Legal Guidance and Research / Experts / Anna Dąbrowska

Anna Dąbrowska

Anna Dąbrowska is involved mainly in transactional work, focusing on corporate law. She has taken part in many mergers and transformations of legal entities, as well as share purchase transactions and business acquisitions. She also assists clients in day-to-day issues arising in the operation of businesses in Poland, including setting up, restructuring and liquidation of companies, partnerships and branches, effecting changes in corporate structures, and initiating and monitoring related registration proceedings.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Experience

  • Wardynski & Partners (1996 - Present)

Membership

  • European Regional Forum in the IBA
  • IBA Future of Legal Services Commission
  • Polish Chapter of the International Section of the New York State Bar Association

Qualifications

  • Attorney-at-law in Poland (2007)
  • Solicitor in England and Wales (currently not practising) (2015)
  • MA in Law (1999)

Education

  • University of Warsaw (1999)

1 Contributions by Anna Dąbrowska

Poland 2025: Comprehensive business law, taxation and regulatory guide for foreign investors: incorporation, employment, real estate, contracts, IP/data, competition and merger control, FDI screening, and tax compliance
PRACTICE NOTES
Poland 2025: Comprehensive business law, taxation and regulatory guide for foreign investors: incorporation, employment, real estate, contracts, IP/data, competition and merger control, FDI screening, and tax compliance
Updated March 2025 Introduction The European Commission anticipates that Poland’s GDP growth in 2025 will continue to trail the EU average for a third year in a row. In a volatile setting, provisional data from the Central Statistical Office show GDP in 2024 rose by a modest 2.5% versus 2023, easing from 4.9% in 2022. This tempo points to a measured rebound from earlier strains, chiefly elevated inflation and higher interest rates. Although the final quarter of 2024 recorded some improvement, with year-on-year growth of 3%, it still fell short of expectations. Weaker consumer outlays, held back by flat real wages and pricier credit, have weighed on activity, while geopolitical developments are also exerting pressure. Nevertheless, infrastructure spending and a recovery in exports have offered partial support. Economists expect growth to settle in 2025, though ongoing geopolitical tensions and wider global uncertainties remain key risks. The business environment Poland’s legislative set-up is shared between the government and two parliamentary chambers, the Sejm and the Senate. The Polish Constitution sets out individual freedoms,...
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