Although this is going vastly off-topic...
I think that perhaps you've never seen a truly poor country, or even Europes poorest corners, if you really think that Slovakia, an industrialised country, though a lower-rank one, is a "backward agrarian country".
The "truly poor" countries in Europe don't even pop on the radar when it comes to "relativity". Sure, Albania is poorer - Romania and Bulgaria are more agrarian - Ukraine is only a powerhouse in the primary sector - Belarus isn't even worth mentioning.
However, as you mentioned "Core Europe", i'm seeing it in comparison to that. Sure, it has its own more poor corners - Southern Italy, Portugal in particular. But most eastern European nations barely even approach those.
Sure, Skoda is concentrated there obviously (in the Western regions). Do those four Western regions combined (as the "stronger" part of Slovakia) compare in any way remotely to extremely-similar-sized, -populated and -structured regions such as the Metropolitan Region Hannover in Germany, the Toulouse metro in France, or the Greater Glasgow Area?
As you're quoting Eurostat, in 2004, Slovakia ranked at 56% of average EU GDP per inhabitant, not really high for the new eastern EU member states - roughly level with Estonia (55.7%) or, for a wider comparison, French Guyana (54.4%); considerably lower than the Czechs though (75.2%).
However, Bratislava by itself is at 129% (roughly level with the
average for the UK), while the rest of the country ranks between 42.3% and 52.7%.
The lowest in "Western Europe" is Portugal Norte at 58.8%. In "Core Europe" (Germany, Benelux, France, Italy) the lowest is Sicilia at 67.3% - and that's already considered piss-poor.
I consider myself short at 1.83m btw.
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