Saturday, 15 January 2022

Nepotism & Emigration: How Many Uhljebs Quit Croatia Since 1991?

January 15, 2022 - How many uhljebs quit Croatia since 1991? A closer look after the new census results. 

According to the new census, Croatia has 3,888,529 inhabitants, which means that it has lost 400,000 inhabitants since the last census in 2011, the Central Bureau of Statistics announced.

Index.hr reports that since the 1948 census, Croatia has not recorded such a low number. Since 1991, it has lost 895,736 inhabitants, almost all of Zagreb. The drastic drop in population begins a year after Tudjman's overwhelming HDZ victory in the country's first democratic elections. Although the war broke out since then, and other political options had power, the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) spent most of the time in power. 

Why and how it happened is yet to be discussed, and analyses have yet to be done. The media has published many stories of people and even entire families who sought happiness outside of Croatia. Most of them are employed or unemployed, who left Croatia in search of a better life. An Index poll in 2018 asked why people left Croatia, and corruption, primitivism, religious obstinacy, and nationalism were cited as the main reasons.

In parallel with the emigration, there is an increase in the number of employees in counties, cities, and municipalities in Croatia. These employees have kept in power the same politicians and the same political, social, and economic ideas that have led to the disappearance of almost half a million people since 2011. 

From 2002 to 2019, the number of employees in counties increased from 1,237 to 2,409, in cities from 7,170 to 10,777, and in municipalities from 2,285 to 5,861. In 2002, Croatia had slightly more than 4,305 million inhabitants and 10,692 employees in cities, municipalities, and counties. In 2019, Croatia fell to 4,060 million inhabitants, and the number of uhljebs grew to 19,047.

Uhljeb, though a difficult word to translate, literally means 'in bread', and it refers to a person who has a job for life through connections - either political or family - and whose levels of competence and interest in doing the job well are questionable at best. You can learn more about uhljebs in A Tale of Two Croatias: Before and After the Uhljeb Discovery (here) and Welcome to Uhljebistan: A Foreign Appreciation of the Cult of Uhljeb (here).

Now that your mind is refreshed - you must know someone who left Croatia in the past few years, especially if you are from Slavonia. Or at least heard about someone who has left. But have you ever heard or know about a single uhljeb who left Croatia? Or did only those who were forced to feed the uhljebs move out?

For more on news in Croatia, follow TCN's dedicated page.

Saturday, 4 September 2021

Croatian Tax Stamps Finally Binned as Country Moves Forward

September the 4th, 2021 - One thing which has always fascinated and baffled me, despite many years in Croatia, is the need for tax stamps. You needed to buy them to do just about anything administrative and let's be honest, it's archaic and amusing. Don't tell that to the clerk who is very seriously asking for one, though. Croatian tax stamps are now finally binned and resigned to the history books as the country finally steps out into the 21st century.

Seing your documents get stamped by hand by someone who really couldn't look less interested and then handing over some tax stamps really makes a person feel like they've stepped back in time, and it will come as a pleasant surprise to many when issuing documents that they're no longer needed.

As Poslovni Dnevnik writes, in the Republic of Croatia, for the issuance of as many as 177 documents, Croatian tax stamps had to be purchased all the way from the dark ages (kidding, but maybe not) until September the 1st, 2021, along with all of the other bizarre paperwork that clerk wanted. They're thankfully no longer required.

As of the 1st of September, Croatian tax stamps have no longer needed to be purchased for the issuance of driving licenses, passports, birth certificates and a whole range of other documents.

Namely, the new Regulation on the Tariff of Administrative Fees entered into force on the 1st of September. The Tax Administration confirmed for RTL that it is expected that 80 million kuna less per year will be paid into the state budget owing to the removal of the need for Croatian tax stamps.

The assistant head of the Zagreb City Administration office, in the civil status sector, said that everything would now be easier for everyone.

"It simply means that it's all going to be easier for people, and for us in some way. So, all documents and certificates from the state registers and the book of citizens such as from the voter list, when we talk about the area of ​​our city office for general administration, are exempt from the payment of administrative fees,'' said Asja Ettinger.

For more, make sure to check out our dedicated lifestyle section.

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