Almost a third of Romanians of working age do not work, according to new Eurostat data.
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Romania is an economy in which there are two seemingly contradictory situations: many people do not have a job, but there are also enough people who work below their qualifications, Hotnews.ro shows.
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In 2023, the overqualification rate in Romania was around 16% (compared to the EU average of 22%), according to Eurostat data, which considers that an employee is overqualified if he has higher education than the qualification level required by the job. Romanian women have a slightly higher overqualification rate than men, Eurostat also shows. Among EU countries, the overqualification rate was highest in Spain (36%), followed by Greece (31%) and Cyprus (30%).
The lowest rates were recorded in Luxembourg (5%), Denmark and the Czech Republic (each 13%).
In 18 of the 27 EU countries, women had higher overqualification rates than men, with the biggest differences being recorded in Malta and Slovakia (both +8 percentage points (pp)) and Italy (+7 pp).
In 9 EU countries, men had higher overqualification rates, with the biggest differences being recorded in Lithuania (+5 pp), Latvia (+4 pp) and Bulgaria (+3 pp).
Eurostat also measured the employment rates (percentage of employed people out of the total working-age population) in EU member states. The third lowest is in Romania (68.7%), after Italy and Greece.
The highest employment rates were recorded in the Netherlands (84%), Sweden (83%) and Estonia (82%).
Tags: Romania country Europe terms share population work working age Italians Greeks