Average salary per employee in Europe

by Single_Share_2439

13 comments
  1. Source: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/products-eurostat-news/w/ddn-20251112-1

  2. In Finland low wages are relatively high, but high wages are relatively low. This contributes to the relatively high cost of living as “cheap labor” is comparatively not cheap.

    Is there a similar comparison somewhere for different income deciles? That would be an interesting comparison

  3. Average is not a good measure in these kind of statistics.

  4. That is in **EU**. Norway and Switzerland? I tried to find those.

  5. I struggle to find a job that will pay me more than 12€/h with 7 years of experience and 4 of them in a managerial position. They think asking for 15€/h is too much.

    This is logistics.

    50k would be cool though.

    Edit: Also to add, my brother, who works as a regular warehouse worker, makes 18€/h in Sweden
    I made less than him, being a manager and running a warehouse here in Helsinki.

  6. That’s can explain from a certain perspective why even lots of immigrants complain about the current immigration policy, they still want to stay or come to Finland.

    There is a saying in Chinese: a scrawny camel is still lager than a horse.

  7. Denmark is high, but that number is including salary, pension, 1 extra week of vacation per year as far as I know, bonus, etc. everything in your salary package is included before tax.

    Our taxes are anywhere between 30-50% depending on how much you earn, and yes when you buy something in the store, you pay 25% flat VAT as well. It’s not variable here yet. Government says it’s too hard to change in their IT system, where it would be 12% for food and 25% for tech for example.

    Too hard to program I tell you. Quantum computing is much much easier. /S

    Add on top of that, renting in big cities like Copenhagen if you don’t have a lot of luck or nepotism going on, then you’re going to pay 1750 eur per month to rent a 2 bedroom 60-70m2 apartment.

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