European Union statistics

Statistics in the European Union are collected by Eurostat (European statistics body).

Area and population

EU and UK population cartogram

As of 1 January 2006, the population of the EU was about 493 million people, although in 2020 the EU lost over 10% of its population as a result of the UK leaving the bloc.[1] Many countries are expected to experience a decline in population over the coming decades,[2] though this could be offset with new countries planning to join the EU within the next 20 years. The most populous member state is Germany, with an estimated 80.4 million people. France and Ireland have the highest birth-rates.[3] The most densely populated country is the island of Malta, which is also the smallest, while the largest in area is France. The least densely populated country is Finland.

Population figures in the table below are from 2006 or 2007 estimates. The highest and lowest figures in each column have been marked in bold.

Member StatePopulation
in millions
Population
% of EU
Area
km2
Area
% of EU
Pop. density
People/km2
 European Union 494.8 100% 4,422,773 100% 112
 Austria 8.3 1.7% 83,858 1.9% 99
 Belgium 10.5 2.1% 30,510 0.7% 344
 Bulgaria 7.7 1.6% 110,912 2.5% 70
 Croatia 4.3 0.9% 56,594 1.3% 75.8
 Cyprus 0.8 0.2% 9,250 0.2% 84
 Czech Republic 10.3 2.1% 78,866 1.8% 131
 Denmark 5.4 1.1% 43,094 1.0% 126
 Estonia 1.3 0.3% 45,226 1.0% 29
 Finland 5.3 1.1% 337,030 7.6% 16
 France[4] 65.03 13.% 643,548 14.6% 111
 Germany 80.4 16.6% 357,021 8.1% 225
 Greece 11.1 2.2% 131,940 3.0% 84
 Hungary 10.1 2.0% 93,030 2.1% 108
 Ireland 4.6 0.9% 70,280 1.6% 60
 Italy 58.8 11.9% 301,320 6.8% 195
 Latvia 2.3 0.5% 64,589 1.5% 35
 Lithuania 3.4 0.7% 65,200 1.5% 45
 Luxembourg 0.5 0.1% 2,586 0.1% 181
 Malta 0.4 0.1% 316 0.0007% 1,261
 Netherlands 17 3.3% 41,526 0.9% 394
 Poland 38.1 7.7% 312,685 7.1% 122
 Portugal 10.6 2.1% 92,931 2.1% 114
 Romania 21.6 4.4% 238,391 5.4% 91
 Spain 44.7 9.0% 504,782 11.4% 87
 Slovakia 5.4 1.1% 48,845 1.1% 111
 Slovenia 2.0 0.4% 20,253 0.5% 99
 Sweden 10 1.8% 449,964 10.2% 20

Economy

For statistics relating to economy, please see Economy of the European Union.

EU budget

The primary resource for funding the European Union is the contributions sought from member states. Each member state contributes to the EU budget, and receives funding back from the EU, depending on the relative wealth of the states, i.e. their ability to pay.

The table below shows the contributions as a percentage of the total budget. This takes into account the special considerations given to the United Kingdom to reduce its contribution through a rebate. Expenditure in Luxembourg, Belgium and France include items for the EU administrative centres in each of those countries.

