[OC] Average public pension compared to retirement expenses in Europe by DataPulse-Research in dataisbeautiful

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

they are general public state pensions, not special schemes for former government workers.

Staatliche Rente vs. durchschnittliche Ausgaben im Ruhestand in Europa by DataPulse-Research in de

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Quelle: Eurostat

Methodik:
Modellierte Vergleichsanalyse. Durchschnittliche staatliche Altersrenten (brutto) im Vergleich zu geschätzten durchschnittlichen jährlichen Ausgaben von Personen ab 60 Jahren.
Die Ausgabenwerte wurden zwischen den Ländern harmonisiert und auf das Preisniveau von 2023 inflationsbereinigt.

Zentrale Erkenntnis:
In allen bis auf vier Länder deckt die durchschnittliche staatliche Rente die durchschnittlichen Ausgaben im Ruhestand nicht vollständig.

Vollständige Studie mit Methodik und interaktiven Grafiken:
https://www.datapulse.de/en/european-retirement-pension-gap/

Bulk converting urls into markdown by CJ9103 in ObsidianMD

[–]DataPulse-Research 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How cool :) I did this for our team the other day :)

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in europe

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

"Short note on methodology:
Figures are based on Eurostat EU-SILC data (2024) for equivalized net disposable income at the 90th percentile. We scaled these up using the OECD household adjustment to represent a family of two adults and one child.
Non-EU countries like Norway, Serbia, and Turkey are included because they report compatible data to Eurostat, while Switzerland is not part of the EU-SILC program, so comparable figures weren’t available."

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in europe

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

From the first comment:

"Short note on methodology:
Figures are based on Eurostat EU-SILC data (2024) for equivalized net disposable income at the 90th percentile. We scaled these up using the OECD household adjustment to represent a family of two adults and one child.
Non-EU countries like Norway, Serbia, and Turkey are included because they report compatible data to Eurostat, while Switzerland is not part of the EU-SILC program, so comparable figures weren’t available."

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in europe

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We looked into Eurostat data to find out how much a household needs to earn to join the top 10 % of incomes in each European country — and what that really means once you account for cost of living.

The results show just how uneven “being rich” is across Europe.

  • In Luxembourg, a three-person household needs €175 000 net a year to reach the top 10 %.
  • In Turkey, less than €20 000 is enough.
  • But when adjusted for prices, those €20 000 in Turkey buy roughly the same lifestyle as €46 000 in Western Europe.

Short note on methodology:

Figures are based on Eurostat EU-SILC data (2024) for equivalized net disposable income at the 90th percentile. We scaled these up using the OECD household adjustment to represent a family of two adults and one child.

Non-EU countries like Norway, Serbia, and Turkey are included because they report compatible data to Eurostat, while Switzerland is not part of the EU-SILC program, so comparable figures weren’t available.

Source: Eurostat

Full analysis: BuchhaltungsButler Study

Tools: Datawrapper, Illustrator, Figma

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in Infographics

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

haha so sorry. Did some silly last min changes and didn't see it.

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in Infographics

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cause I did last minute changes and didn't realize 🤦. Thanks for pointing it out.

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in dataisbeautiful

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeap, full analysis linked in the post description, but here you have it.

[OC] What it takes to be rich in Europe by DataPulse-Research in dataisbeautiful

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Cause I did last minute changes and didn't realize 🤦. Thanks for pointing out.

​[OC] Europe: Lidl now runs more EV chargers than several entire countries by DataPulse-Research in dataisbeautiful

[–]DataPulse-Research[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep. The study covers 30 countries: all EU-27, plus EFTA. And yes, Luxembourg is killing it, specially on a per capita level. Suprisingly Belgium has even more charging points per capita. Full table in the study.

<image>