# Median Equivalised disposable income is one of the most accurate measurements of wealth, because it accounts for all expenses (taxes, social spending etc.), including higher living costs, and adjusts for purchasing power parity. Also, it takes the median, not the average, which means that it’s a better representation of the broad mass of people, leaving out the few hyper-rich who would distort the data
IllustriousQuail4130 on
No way in hell or earth. Portugal should be yellow
sakri on
Check mate trickle down deniers! You can literally see the wealth dripping from Norway, through Denmark, down to Central Europeans disposable income paradise!
CryptographerHot3109 on
I think I missed when Turkey joined the EU
Ok_Bid_3824 on
I wish tax rates were lower for the middle and lower classes.
mattep99 on
I don’t think Italy and Spain are on the same level of France. Italy not for sure, we’re one of the few countries (in Europe) where real wages have fallen in the last decades.
Rent for flats (in small-medium cities) is hard to afford, for smaller ones you spend around 7-800€ (without bills) when a worker’s net salary is 1500€ more or less.
BigFloofRabbit on
As a Brit, this map tells me nothing because I cannot even make a comparison.
TurtleneckTrump on
Why are there no units on this map?
DarkMatterOne on
I love the fact that there is a cutout map of Liechtenstein just to show “no data”
jmgj94 on
r/PORTUGALCYKABLYAT
sweetno on
Nice.
clewbays on
With a minimum wage job in Ireland adjusted for PPP. Your disposable income works out to around 18,500. But according to this graph the median of the entire country is somehow below 22,000.
According to both governments stats base norways median disposable household income was only 3,000 more than Irelands in 2022. 50,000 vs 47,000. Norway is also more expensive than Ireland.
But on this graph Norway is shown to have around 50% more than Irelands disposable income. This graph is a load of shite.
whatthedux on
X doubt for the Netherlands
volchonok1 on
Why current inflation 2022 numbers are practically ancient data.
14 commenti
# Median Equivalised disposable income is one of the most accurate measurements of wealth, because it accounts for all expenses (taxes, social spending etc.), including higher living costs, and adjusts for purchasing power parity. Also, it takes the median, not the average, which means that it’s a better representation of the broad mass of people, leaving out the few hyper-rich who would distort the data
No way in hell or earth. Portugal should be yellow
Check mate trickle down deniers! You can literally see the wealth dripping from Norway, through Denmark, down to Central Europeans disposable income paradise!
I think I missed when Turkey joined the EU
I wish tax rates were lower for the middle and lower classes.
I don’t think Italy and Spain are on the same level of France. Italy not for sure, we’re one of the few countries (in Europe) where real wages have fallen in the last decades.
Rent for flats (in small-medium cities) is hard to afford, for smaller ones you spend around 7-800€ (without bills) when a worker’s net salary is 1500€ more or less.
As a Brit, this map tells me nothing because I cannot even make a comparison.
Why are there no units on this map?
I love the fact that there is a cutout map of Liechtenstein just to show “no data”
r/PORTUGALCYKABLYAT
Nice.
With a minimum wage job in Ireland adjusted for PPP. Your disposable income works out to around 18,500. But according to this graph the median of the entire country is somehow below 22,000.
According to both governments stats base norways median disposable household income was only 3,000 more than Irelands in 2022. 50,000 vs 47,000. Norway is also more expensive than Ireland.
But on this graph Norway is shown to have around 50% more than Irelands disposable income. This graph is a load of shite.
X doubt for the Netherlands
Why current inflation 2022 numbers are practically ancient data.