Member State Total contribution
in Euro
Total contribution
as % of total EU budget
Total expenditure
year 2006 in Euro
Total expenditure
as % of total EU budget
Net contribution
in Euro
Net contribution
in Euro per capita
Total contribution
in Euro per capita
 European Union 105,259,468,772100.00%106,575,500,000100.00%-1,316,031,228-3213
 Germany 22,218,438,94121.11%12,242,400,00011.49%9,976,038,941124276
 France 17,303,107,85916.44%13,496,200,00012.66%3,806,907,85959266
 Italy 14,359,479,15713.64%10,922,300,00010.25%3,437,179,15758244
 United Kingdom 13,739,900,04613.05%8,294,200,0007.78%5,445,700,04690226
 Spain 8,957,286,4888.51%12,883,000,00012.09%-3,925,713,512-88200
 Netherlands 5,552,933,7815.28%2,190,400,0002.06%3,362,533,781198327
 Belgium 4,035,286,8073.83%5,625,100,0005.28%-1,589,813,193-151384
 Sweden 2,832,862,8002.69%1,573,400,0001.48%1,259,462,800126283
 Austria 2,308,432,0302.19%1,830,100,0001.72%478,332,03058278
 Denmark 2,130,860,2122.02%1,501,900,0001.41%628,960,212116395
 Poland 2,099,087,1141.99%5,305,600,0004.98%-3,206,512,886-8455
 Greece 1,882,611,8791.79%6,833,700,0006.41%-4,951,088,121-446170
 Finland 1,544,832,2841.47%1,280,400,0001.20%264,432,28450291
 Portugal 1,443,049,6021.37%3,634,800,0003.41%-2,191,750,398-207136
 Ireland 1,341,281,3131.27%2,461,800,0002.31%-1,120,518,687-244292
 Hungary 1,003,119,4110.95%1,842,200,0001.73%-839,080,589-8399
 Czech Republic 932,392,8590.89%1,330,000,0001.25%-397,607,141-3991
 Slovakia 393,148,7770.37%696,200,0000.65%-303,051,223-5673
 Slovenia 299,993,5720.29%406,000,0000.38%-106,006,428-53150
 Luxembourg 241,439,0110.23%1,194,800,0001.12%-953,360,989-1,907483
 Lithuania 221,997,4050.21%799,800,0000.75%-577,802,595-17065
 Cyprus 144,556,4160.14%239,600,0000.22%-95,043,584-119181
 Latvia 115,205,4310.11%402,600,0000.24%-287,394,569-12550
 Estonia 100,756,3080.10%300,000,0000.28%-199,243,692-14272
 Malta 57,409,2690.05%157,000,0000.14%-99,590,731-249144
 Bulgaria 360,600,0000.34%-360,600,000-47
 Romania 693,100,0000.65%-693,100,000-32

There are many indices available on issues such as corruption, development, and freedom.

Freedom of the press

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Finland2
2 Denmark3
3 Sweden5
4 Netherlands6
5 Portugal10
6 Germany11
7 Belgium12
8 Ireland13
9 Estonia14
10 Luxembourg17
11 Austria18
12 Latvia22
13 Cyprus27
14 Lithuania28
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
15 Spain29
16 Slovenia32
17 Slovakia33
18 France34
19 Czech Republic40
20 Italy41
21 Romania48
22 Croatia59
23 Poland62
24 Greece65
25 Malta81
26 Hungary89
27 Bulgaria111

Reporters sans frontières (Reporters Without Borders) conducts an annual survey on the freedom of the press and produces scores (not shown here) for each country, resulting in the Press Freedom Index. In 2019 and 2020, Finland was proclaimed as having the freest press in the European Union, and the second in the world behind Norway. Bulgaria was ranked as having the least free press in the European Union in 2019 and 2020.[5]

Economic freedom

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Denmark9
2 Ireland11
3 Estonia13
4 Luxembourg15
5 Finland16
6 Netherlands17
7 Sweden18
8 Germany19
9 Lithuania22
10 Austria25
11 Czech Republic29
12 Belgium40
13 Cyprus41
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
14 Slovakia42
15 Spain46
16 Hungary47
17 Malta48
18 Latvia55
19 Poland57
20 Romania59
21 Bulgaria60
22 France62
23 Portugal67
24 Slovenia76
25 Italy83
26 Greece117

An index of Economic Freedom is produced by the Wall Street Journal and the Heritage Foundation. It uses 50 different variables to compile the survey, in areas such as trade policy and government intervention.

A similar index produced by the World Economic Forum is its Global Competitiveness Index.

Source: 2013 Index of Economic Freedom.

