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    20 commenti

    1. Helpful-Device290 on

      I just googled, and Spain has 29% youth unemployment, while Sweden has 22%. That’s insane! Do young people in Sweden and Spain not want to work?

    2. Wish all countries could get these numbers lower. There is something we all could can do make it better. Less ordering from cheap stores like temu. Those places wont create any jobs to eu

    3. In Bulgaria only people who have active unemployment benefits are counted as “unemployed”. If you don’t qualify for unemployment benefits which are usually limited to 3 to 12 months, you drop out of this statistic. The real number of non-working people aged 18 to 64 is somewhere between 10 and 15%

    4. spadasinul on

      Since there are so many here asking why are there so many people who don’t want to work, unemployment only counts the people who don’t have a job but are looking for one and are ready to work. The ones who don’t want to work are “outside of the labour force”. It’s in the methodology
      https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/lfs/methodology

    5. Forellenman on

      Maybe Spain should take care of its labor market instead of fighting Israel lol

    6. ATrexCantCatchThings on

      Surprised Spain and Greece are doing so well compared to Sweden and Finland…

    7. leaflock7 on

      every EU country try its best to show as low as possible unemployment rate while the truth is that probably most are at least +5-8% more

    8. el_argelino-basado on

      Is there any estimate on how much of that unemployment is actually under the table employment,I heard Spain has a lot of it

    9. It’s never enough to talk about unemployment rate without also talking about employment rate. Sometimes looking at one can bring light to the other.

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