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SPIEGEL: Greeks, Bulgarians use Turkey as ‘shopping paradise’ – Turks in line for bread

The ups and downs of Greek tourism and the shopping of Bulgarians and Greeks in Turkey in the German press.

The taz of Berlin refers to Greek tourism, which due to a pandemic, as he writes, has its ups and downs. “The money left by each tourist is hardly enough to bring the total revenue from tourism by the end of October to 58% for the same period of 2019. At that time, direct revenue had risen to 17.569 billion euros. The tourist season officially started this year on May 15, a month earlier than the first year of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. But there was a wrong start: the 3G principle was applied – vaccination, recovery, testing. However, only those who could present an expensive “PCR tests that were not older than 72 hours were considered negative. This prevented many from traveling around the country.”

And the article continues: “The government under the conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis reacted relatively quickly. After a ministerial decision on June 17, 2021, a cheap quick test was suddenly enough to enter Greece. Tourism ‘caught fire’. Greece managed to In the third quarter of this year, Greek tourism revenues almost reached the level of 2019, in some top destinations, such as Mykonos, they were even higher, but it came too late and it was too short. “The next blow came with the German government ‘s decision to designate Greece as a high – risk area from November 21 and tighten the return rules. So for the Greek tourism industry, the season passed earlier than expected.”

In the queue for bread when the neighbors are shopping at a frenetic pace …

“Bulgarians and Greeks use Turkey as a shopping opportunity paradise” is the title of a post on its website. Spiegel, which observes howDespite government support measures, the Turkish lira has only stabilized slightly. “People from Bulgaria and Greece cross the border to shop cheaply in the neighboring country,” the report said. The parking lots are full of Bulgarian cars. It is almost impossible to see signs from Edirne or Istanbul, he said. “They buy like crazy without knowing what they are buying,” he said, describing the situation … And people from neighboring Greece exchange euros for pounds. Speaking to reporters, a client said she was happy to be able to buy gifts for her family and herself. While Bulgarian and Greek customers besiege stores in Edirne, people in Turkey are painfully aware of the decline in their purchasing power. “Sometimes they wait in the cold in long queues for bread.”

Maria Rigoutsou

SOURCE: Deutsche Welle

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Source From: Capital

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