Colour Codes
Free
Mostly Free
Moderately Free
Mostly Unfree

Perception of corruption

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Denmark=1
2 Finland3
3 Sweden4
4 Netherlands8
5 Luxembourg10
6 Germany11
7 Austria14
8 Belgium17
9 Ireland=18
= Estonia=18
11 France21
12 Portugal30
13 Poland=36
= Slovenia=36
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
15 Lithuania=38
= Cyprus=38
= Czech Republic=38
18 Spain=41
= Latvia=41
20 Malta51
21 Italy53
22 Slovakia57
23 Croatia60
= Romania61
25 Hungary64
26 Greece67
27 Bulgaria77

Transparency International is an international NGO publishing an annual Global Corruption Report indicating the perception of corruption around the world. The rankings of the table refer to the Corruption Perceptions Index 2018 . A high ranking means low corruption.

Human development

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Ireland4
2 Germany5
3 Sweden7
4 Netherlands10
5 Denmark11
6 Finland15
7 Belgium17
8 Austria20
9 Luxembourg21
10 France24
11 Slovenia25
12 Spain26
13 Czech Republic27
14 Italy28
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
15 Malta29
16 Estonia30
17 Greece31
18 Cyprus32
19 Poland33
20 Lithuania35
21 Slovakia38
22 Portugal=41
= Latvia=41
24 Hungary45
25 Croatia46
26 Bulgaria51
27 Romania52

The Human Development Index is a measure produced by the United Nations which covers three aspects of human development:

  • poverty (GDP per capita)
  • education (mean years of schooling and expected years of schooling)
  • health (life expectancy)

The rankings of the table refer to the UNDP Human Development Report 2018 (2017 data). The UN lists all EU member states as countries with very high human development.

Income equality

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Denmark2
2 Sweden4
3 Czech Republic5
4 Slovakia6
5 Hungary10
= Finland10
7 Germany14
8 Slovenia15
9 Austria18
10 Bulgaria19
11 Netherlands25
12 Romania26
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
13 France32
14 Belgium33
15 Ireland40
= Greece40
17 Poland44
18 Spain47
19 Estonia50
20 Lithuania51
21 Italy51
22 Latvia57
23 Portugal59

Income inequality, measured by the gini coefficient is how evenly incomes are distributed through the population. Denmark has the least income inequality with a gini coefficient score of 24.4, whilst Portugal has the most income inequality with a score of 38.5. Malta, Luxembourg, and Cyprus have no statistics available, and so are not included in this table. These statistics have been compiled by the United Nations (see )

Ease of doing business

EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
1 Denmark3
2 Sweden9
3 Estonia12
4 Finland13
5 Latvia14
6 Germany17
7 Ireland18
8 Austria19
9 Lithuania21
10 Poland24
11 Portugal25
12 Czech Republic27
13 Netherlands28
14 France29
EU
Rank
Member StateGlobal
Rank
15 Slovenia30
16 Spain32
17 Slovakia33
18 Romania36
19 Bulgaria39
20 Hungary41
21 Belgium42
22 Croatia43
23 Cyprus45
24 Italy50
25 Luxembourg59
26 Greece61
27 Malta76

The Ease of Doing Business Index is created by the World Bank and based on the study of laws and regulations, with the input and verification by more than 3,500 government officials, lawyers, business consultants, accountants and other professionals who routinely advise on or administer legal and regulatory requirements.

The data in the table are from the 2017 report.[6]

gollark: Yes, which would probably ruin the company involved if people were trapped there.
gollark: Also, there would *probably* be a scandal.
gollark: What is? Against what?
gollark: There would not really be demand for a game which has a significant chance of killing you.
gollark: If they kill customers they lose potential profit.

See also

References

  1. "Total Population as of 01.01.06 Archived 6 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine", EUROSTAT. Retrieved 12 November 2006.
  2. "The EU's baby blues", BBC News, 27 March 2006. Retrieved 10 July 2006.
  3. "France claims EU fertility crown ", BBC News, 16 January 2007. Retrieved 10 February 2007.
  4. Figures for France include the four overseas departments (French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Réunion) which are integral parts of the European Union, but do not include the overseas collectivities and territories, which are not part of the European Union. Figures for Metropolitan France proper are: population 63.6 million, area 551 695 km², and population density 113/km².
  5. World Press Freedom Index 2019 and World Press Freedom Index 2020, Reporters Without Borders
  6. http://www.doingbusiness.org/rankings/
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