
Nel 2025, tra i paesi dell’UE, i tassi di occupazione più elevati sono stati registrati a Malta (83,6%), Paesi Bassi (83,4%) e Repubblica Ceca (82,9%). I tassi più bassi sono stati registrati in Italia (67,6%), Romania (69,0%) e Grecia (71,0%).
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/products-eurostat-news/w/ddn-20260417-1
di nimicdoareu
7 commenti
In 2025, 76.1% (197.7 million people) of the EU’s 20 to 64-year-olds were employed, the highest share recorded since the start of the time series in 2009.
EU finally doing one thing right, maybe keep it up
Interesting how high Malta and the Netherlands rank, but I’d love to see this broken down by full-time vs part-time and job quality too. High employment doesn’t always mean good jobs.
Malta and Netherlands above 83%, Czechia close behind.. meanwhile Italy at just 67.6%. The north-south divide in Europe is still very real. Some countries are doing great, others are seriously lagging
Maybe the Czechs in this group can help verify this but when I moved to CZ 13 odd years ago my girlfriend (now wife) told me that there were more open vacancies than unemployed. In theory every person of working age could have worked and that is one reason unemployment benefits are so low to encourage people to actually go and find a job.
Inflation cooling down is good news, but it doesn’t mean prices going down prices are actually increasing slowly
Romania’s numbers are skewed because a good portion of the working population is domiciled in the country but the people actually live and work abroad.