Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

30 Years of Teaching Economics in French at Sofia University

We are becoming an increasingly attractive choice for French students, says Assoc. Prof. Sonia Georgieva to Radio Bulgaria

Photo: Facebook/stopanski.fakultet

Philanthropy and the vision for the progress of Bulgarian science and education define the development of higher education in the country. One of the greatest and most significant benefactors in Bulgaria's history was Evlogy Georgiev, a man with an entrepreneurial spirit and unwavering patriotism, despite spending decades outside the country. He donated the money to build Sofia University. 

Almost a century and a half later, another Bulgarian followed the example of the banker from Karlovo. 


Early this year, it was announced that an anonymous benefactor had made the largest single donation to the university's Faculty of Economics: one million leva (511,000 euros). The money will be used to fund scholarships for the faculty's students over the next ten years. The donor remains anonymous, saying only that he is an alumnus of the faculty. 

In fact, economics was taught a few years after the establishment of the first Bulgarian higher education institution in Sofia (1888). Political economy, finance and statistics were introduced in the Faculty of Law, which opened in 1892. 

Today we present the bachelor programmes of the Faculty of Economics and Finance and Business Administration, which are taught in French.


The studies in these programmes last four years, with a compulsory internship in the third year and a semester of the European mobility programme Erasmus in a French university. The courses are taught in Bulgarian and French by Bulgarian lecturers and guest lecturers from abroad, we learn from Assoc. Prof. Dr. Sonya Georgieva, head of the programme. 

"This is a programme whose foundations were laid in 1995 with the support of the French Institute at the French Embassy in Bulgaria. Later, based on this experience, in 2009-2010 we created a joint bachelor's programme "Licence" in Economics and Business Management with the University of Lille in France, which is still the main partner of the Faculty of Economics. Since the 2018-2019 academic year, this programme has also been implemented with the University of Poitiers. I highlight these two French universities as partners, although we have many more, because we have an agreement with them that allows students to obtain two diplomas simultaneously - one in Bulgarian and one in French." 

Assoc. Prof. Sonia Georgieva's visit to the University of Poitiers for the presentation of Sofia University
The double degree in the Francophone programme requires that the curricula and programmes are in line with both Bulgarian standards and those of the French partner universities, explains Assoc. Prof. Georgieva. 

I would like to draw attention to the fact is interdisciplinary, integrating economic, financial, managerial, and legal disciplines along with STEM fields such as applied mathematics, statistics, computer science, and information technology. This ensures a truly specialised education.

Proficiency in French is enhanced as students study it as a specialised language, mastering professional jargon and terminology. This is the added value of their education and gives them a competitive edge in the labour market.

The French branch of the programme at the Faculty of Economics of Sofia University is open to all applicants. However, Assoc. Prof. Sonya Georgieva notes that the most successful applicants come from language and mathematics high schools in Bulgaria and abroad.


Over the past 14 years, 246 Bulgarian students have successfully obtained double major diplomas. Currently, 67 future graduates are enrolled, almost 30 of them foreigners.

The graduates have gone on to a wide range of careers, from working in small and medium-sized enterprises to high positions in Bulgarian and international companies. The gratifying thing is that more and more of them are choosing to continue their professional development in Bulgaria, notes the head of the Francophone programme. 

"And here I would like to mention our work with PhD students. It is extremely important because we are counting on them to stay with us as teachers. At the National Competition for Doctoral Students organised by the Francophone University Agency (AUF) on May 28 this year, the winner was our doctoral student Lydia Kabatliyska, who will represent Bulgaria at the World Competition in the Ivory Coast this autumn". 

And Bulgaria is becoming more and more attractive for Bulgarian and foreign francophone students, says Assoc. Prof. Sonia Georgieva.

"The proof of this is that French students, for example, who come for one semester, typically the winter term, choose to extend their stay. This indicates their appreciation of Bulgaria as a place to live, and underscores the quality education offered by our faculty and university."


Explore French-language study programs at Bulgarian universities:




Photos: Facebook/stopanski.fakultet, uni-sofia.bg, Ani Petrova - BNR
Translated and posted by Elizabeth Radkova



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Bulgarians in Albania need state support in order to preserve their national identity

"You say you are Bulgarian, but you do not know Bulgarian" – this reproach from officials in Bulgaria has been faced by quite a few by our compatriots from the historical Bulgarian communities around the world. One of them is Bledar Alterziu from..

published on 12/2/24 4:05 PM

Dina Djevali from Syria: I have lived through utter misery, nothing is difficult for me in Bulgaria

The survival of millions of people around the world, living in conditions of war, hunger, disease and immense despair, is at stake every day. We often approach immigrants from such countries with hostility rather than understanding. What they have..

published on 12/2/24 1:01 PM

Bulgarian high school students fight disinformation

Modernizing critical thinking skills, fact-checking skills and media literacy are essential for society, especially for young people in Bulgaria - the country with one of the lowest media literacy indices in the EU, reports the educational platform..

published on 12/1/24 5:05 AM