Am 1. Januar 2026 hatten 22 von 27 EU-Ländern nationale Mindestlöhne, alle außer Dänemark, Italien, Österreich, Finnland und Schweden. In acht Ländern lag der Mindestlohn unter 1.000 € pro Monat: Bulgarien (620 €), Lettland (780 €), Rumänien (795 €), Ungarn (838 €), Estland (886 €), Slowakei (915 €) und Tschechien (924 €).

    https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/products-eurostat-news/w/ddn-20260130-2

    Von nimicdoareu

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    7 Kommentare

    1. nimicdoareu on

      In 6 countries, minimum wages were above €1 500 per month: France (€1 823), Belgium (€2 112), the Netherlands (€2 295), Germany (€2 343), Ireland (€2 391) and Luxembourg (€2 704).

    2. Minimum wage in Portugal is 920€, so it’s 9 countries… (where are they getting 1073€?)

    3. know-your-enemy-92 on

      Finland has no statutory minimum wage law; instead, minimum wages are determined by sector-specific collective agreements (TES) negotiated between trade unions and employers‘ association.

    4. Denmark uses collective agreements. A very low wage is ~ €3.000, around 2000 after tax. Denmark is an expensive country to live in.

    5. Unnamed-3891 on

      It never ceased to baffle me that so many people cheer for the ”permanently unemployable” class to keep growing. Because that’s what happens when you have a minimum wage and keep raising it.

      No, it doesn’t mean ”oh well, I guess now we just pay everybody more”. It means ”oh well, now we have to fire every single person whose monetary productivity value is below XYZ and never ever hire such people again”.

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