How much is paid for in pregnancy like Yuli? These are the figures around the world.

The dispute over Juliana Nura's non-partial pregnancy has opened a 20-x0-type Pandor” in our society, but while we are still wondering whether it's right or not, Europe has turned this into a very tight legal system.
And if you thought the rules were the same everywhere, you were wrong! Each state has its “receta” how it treats the industry, ranging from large payments to total privacy removal.
Let's start with our neighbors. Greece is known as one of the countries where donors are best paid in Europe. While legally considered compensation and not salary, a donor there can earn between 200 and 1,200 euros, depending on clinics and the number of donations, reports Cut, broadcast Periscope.
What makes Greece so popular for women worldwide is the strict law of anonymity. The donor's identity remains secret forever and is stripped of any parental responsibility or right over the child.
Spain follows a similar pattern of secrecy. Under Spanish law, the donation is entirely an unselfish act and the sale of sperm is illegal. However, clinics offer about 30 to 50 euros for each visit as compensation for time spent, which in a full cycle of donation amounts to about 900 euros. Even there, the donor's identity is protected by law and is never given to the mother.
But if we go north on the continent, the rules of the game change dramatically. Sweden is an absolute pioneer in this field. In 2016, Swedes took a historic step by passing the law that allowed single women, similar to Juli, to have full access to the treatment of sperm donated by clinics. Sweden is also the first country in the world since 1985 to eliminate the concept of anonymous donor. When the child turns 18, he has the full legal right to request the precise information of the one who donated the sperm. The payments there are designed mainly as repayment of expenses, grasping assets of 40 euros and higher per visit.
An open pattern also follows Germany, where anonymity is strictly forbidden. Children born of this process have the right to recognize their biological origin as they turn 16. German clinics reward donors with about 80 to 130 euros per visit. Whether the law protects secrecy in both Greece and Spain or gives the child the right to recognise the origin of both Sweden and Germany, common across the West is essential: donors have no financial or parental obligation. While they've been building these legal frameworks for decades, we still have this discussion running on the grid without getting quiet.
Otherwise, Yuli tonight is launching the first episode of reality-see “Eagle queen“. /Periscope/











