If you prefer an open source app, native, complete, with a decent UI and an active developer community, the official one is definitely the best. And I mean Jerboa, because it is the official client made by the very same people that are making Lemmy (so always compatible and up-to-date with the server development).
Otherwise, if you don't mind using a closed source app, Summit is the most feature rich one and it is maintained by a professional industry-level native Android developer who really knows what he's doing.
Finally, if you want to experiment with a cross platform app, open source and well maintained, with a really nice user interface, have a try with Thunder.
It's still too early to tell anything, hope they come back too!
The Lemmy ecosystem is weird because there are so many Lemmy tools maintained by a single person yet at the same time the majority of Lemmy's user base is tech-savy (we're mostly nerds working in the IT field) and we should be inclined to collaboration rather than competition, considering the amount of criticism about western capitalism here.
The reason may be that many projects started out as experiments/for fun, or that we are unwelcoming to new contributors, who knows...
I agree in that the failure to address socio-economic issues by who has been in charge until now fuels the resentment/frustration/urge for "quick and dirty" solutions people are looking for in alt-right parties. Until they realize having been deceived because things change for the worse and, which is more important, the establishment is not going to change.
It is a country without future, and there is no hope for the situation to improve any time soon. Extremely low wages, no affordable housing, healthcare unavailable and poor access to education/services in general but high taxation. It would be crazy to expect anyone to plan to have a family!
And if imported goods have cheap prices due to ignoring labor rights, worker safety and environmental protection it is acceptable... This is hypocrite and really does not deserve further comments.
I don't think there is a solution for European economy. Better be prepared for the worst rather than living with the illusion that these tricks may work.
It's not a "fine" but a XIX century protectionistic measure which is unlikely to help anyone (except making people poorer because higher prices mean higher expenditure for consumers). And from here to the next inflation spiral there is just a small step...