The proportion of low-wage earners among employees amounted to 17.0% in 2010 in the EU27. The proportion was 18.3% in Malta.

Eurostat said the highest percentages were observed in Latvia (27.8%), Lithuania (27.2%), Romania (25.6%), Poland (24.2%) and Estonia (23.8%), and the lowest in Sweden (2.5%), Finland (5.9%), France (6.1%), Belgium (6.4%) and Denmark (7.7%).

Low-wage earners are defined as those employees earning two thirds or less of the national mediangross hourly earnings. Hence, the thresholds that determine low-wage earners are relative and specific to each Member State.

These data come from a publicationissued by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, based on the latest results of the four-yearly Structure of Earnings Survey. This survey provides detailed information on the structure and the distribution of earnings in the EU.

Low-wage earners: 21% of female employees, 13% of male…

There are large differences between men and women regarding the proportion of low-wage earners. In the EU27 in 2010, 21.2% of female employees were low-wage earners, compared with 13.3% of male employees. (In Malta the figures were 22.4% and 15.6% respectively)

In all Member States, except Bulgaria, there was a larger share of female employees who were low-wage earners than male. The highest proportions for women were registered in Cyprus (31.4%), Estonia (30.1%), Lithuania (29.4%), Germany and Latvia (both 28.7%) and the United Kingdom (27.6%), and the smallest in Sweden (3.1%), France (7.9%), Finland (8.0%) and Denmark (9.8%).

29% of employees with a low level of education, 6% with a high level…

The level of education plays an important role: the lower the level, the higher is the likelihood of being a low-wage earner. In the EU27 in 2010, 29.0% of employees with a low6 education level were low-wage earners, compared with 19.3% of those with a medium6 level and 5.8% of those with a high6 level. More than half of employees with a low level of education in Germany (54.6%) and Slovakia (51.5%) were low wage earners, and almost half in Romania (49.4%).

31% of employees with a fixed term contract and 16% with an indefinite contract

The type of contract also has a significant impact. In the EU27 in 2010, 31.3% of employees with a contract of limited duration were low-wage earners, compared with 15.7% for those with an indefinite contract.

The proportion on indefinite contract in Malta was 17.5%.

In all Member States, except Estonia and Cyprus, the pattern was the same. The largest proportions of low-wage earners among employees with a contract of limited duration were observed in the Netherlands (47.9%), Poland (42.5%), Germany (38.0%), Bulgaria (36.9%), Hungary and the United Kingdom (both 36.4%).

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.