There is a common thread that connects the countries of the European Union: in the last 12 months the quality of life has worsenedThis is the reality that emerges from the latest survey of theEurobarometer, recently published. On average in the EU, the deterioration in the quality of life is recorded by 27% of the population, but there are some shocking data, such as that concerning the Greece, where well the 43 % of the population perceived a decline in their living conditions (+6%).
And also beyond the Alps, in France, the deterioration is indicated with high percentages, 39% of the interviewees. French in good company with Portuguese e bulgari (39%, with increases of 6 and 9 percent), followed by Romanians (38%). And as for the former locomotive Germany, the worsening of the quality of life is indicated by a third of the inhabitants, 34%, five percent more than in the comparison between last autumn and this spring.
In short, there is no Member State where there is not a negative perception of the trend in one's quality of life, with minimal peaks regarding Poland (9%), Denmark (12%) and Malta (14%). But obviously there are also those who have seen their quality of life improve, an average of 11% in the EU (still less than half of those who have registered a worsening), with peaks that however reach 31% for Malta, at 27% per Denmark e Sweden, at 20% for the Latvia.
And theItaly? In our country only 6% declare an improvement in their standard of living in the last 12 months, a low percentage, half the European average, at the bottom of the ranking, just above Hungarians e slovaks (5%). And while for the vast majority (74%) everything has remained stable, here's the sore point: for 20%, however, the quality of life has worsened.
