on everyone’s Bingo card. However, the Polish economic environment has evolved substantially since the post-communist ruins of decades ago, transitioning from Marx to markets. What happened?

Poland Is No Longer a Running Gag

Did you hear about the Polish workers who carpooled? Every day they would meet at work. Forty years ago, the Polish would have been the source of jokes. Today, they are the subject of envy.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, Poland suffered from hyperinflation and a collapse in growth. Rather than wallowing in Das Kapital and drowning in a plate of buttered pierogies, the nation rebuilt itself from the ground up. By the mid-1990s, Poland successfully plugged the holes in a sinking ship, stabilizing the economic climate.

As socialist pillars – state-owned enterprises and lavish government subsidies – were dismantled, the free-market system went to work, thanks to the brilliance of several legendary economists, including Milton Friedman (more on that later). Observers can use various metrics to assess how successful Poland has become.

One of these is the Human Development Index (HDI), a gauge established by the United Nations to determine citizens’ overall quality of life. Within Central and Eastern Europe, Poland registered the highest HDI, after ranking third from the bottom in 1990. Another could be gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, which exceeded $55,000 in 2025, equal to 85% of the European Union (EU) average. Or, since joining the trade bloc in 2004, the Polish economy has grown at an average annual rate of nearly 4%, more than double that of the EU.

Put simply, Poland is now the world’s 20th largest economy.

Like every other nation on the planet, it is facing a series of challenges, mainly an aging population. But if Poland can rise from the hell of communism and the ashes of destitution and despair, it can undoubtedly overcome this latest obstacle.

Thank You, Milton Friedman

Friedman was perhaps the most important and influential economist of the 20th century. His ideas and wisdom not only helped form the thoughts of multiple generations – even to this day! – but also transformed Poland, at least according to former Finance Minister Leszek Balcerowicz.

In the 1990s, Balcerowicz relied on the teachings of Friedman, as well as those of Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig von Mises, to reshape the economy. From tighter monetary control (inflation is a monetary phenomenon) to the rollback of state intervention (nothing more permanent than a government program), Friedman’s footprints are all over the Eastern European state.

Similar to Javier Milei in Argentina, Balcerowicz applied “shock therapy” with exceptional success.

Within the blink of an eye, 90% of prices were freed from government control, allowing the invisible hand of the market to set real prices rather than the arbitrary whims of bureaucrats. Competition, balanced budgets, currency convertibility, legal frameworks, and opening to foreign trade became integral to Poland’s success. The country also enacted fair competition regulations and implemented robust bank protections to bolster credit access and expansion.

Unsurprisingly, Balcerowicz won the 2014 Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty from the Cato Institute.

That’s Capitalism, Baby

In these times, capitalism has been given a bad reputation, even if it is credited with lifting civilization from the vestiges of misery. Does it need a rebranding? Consider this. A recent Harris Poll found that 57% of voters say capitalism is superior to socialism, compared with 41% who believe socialism is better. However, when the term “free enterprise” is substituted for capitalism, the endorsement number swells to nearly 80%.

Blame it on the government education system. Point fingers at the mainstream media. Perhaps economists do a terrible job. Whatever the case, there is no denying capitalism’s record – and Poland is one more example of its success.

Andrew Moran, Economics Editor at LibertyNation.com. Andrew has written extensively on economics, business, and political subjects for the last decade. This article was first published HERE

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