For some time now, the media has been spreading information about the surprising attitude of the member of the Board of Directors of the National Bank of Poland, Mr. Pawel Muchawho plays a game incomprehensible to the public and sharply criticizes the actions of the bank’s president.
There are general, unsubstantiated accusations here about the functioning of the NBP and even about the “rule of law” – it is known that the left-liberal media will happily accept these.
But what’s really going on? Recent contributions from the former presidential minister himself shed some light on this.
It’s worth remembering that A member of the NBP board earns more than PLN 61,000. zloty. monthly (this is evident from data from the NBP website for 2022).
What about bonuses and rewards? Every Pole knows that he is rewarded by the boss for good results at work. However, Mr Mucha seems so far removed from reality that he considers large bonuses an automatic privilege.
He expresses this at the beginning of his internet article:
As we know from people familiar with the bank, Mr. Mucha has only raised issues at Board meetings in recent months about his own benefits and other benefits allegedly due to him.
And besides the salary, he wants much more. He is suing the banking authorities for the alleged payment delays more than 120,000 PLN for bonuses and prizes that, in Mr. Mucha’s opinion, he deserves.
But it’s hard to say why. Mr Mucha does not head NBP departments and only participates in board meetings once every two weeks. According to several of my conversation partners, they sometimes behave there in a way that has never been seen at a bank. Let’s put it subtly.
Nevertheless, according to Mr. Mucha, the bonuses and rewards for a member of the board of directors are owed to him, and that’s it. Another question is whether his attitude, which clearly damages the image of the NBP, does not confirm that he was right not to receive them?
As our informants confirm, all other elements of the story and activities of Mr. Mucha, including writing letters to the Monetary Policy Council (all of which, by some opposition representatives, immediately reached the media), interpreted as part of the growing pressure aimed at forcing the NBP to pay this huge amount of money.
President Adam Glapiński never succumbs to media or political blackmail
– we hear.
Previously, Mr Mucha tried several times to put pressure on the bank by issuing a subpoena and by making the matter public. This has forced the NBP authorities to issue statements on the matter.
A series of entries on the X website (formerly Twitter) cleared up the picture for us. The opinion that it is mainly about money and the fight for the ‘good of the NBP and the rule of law’ seems justified useful tools. Especially since everything is in order with the rule of law at the bank, and the institution has achieved significant successes under the rule of President Adam Glapiński, from radically increasing gold and currency resources to effectively reducing Putin’s inflation without raising unemployment to increase.
Interestingly, as we have noted, Mr. Mucha’s attitude also provokes outrage in the presidential palace, where he previously worked. Andrzej Duda himself is said to be disgusted by the attitude of the former minister at the National Bank of Poland and his public actions. Calls for conversion, which were addressed to him from that side through informal channels, have so far had no effect. Perhaps because Mr Mucha, as he told several people, plans to become President of Poland in the future.
And this is no joke at all.
It would be funny if there were not the harmful opinions so eagerly expressed by the media of the Third Polish Republic in the name of “expected bonuses” and other benefits.
mk, grammar school
Source: wPolityce