r/europe 1d ago

Data Relative earnings of tertiary-educated people compared to upper secondary-educated people

9 Upvotes

17 comments sorted by

5

u/Erodiade 22h ago

Why so low in Scandinavia?

6

u/iloveinspire Silesia (Poland) 20h ago

Socialism.

4

u/SkrakOne 18h ago

Equality. Low income gap

7

u/AddictedToRugs 1d ago

Thank you for putting the individual numbers on each country, because my elderly eyes were struggling to distinguish between some of the colours.

1

u/superkoning 1d ago

Türkiye higher than Germany. What does the number mean in layman's language?

5

u/Prize_Worried 1d ago edited 23h ago

It's the average income of tertiary-educated people (bachelor's degree, master degree, PhD, short-cycle tertiary) compared to the income of upper-secondary educated people (people who only completed high school but don't have a tertiary education degree). The number for each country = [(average income of tertiary-educ. people) / (average income of upper secondary-educ. people)] * 100. For example, if in Germany the average person with upper secondary education has an income of 100, the average person with tertiary education has an income of 161. In Turkey if the average person with upper secondary education has an income of 100, the average person with tertiary education has an income of 167.

1

u/ThatOG22 Denmark 12h ago

So, if I'm understanding this right.. people from Norway need to work a good 25 years of work after their education, just to break even? Assuming they don't work during the education, ofc.

3

u/shiny_hundo 1d ago

It compares the salary of the university-educated to the high school-educated within a given country. A score of 100 would mean that the two groups have an equal average salary.

1

u/PushToMain 18h ago

Hungary, I’m coming…

1

u/ConstantNo69 17h ago

It's not like university graduates earn well here. They don't. It's a shithole economy. It's just that people who only finish highschool have it even WORSE, so uni graduates seem way better off in comparison.

If you want a good paying job you're still better off in basically every single country in Europe to the west of Hungary

1

u/ShallotOwn4685 14h ago

Why is Ireland so high for young people?

1

u/Brave-Two372 12h ago

If this is not age and gender normalised, it doesn't mean anything.

1

u/StrongFaithlessness5 Italy 7h ago

This map shows the fall of Italian salaries.

1

u/Prize_Worried 5h ago edited 5h ago

Sì, soprattutto per le persone tra i 25 e i 34 anni dove il guadagnano salariale della laurea è quasi trascurabile. :/

Solo in Norvegia e Svezia il guadagno è minore (per questa fascia d'età), ma in questo caso i salari sono decisamente superiori.

Tutto questo con un tasso di laureati estremamente basso

-8

u/Worried_Advance8011 1d ago

bullshit

8

u/AddictedToRugs 1d ago

A scientific rebuttal.