Currently, the Polish government faces challenges, but today it publishes the Development Strategy up to 2035, enshrining a central role for private companies in stimulating the economy. Public investment, especially in infrastructure, will support GDP growth, but the strategy aims to mobilize private capital as the growth engine by 2035. Private companies become the growth engine of Poland through 2035; the objective is that at least half of the 100 largest companies are private by 2035 (today there are 24). Key priorities: stimulate the economy, national security, and demographics. Economic activity, including private enterprises, is considered foundational for sustainable development. Support model: a move toward subsidized financing rather than direct subsidies; loans would be provided by public bodies such as Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego, the Polish Development Fund, and venture capital funds. Key investments: Central Transport Hub (CPK), ports and intermodal terminals, a nuclear power plant, energy networks, and defense technologies. Impacts expected for private companies: expanded access to subsidized financing and new public procurements/investments related to strategic infrastructure. Next steps: participate in the public consultation by October; monitor updates for favorable conditions or shifts in investment policies. Why it matters now: reflects a coordinated public-private push to spur growth, employment, and economic resilience over the next decade.