União Europeia
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Re: União Europeia
Purchasing power of Europeans increases to €17,688 in 2023
In 2023, the average per capita purchasing power in Europe is €17,688. However, there is a clear divide among the 42 countries in Europe: Liechtenstein, Switzerland, and Luxembourg, for example, have quite a higher net income than the rest of Europe, while the purchasing power is the lowest in Belarus, Kosovo, and Ukraine. The biggest winner of the year is Ireland, which moved up four places in the overall European comparison. These are some of the results of the newly released study “GfK Purchasing Power Europe 2023.”
In total, Europeans have around €12.1 trillion available to spend in 2023 on food, housing, services, energy costs, private pensions, insurance, vacations, mobility, and consumer purchases. This corresponds to an average per capita purchasing power of €17,688 per year, which represents a nominal growth of 5.8 percent compared to the revised values of the previous year. However, the amount that consumers actually have available for spending and saving varies greatly from country to country, and also depends on how consumer prices develop in 2023.
Ireland continues to be in the fast lane in 2023
As in previous years, Liechtenstein tops the purchasing power rankings by some significant distance. The people of Liechtenstein have a per capita purchasing power of €68,843, which is almost 3.9 times higher than the European average. Switzerland and Luxembourg follow in second and third place. While the per capita purchasing power of the Swiss is €49,592 – almost 2.8 times the European average – Luxembourgers have a disposable net income of €40,931 per capita. This is more than 2.3 times the European average.
All other countries in the top ten also have a very high per capita purchasing power – at least 47 percent more than the European average. The biggest winner is Ireland: After the island state barely made it into the top 10 last year, it was able to move up four places this year and is in sixth place. With €26,882 per capita, the Irish are exactly 52 percent above the European average.
There were also some other changes within the purchasing power top 10. Iceland and Denmark moved up one place each to fourth and fifth place respectively, while Austria improved by two places to seventh place. Norway, on the other hand, fell by four places, Germany by one, and the United Kingdom by three. This puts the three countries at the bottom of the purchasing power top 10.
Overall, 16 of the 42 countries surveyed are above the European average. This contrasts with 26 countries whose per capita purchasing power is below average – including Spain, which at €16,449 per capita is slightly below the European average. As in previous years, Ukraine is still at the bottom of the ranking. There, people only have €2,478 per capita, which is exactly 14 percent of the European average.
Tim Weber, expert in GfK’s Geomarketing solution area, comments: “This year, European countries are recording again a significant increase in purchasing power of almost 6 percent on average, but this cannot fully compensate for the still high inflation. However, the purchasing power does not develop the same way in every European country: For example, while Ireland climbs four places, the neighboring United Kingdom falls three places. And a lot has also happened within the countries – such as in the Czech Republic, where the rankings are mixed up considerably this year, or in Poland and France, where the gap between regions with strong and weak purchasing power is becoming ever larger. However, a somewhat positive trend can be observed between the 42 countries: Although the differences are still very high when it comes to spending potential, the purchasing power gap is at least closing a bit.”
Comparison of select countries and regions
Below is a more detailed evaluation of the distribution of purchasing power in the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, and Romania. A comparison of these countries offers insights into the regional distribution of spending potential within the respective countries.
Netherlands: Balanced distribution of purchasing power in the provinces
In the Netherlands, people have a per capita purchasing power of €25,098. This puts the Dutch in 12th place across Europe and almost 42 percent above the European average.
Compared to other European countries, where the purchasing power gap is sometimes very wide, the regional distribution of spending potential in the Dutch provinces is quite balanced. Accordingly, the average per capita purchasing power differs by just over 8 percent in both directions.
After Utrecht was able to reach the top of the provincial ranking in 2022 and pushed Noord-Holland into second place, the province around the capital Amsterdam is once again in pole position this year. With €27,198, people there have on average around €800 more available to spend and save than residents in the second-placed province of Utrecht.
There are further rank changes in places eight to eleven: Flevoland, the youngest province in the Netherlands, moves up one place to eighth place, while Overijssel improves by two places and ranks directly after Flevoland. Drenthe and Friesland, on the other hand, drop to places ten and eleven respectively. As in the previous year, Groningen comes in last, where people have a net disposable income of €23,047 per capita.
