I’m posting this because I personally always wanted to know what’s Ireland’s actual economy like if you take away all the big corporations that move there for various reasons
Worth a read about how southern ireland screws over not just Europe but a lot of Africa as well.
No Luxembourg? 🙁
It’s a terrible graph, especially the population axis.
Rooting for Albania.
Like comparing average wage of EU vs median wage of one EU state.
Useless.
Nice chart.
Very nice way of showing on the same chart both Per-Capita GDP (the horizontal lenght of each bar) and Total GDP (the area of each bar), considering the vertical side is population, and total GDP equals GDP_per_capita times Population.
I travel to Czechia regularly, the Czech Engineer who I work closely with bought himself a Playstation 5 as treat, he said he saved several months so he could afford it, he was taken aback when I told him that Irish kids would expect their parents to buy them a PS5 for christmas.
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I’m posting this because I personally always wanted to know what’s Ireland’s actual economy like if you take away all the big corporations that move there for various reasons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_erosion_and_profit_shifting
Worth a read about how southern ireland screws over not just Europe but a lot of Africa as well.
No Luxembourg? 🙁
It’s a terrible graph, especially the population axis.
Rooting for Albania.
Like comparing average wage of EU vs median wage of one EU state.
Useless.
Nice chart.
Very nice way of showing on the same chart both Per-Capita GDP (the horizontal lenght of each bar) and Total GDP (the area of each bar), considering the vertical side is population, and total GDP equals GDP_per_capita times Population.
I travel to Czechia regularly, the Czech Engineer who I work closely with bought himself a Playstation 5 as treat, he said he saved several months so he could afford it, he was taken aback when I told him that Irish kids would expect their parents to buy them a PS5 for christmas.
EUROSTAT : Average Monthly take-home or net salary
Luxembourg: €3,650
Denmark: €3,500
Netherlands: €3,150
Ireland: €3,075
Sweden: €3,000
Austria: €2,900
Finland: €2,850
Germany: €2,750
France: €2,650 (tie)
Belgium: €2,650 (tie)
Spain: €1,850
Italy: €1,820
Cyprus: €1,800
Czechia: €1,520
Malta: €1,350
Slovenia: €1,350
Estonia: €1,300
Greece: €1,280
Portugal: €1,210
Lithuania: €1,195
Slovakia: €1,130
Poland: €1,050
Croatia: €1,000
Hungary: €930
Latvia: €890
Romania: €880
Bulgaria: €735
[https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/4187653/15387581/Annual_avg_salary_2021.jpg/69c6ca57-04a8-d34e-a1e7-a099686ff56b?t=1670936161683](https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/4187653/15387581/Annual_avg_salary_2021.jpg/69c6ca57-04a8-d34e-a1e7-a099686ff56b?t=1670936161683)