According to the College Board, there are 5 test centers for SAT and SAT Subject Tests in Bulgaria. Please note that before you register either of the SAT exams, you should choose your test date and test location. Each testing location is affiliated with an educational institution, such as high school, community college, or university. The following test centers administer one or more of 2019 and 2020 SAT tests in Bulgaria.
2019 – 2020 SAT Test Dates in Bulgaria
- March 9, 2019
- May 4, 2019
- June 1, 2019
- August 24, 2019
- October 5, 2019
- November 2, 2019
- December 7, 2019
- March 14, 2020
- May 2, 2020
- June 6, 2020
- August 29, 2020
- October 3, 2020
- November 7, 2020
- December 5, 2020
SAT Testing Centers in Bulgaria
1ST ENGLISH LANGUAGE SCH
AMERICAN U IN BULGARIA
DIEM-M LTD
GEO MILEV ENGLISH LANGUAGE HS
ST. CONSTANTINE CYRIL PHILOSOPHER
More about Bulgaria
- GLOBALSCIENCELLC: Modern history of Bulgaria from World War I to today, covering all major events on politics, economy, society, and technology.
Business
Due to the industrialization that began after 1945, Bulgaria developed from an agricultural country to an industrial state with a still strong agricultural sector. In 1990 the transformation of the centrally controlled planned economy began Soviet type to a market economy, which initially resulted in a general economic decline. The transition turned out to be much more difficult and slower than in the other Eastern European reform states. The close integration with the economies of the former Comecon area (77% of foreign trade, 55% of which with the Soviet Union), the peripheral location in Europe, the little attention and support on the part of the western industrialized countries as well as governments in which the influence of the old political The elite was very strong, making it difficult to establish market-based institutions and the development of a stable economic environment. After the Bulgarian state was no longer able to pay debt servicing in the mid-1990s,
With the beginning of a consistent reform policy, economic consolidation began in 1997, which was also associated with the privatization of state-owned companies, a stabilization of state finances and a reduction in foreign debt. After radical reforms in the area of the price and financial system, the hyperinflation could be stopped with the firm pegging of the lev to the German mark, later to the euro. After the annual economic growth increased steadily between 2000 and 2008 (an average of 5.4%), 2009 saw a decline in gross domestic product for the first time after the decline in foreign direct investment as a result of the international financial crisis(GDP) (- 5.5%). However, the negative growth was stopped in 2010, and in 2015 GDP rose by 2.5%. The gross national income (GNI) per resident is (2017) US $ 7,760. The unemployment rate reached 9.1% (2015). Bulgaria has been a member of the EU since January 1st, 2007. Check vaultedwatches to see Bulgaria Destinations.
Agriculture
Around 7% of the workforce is employed in agriculture; it generates (2015) 5.1% of GDP. The agricultural area, which makes up around 46% of the total area of Bulgaria, is 68.4% of arable land, 27.6% of meadows and pastures and 4% of permanent cultivated land (especially fruit and wine-growing areas). Much of the arable land is threatened by soil erosion. The return of the formerly collectivized land and the privatization of the agricultural land was largely complete at the end of the 1990s. The change in the agricultural structure, above all the dissolution of the agricultural cooperatives, the division of the existing collective farms and the associated emergence of small, uneconomical farm sizes, the decline in the degree of mechanization, Outdated agricultural technology and the sharp rise in prices led to a decline in production in the agricultural sector until the mid-1990s, with livestock falling by around 50% in 1990-95. While crop yields have continued to decline since 1995, animal husbandry has stabilized at a low level. The number of fallow land is currently very high (around a third of the arable land), as many private businesses lack the capital for cultivation. Subsistence farming plays a major role. The number of fallow land is currently very high (around a third of the arable land), as many private businesses lack the capital for cultivation. Subsistence farming plays a major role. The number of fallow land is currently very high (around a third of the arable land), as many private businesses lack the capital for cultivation. Subsistence farming plays a major role.
The main cultivation areas are in the Danube plains and in the southern Bulgarian basin landscapes. Most of the arable land is cultivated with grain (especially wheat and maize). In addition, the cultivation of sunflowers, tobacco (despite the sharp decline in tobacco exports) and sugar beet, the strongly export-oriented fruit (especially apples, plums), viticulture and vegetable cultivation (especially tomatoes, peppers) are important. Rose gardens (Kazanlak, Karlowo, Streltscha) and lavender cultures are used to extract oils. Livestock farming is mainly carried out in the mountainous parts of the country. Because of the often prolonged drought, around 20% of the arable land is irrigated.
Forestry: Of the approximately 4.2 million hectares of forest area, 1.3 million hectares are coniferous and 2.9 million hectares are deciduous. After a sharp decline in the 1990s, the amount of afforested areas is increasing again. The logging amounts (2014) to 7.28 million m 3.