France: Highest purchasing power in Paris, lowest in the Parisian banlieue
In France, the average per capita purchasing power this year is €23,355. This puts the French exactly 32 percent above the European average and in 15th place in a European comparison. The top 10 mainly includes districts located in the Île-de-France and Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes regions.
As in 2022, the purchasing power ranking is led by Paris, where people have €38,588 per capita for their spending and saving. This means that Parisians are more than 65 percent above the national average and have a purchasing power that is more than 2.5 times as high as that of the arrondissement with the lowest purchasing power. As in previous years, the arrondissement of Saint-Denis, located north of Paris, comes in last, where per capita purchasing power is on average €15,150, which is more than 35 percent below the national average. This means that the gap between districts with strong and weak purchasing power in France widens a bit more this year.
In the second-placed arrondissement of Boulogne-Billancourt, the population has a per capita spending potential of €36,260 per capita, which is more than 55 percent of the French average; in the third-placed Gex it is €34,571, which is 48 percent higher than the French average. The only changes in the top 10 this year were Thonon-les-Bains and Rambouillet, which swapped places nine and ten. The Senlis district is exactly on the national average with a disposable net income of €23,355 per capita.
Italy: Pronounced north-south divide
In Italy, people have a per capita purchasing power of €20,205. This puts Italians slightly more than 14 percent above the European average and in 16th place among the 42 countries surveyed.
There are significant differences in the regional distribution of purchasing power between Italy’s affluent north and poorer south. All of the provinces in the top ten are located in northern Italy. As in previous years, Milano is the front-runner. The province around the fashion metropolis of Milan has a per capita purchasing power of €28,141, which is almost 39 percent above the national average.
The ten least affluent provinces are all located in southern Italy. As in previous years, Crotone ranks last, with only €12,144 disposable income per capita – which corresponds to almost 60 percent of the national average. This means that the people of Milan have 2.3 times the purchasing power of the people in Crotone, but the gap between the regions of the country with strong and weak purchasing power is closing somewhat this year. The net disposable income is closest to the average in Macerata. With a per capita purchasing power of €20,199, the province is only €6 below the national average.
There are some changes in the top 10 this year: Lecco has moved up three places and is now in fourth place with a per capita purchasing power of €25,037. Parma, Genova, and Modena, on the other hand, fell by one place each, while Trieste slipped by two places. New to the top 10 is the province of Belluno, which ranks eighth with a spending potential of €24,446 per capita. Piacenza, on the other hand, is pushed out of the top 10 and is now in twelfth place.
Spain: Slowly moving away from the European average
The average per capita purchasing power in Spain this year is €16,449. This puts the Spanish exactly 7 percent below the European average and in 17th place among the 42 European countries. This means that Spain is still relatively alone in the European midfield but is moving further and further away from the European average from year to year.
Gipuzkoa, located on the coast of the Bay of Biscay and bordering France, managed to defend its top spot this year. With €20,859, the residents of the smallest province in terms of area have the highest per capita purchasing power in Spain and are almost 27 percent above the national average. In second and third place are Madrid with €20,652 and Araba/Alava with €20,494 per capita. In places seven to nine, the ranks are swapped around a bit in 2023. Asturias improves by two places and takes seventh place with a spending potential of €18,808 per capita, while Navarra and Zaragoza slip one place each.
The Balearic Islands located off the east coast of mainland Spain are closest to the national average. Inhabitants of this district have €16,579 per capita available for spending and saving, which is almost 0.8 percent above the national average.
At the bottom of the purchasing power ranking, on the other hand, are the southwestern provinces of Spain. As in previous years, the geographically largest Spanish province of Badajoz occupies the last place in the rankings. With a per capita purchasing power of €12,183, the inhabitants of Badajoz have almost 74 percent of the national average at their disposal.
Czech Republic: Large cities with below-average growth in purchasing power and significant losses in ranking
In the Czech Republic, the spending potential this year is €14,824. The country is thus continuing the trend of recent years where it is getting closer to the European average. Although the Czechs are still 16 percent below average, they move up two places to 20th place in the overall European comparison, as they already did in the previous year.
