European Union Open Data Portal - Custom query: Geographical Coverage filters: Latvia, France, Portugal, Poland, Denmark; Keywords filters: GDPtag:data.europa.eu,2012:/feeds/custom.atom?vocab_geographical_coverage=http%3A%2F%2Fpublications.europa.eu%2Fresource%2Fauthority%2Fcountry%2FDNK&tags=GDP2019-08-13T13:15:25ZEuropean Publications Officehttps://data.europa.eu/euodpRecently created or updated datasets on European Union Open Data Portal. Custom query: Geographical Coverage filters: Latvia, France, Portugal, Poland, Denmark; Keywords filters: GDPEuropean Quality of Life Survey 2016Eurofoundinformation@eurofound.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/european-quality-of-life-survey-2016Eurofound’s European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS) documents living conditions and people’s social situation, and explores issues pertinent to the lives of European citizens. From September 2016 to March 2017, Eurofound carried out its fourth survey in the series (in operation since 2003). The EQLS 2016 interviewed nearly 37,000 people in 33 countries – the 28 EU Member States and 5 candidate countries (Albania, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey). Its findings provide detailed information on a broad range of issues in three main areas:
<ul><li>
- Quality of life: subjective well-being, optimism, health, standard of living and aspects of deprivation, work–life balance</li><li>
- Quality of society: social insecurity, perception of social exclusion and societal tensions, trust in people and institutions, participation and community engagement, and involvement in training/life-long learning</li><li>
- Quality of public services: health-care, long-term care, childcare and other public services</li></ul>2019-08-13T13:15:25Z2018-02-01T12:04:37ZEuropean Quality of Life Survey 2007Eurofoundinformation@eurofound.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/european-quality-of-life-survey-2007Eurofound’s second European quality of life survey (EQLS), which was carried out in 2007, offers a wide-ranging view of the diverse social realities in the 27 Member States, as well as covering Norway and the candidate countries of Turkey, Macedonia and Croatia.
Many of the questions asked in the first EQLS in 2003 were asked again, on such issues as employment, income, education, housing, family, health, work-life balance, life satisfaction and perceived quality of society. Being in possession of two sets of data will allow the research team to gauge how people’s lives have changed in the intervening years.2018-12-14T09:37:07Z2018-02-08T10:49:41ZEuropean Quality of Life Survey 2011Eurofoundinformation@eurofound.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/european-quality-of-life-survey-2011Carried out every four years, this unique, pan-European survey examines both the objective circumstances of European citizens' lives and how they feel about those circumstances and their lives in general. Exports possible in different formats (CSV, EPS, HTML, PDF, PNG, SVG).2018-12-14T09:37:05Z2015-07-27T14:04:41ZEuropean Quality of Life Survey 2003Eurofoundinformation@eurofound.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/european-quality-of-life-survey-2003The Foundation continues its initiative to monitor and report on living conditions and quality of life in Europe.
<h4>28-country 'Quality of life in Europe' survey</h4>
The European quality of life survey (EQLS) that was carried out in 2003 covered 28 countries and involved interviewing 26,000 people. The survey examined a range of issues, such as employment, income, education, housing, family, health, work-life balance, life satisfaction and perceived quality of society.
<h4>Survey results</h4>
The main findings have been published in a series of analytical reports, providing a unique insight into the quality of life in 28 European countries.2018-02-26T12:34:11Z2018-02-08T10:51:41ZHarmonised competitiveness indicatorsEuropean Central Bank - Directorate General Statisticstag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/ecb-competitiveness-indicatorsHarmonised competitiveness indicators (HCIs) are based on consumer price indices, on gross domestic product (GDP) deflators and on unit labour cost indices for the total economy (period averages; index: Q1 1999=100).
The consumer price indices measure the average change over time in the prices paid by households for a specific basket of consumer goods and services.
GDP is a measure of economic activity. It is the value of an economy's total output of goods and services, plus net taxes on products and imports and minus intermediate consumption. The GDP deflators are derived from quarterly national accounts as published by Eurostat (period averages; index Q1 1999=100).
Unit labour costs for the total economy are calculated as the ratio of compensation per employee to labour productivity. Labour productivity is measured as GDP at constant prices divided by the total number of persons employed using quarterly national accounts as published by Eurostat (period averages; index: Q1 1999=100).
The purpose of HCIs is to provide comparable measures of euro area countries' price and cost competitiveness that are also consistent with the real effective exchange rates (EERs) of the euro. The HCIs are constructed using the same methodology and data sources that are used for the euro EERs.2016-01-19T09:06:06Z2015-01-13T08:18:53ZMacro-economic indicators - IndebtednessEuropean Central Bank - Directorate General Statisticstag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/ecb-macro-economic-indicators-indebtednessIndebtedness refers to government debt-to-GDP ratio, government deficit-to-GDP ratio, households' debt-to-gross disposable income ratio and non-financial corporations' debt-to-gross domestic product ratio.
Government debt-to-GDP ratio refers to the Maastricht criteria. The government debt statistics used are those used in the context of the excessive deficit procedure. (Financial stocks at nominal value, percentage points, not seasonally or working day adjusted). The last two years presented in the graphs are based on European Commission forecasts (Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs). The reference value set by the Maastricht criteria is 60%.
Government deficit-to-GDP ratio refers to the Maastricht criteria. The government deficit statistics include settlements under swaps (non-financial flows, current prices, percentage points, not seasonally or working day adjusted). The last two years presented in the graphs are based on European Commission forecasts (Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs). The reference value for the budget deficit under the Stability and Growth Pact is 3%.
Households' debt-to-gross disposable income ratio. Gross disposable income is adjusted for the change in net equity of households in pension fund reserves (non-consolidated, current prices, percentage points, not seasonally or working day adjusted).
Non-financial corporations' debt-to-gross domestic product ratio. The statistics are taken from the national accounts statistics. Debt includes pension reserve liabilities and excludes financial derivatives owing to a lack of comparability across countries (non-consolidated, market prices, percentage points, not seasonally or working day adjusted).2016-01-19T08:42:13Z2015-01-13T08:19:51Z