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Czechs & Slovenians Need To Work The Most To Exit Poverty

Czechs & Slovenians Need To Work The Most To Exit Poverty

In any given country, real wages, employment conditions, and economic opportunity often influence how easily people can overcome poverty.

Hence, rising above the poverty line requires a lot more work in some nations than in others, even between OECD countries.

This infographic, via Visual Capitalist's Niccolo Conte, uses data from the OECD to shows the weekly working hours a single person (with no children) needs to work to rise above the poverty line in 35 OECD countries, assuming they earn 67% of the national average wage.

How Much Work Does It Take to Escape Poverty?

The poverty line is calculated as 50% of the country’s median disposable income. On average across OECD countries, a single individual with below-average income needs to work 21 hours per week to cross the poverty threshold.

However, there are stark differences between the countries at the higher and lower ends of the spectrum, as shown in the table below:

Country Weekly Working Hours to Exit Poverty
Slovenia 35
Czechia 28
New Zealand 27
United States 26
Denmark 26
Poland 25
Estonia 25
Latvia 25
Sweden 24
Luxembourg 24
Slovak Republic 24
Norway 24
Spain 22
South Korea 22
Switzerland 22
Portugal 22
OECD average 21
Germany 21
Canada 21
Austria 21
Iceland 21
Hungary 21
Australia 21
Lithuania 19
Italy 19
Finland 19
Israel 18
France 18
Netherlands 18
Ireland 18
Japan 16
Greece 16
Belgium 16
United Kingdom 14
Türkiye 9

Slovenia stands out, requiring 35 weekly working hours—nearly the equivalent of a full-time job—just to move past the poverty line.

Close behind are Czechia, New Zealand, the United States, and Denmark, each requiring between 26 and 28 hours per week to exit poverty.

Several developed nations are clustered around the OECD average of 21 hours, including Australia, Canada, South Korea, and European countries like Germany and Portugal.

Meanwhile, many countries require less than a typical part-time job’s worth of work (20 hours per week) to lift a low-income worker above poverty.

Türkiye notably requires just 9 weekly working hours to rise above the poverty line. This indicates that the country’s median disposable income is relatively low, with a few hours per week enough to cross the poverty line at lower-than-average wages.

Other countries requiring low working hours to exit poverty include the United Kingdom at 14 weekly hours, followed by Belgium, Greece, and Japan at 16 hours each.

To learn more about this topic, check out this infographic on Home Affordability in OECD Countries on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Tyler Durden Mon, 06/16/2025 - 04:15
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