Survey mean consumption or income per capita, bottom 40% of population (2011 PPP $ per day) - Country Ranking - Europe

Definition: Mean consumption or income per capita (2011 PPP $ per day) used in calculating the growth rate in the welfare aggregate of the bottom 40% of the population in the income distribution in a country.

Source: World Bank, Global Database of Shared Prosperity (GDSP) circa 2011-2016 (http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty/brief/global-database-of-shared-prosperity).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Norway 40.27 2019
2 Luxembourg 35.81 2019
3 Iceland 35.29 2017
4 Switzerland 34.35 2018
5 Denmark 32.46 2019
6 Netherlands 31.10 2019
7 Austria 30.92 2019
8 Sweden 30.84 2019
9 Finland 30.67 2019
10 Belgium 30.07 2019
11 Germany 29.98 2018
12 Ireland 29.15 2018
13 France 28.23 2018
14 Malta 26.74 2019
15 Cyprus 24.84 2019
16 Slovenia 24.08 2019
17 United Kingdom 22.75 2017
18 Czech Republic 21.01 2019
19 Estonia 19.92 2019
20 Italy 19.40 2018
21 Spain 18.29 2019
22 Portugal 16.21 2019
23 Lithuania 16.11 2019
24 Slovak Republic 16.03 2019
25 Poland 16.00 2018
26 Hungary 14.75 2019
27 Latvia 14.37 2019
28 Croatia 13.53 2019
29 Belarus 12.94 2019
30 Greece 11.80 2019
31 Bulgaria 10.25 2019
32 Ukraine 8.79 2020
33 Romania 8.68 2019
34 Turkey 7.60 2019
35 Montenegro 6.16 2018
36 Moldova 6.02 2019
37 North Macedonia 5.57 2018
38 Serbia 5.02 2017
38 Albania 5.02 2017

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Limitations and Exceptions: Because household surveys are infrequent in most countries and are not aligned across countries, comparisons across countries or over time should be made with a high degree of caution.

Unit of Measure: 2011 PPP $

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: The choice of consumption or income for a country is made according to which welfare aggregate is used to estimate extreme poverty in PovcalNet. The practice adopted by the World Bank for estimating global and regional poverty is, in principle, to use per