As in previous years, the capital city district of Prague once again tops the purchasing power rankings. Inhabitants of this district have €20,292 per capita available for spending and saving, which is almost 37 percent above the national average. This means that the people in Prague are almost 15 percent above the European average.
Apart from Prague, however, the other large cities Brno-mesto (Brno) and Plzen-mesto (Pilsen) are pushed out of the purchasing power top 10 this year. In addition, the large cities of Ostrava-mesto (Ostrau), Liberec (Reichenberg) and Olomouc (Olomouc) also lose some places in the district ranking.
New to the top 10 are the two districts bordering Prague – Praha-zapad and Praha-vychod – which occupy the third and eighth place with a per capita purchasing power of €15,591 and €15,289 respectively. In second place this year is Mlada Boleslav, which has improved by one place and, with €15,679, has almost 6 percent more disposable income per capita than the national average. The Kolin district, on the other hand, slipped from eighth to ninth place.
In the district of Pelhrimov, the spending potential of €14,763 per capita is closest to the national average. As in previous years, Jesenik, which is located in Northern Moravia on the Polish border, occupies the bottom spot in the district rankings. Inhabitants of this district have a per capita purchasing power of €12,254, which is around 17 percent below the national average.
Poland: The gap between regions with weak and strong purchasing power is widening
Poland has an average per capita purchasing power of €10,903 in 2023. This puts the Poles at slightly more than 38 percent below the European average, gaining one place to 29th in comparison with the other 41 countries.
The district ranking in Poland is led by the capital district of Warsaw. With €17,980 per capita, purchasing power there is almost 65 percent above the national average. This corresponds to almost 2.7 times the spending potential that people in the district with the lowest purchasing power have. In Kolnenski, which once again brings up the rear this year, the per capita purchasing power is only €6,765, which means that the district's population has 38 percent less than the average Pole for shopping, rent, electricity and saving. The district ranking in Poland also shows that there continues to be a particularly large gap between affluent and disadvantaged regions. Only 83 districts have above average per capita purchasing power, while the disposable net income of 297 districts is below the national average.
Compared to last year, there is only one change in the top 10 this year: Tychy loses three places and slips to 13th place, while the Warszawski Zachodni district west of the capital Warsaw is now in tenth place with a net disposable income of €13,768 per capita. Sokolowski County is the closest to the average purchasing power, and inhabitants of this district have €10,921 per capita available, which is about €18 more than the national average.
Hungary: Purchasing power highest in and around Budapest, and toward the Austrian border
In a European comparison, Hungary ranks 29th out of the 42 countries examined and was therefore able to improve by one place compared to the previous year. With an average per capita purchasing power of €10,834, Hungary is almost 39 percent below the European average.
At the level of the 20 Hungarian counties, not much has changed compared to the previous year. In the top 10, only Tolna and Vas exchange places six and seven. All other counties were able to defend their rankings. As in previous years, the capital county of Budapest takes first place with a clear lead. With a spending potential of €14,020 per person, the capital’s residents are more than 29 percent above the national average.
As in the last few years, five of Hungary’s twenty counties continue to have above-average purchasing power in 2023. All of them are located either in or around the capital city of Budapest or toward the Austrian border. With a disposable net income of €10,899 per capita, Veszprem is only 0.6 percent above the national average and therefore comes closest to it.
By contrast, 15 or three-quarters of Hungary’s districts have a below-average purchasing power. As in previous years, the bottom spot is occupied by the Szabolcs-Szatmar-Bereg county, where inhabitants have a per capita purchasing power of €8,475, which corresponds to almost 22 percent below the national average.
Romania: The purchasing power gap is widening
In Romania, the average per capita purchasing power this year is €7,738. This means that Romanians are 56 percent below the European average and slip two places down to 33rd place.
There were no changes in rankings in the top 10 districts this year. However, it can once again be observed that the gap between regions with weak and strong purchasing power in Romania is widening. Bucharest is clearly in first place with a per capita purchasing power of €15,314, which means that the capital city residents have almost 98 percent more purchasing power than the national average and 3.8 times more purchasing power than the residents of the Vaslui district, which has the lowest purchasing power available for their spending and saving. There, disposable net income is just €4,010, which is almost 52 percent of the national average.
All districts in the top ten have an above-average per capita purchasing power. The tenth-placed district of Prahova comes closest to the national average with a net disposable income of €7,836 per capita but is still almost 1.3 percent above it. All other 32 districts, which constitute more than three quarters of all districts, are below the national average.
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Re: União Europeia
Tudo mentira...segundo o Paul Krugman.
Se a direita estivesse no poder ele diria o oposto!
Um "milagre económico": a descrição da economia portuguesa pelo Nobel da Economia Paul Krugman
Economista Paul Krugman
“Portugal é uma espécie de milagre económico”, diz ao “Jornal de Negócios” Paul Krugman, economista norte-americano que venceu o Nobel em 2008. E como chegámos a este milagre? É “misterioso”
Portugal tem-se mantido forte a nível económico nestes últimos anos, estando melhor que a maioria dos países europeus, mas isso não significa que os problemas tenham acabado ou que esteja livre de riscos. Ainda assim, Paul Krugman, economista norte-americano e prémio Nobel da Economia em 2008, disse que “Portugal é uma espécie de milagre económico”, em entrevista ao “Jornal de Negócios”, publicada esta terça-feira.
O professor em Princeton, referindo-se aos riscos das taxas de juro elevadas, avisou que “Portugal não está livre” do problema, mas que “pode ser algo que consiga ultrapassar”, pois tem estado a crescer bem economicamente. A título de exemplo, nem os Estados Unidos estão completamente livres de risco, mas havendo um forte crescimento económico há uma maior possibilidade de suportar os juros altos da dívida.
Por outro lado, Itália encontra-se com um risco maior, pois ao contrário de Portugal (de momento), “não há nenhuma razão especial para pensar que o crescimento potencial de Itália tenha aumentado muito”.
Assim, tendo em conta o desempenho português nos últimos anos, Krugman caracteriza o sucesso como um “milagre económico”.
Após a crise da dívida, “Espanha acabou por alcançar a recuperação económica mas fê-lo passando por anos de desemprego elevado, desvalorização interna e queda dos custos”, explicou. Já Portugal “teve uma recuperação sem isso”.
“Tive longas conversas com o meu amigo Oliver Blanchard, o antigo economista-chefe do Fundo Monetário Internacional e ele diz: Não percebo como é que Portugal se saiu tão bem. Como é que eles fizeram isso?”, contou ao jornal. A sua explicação passa pelo turismo e pelo crescimento das exportações, mas no geral indicou que “é um pouco misterioso” como tudo aconteceu.
Em relação a futuros problemas, Krugman indicou que por Portugal estar demasiado ligado à Europa pode ser atingindo por ela, pois “Portugal tem estado muito bem, mas a Europa não”.
Olhando para o passado, o economista recordou a primeira vez que esteve em Portugal, em 1976, uma altura em que o país “parecia mais um mercado emergente do que uma nação europeia”, o que “hoje não é de todo verdade”.
Já na comparação com 2013 - ano em que disse que Portugal era um país pobre e com problemas estruturais -, Krugman indica que são “muito menos” os problemas hoje em dia. “Portugal teve um bom período de sucesso económico após a revolução e depois uma espécie de paragem durante alguns anos, mas essa paragem parece ter chegado ao fim”, afirmou na entrevista ao “Jornal de Negócios”.
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Re: União Europeia
The majority of the European Parliament has voted in favor of making major changes to the Treaty of the European Union. The proposal demands the abolition of the national veto in over 65 policy areas.
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Re: União Europeia
Triste sina ter nascido português
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Re: União Europeia
Foi só mais um coitado que teve um surto psicótico.
Temos de aceitar. É a cultura deles.
Triste sina ter nascido português
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Re: União Europeia
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
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Re: União Europeia
Tão democratas que eles são... já querem instalar ditaduras militares e tudo.
O mais engraçado nisto tudo é que os mesmos iriam queixar-se da mesma ditadura que agora defendem, ou porque é muito frouxa ou porque é demasiado dura.
O mais engraçado nisto tudo é que os mesmos iriam queixar-se da mesma ditadura que agora defendem, ou porque é muito frouxa ou porque é demasiado dura.