以下是赚取 1,000 美元需要最长时间的国家
These Are The Countries Where $1,000 Takes The Longest To Earn

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/these-are-countries-where-1000-takes-longest-earn

根据 Visual Capitalist 近期引用经合组织(OECD)和“用数据看世界”(Our World in Data)统计数据进行的一项分析,各国被按平均每位劳动者赚取 1,000 美元(经购买力平价调整后)所需的工作时长进行了排名。 数据显示出明显的全球鸿沟。卢森堡和冰岛的劳动者位居榜首,仅需 16 小时即可赚取 1,000 美元;而哥伦比亚和墨西哥的劳动者则分别需要工作 86 小时和 78 小时。总体而言,欧洲国家因具备高生产率经济、强大的劳动制度以及对教育的大量投入,在该榜单前列占据主导地位。 相反,低收入国家的公民往往需要工作更长时间,但报酬却低得多。经济学家将这种差异归因于生产率较低、资本获取受限以及庞大的非正规经济部门等因素。 通过采用购买力平价(PPP)而非原始汇率,该研究更准确地比较了不同经济体之间的实际生活水平。最终,这些研究结果表明,尽管高收入国家受益于能实现时薪最大化的先进经济结构,但发展中地区的劳动者在达到同样的财务里程碑时,往往面临着劳动强度更大的路径。

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原文

How long would you need to work to earn $1,000? In Colombia, the answer is roughly 86 hours. In Luxembourg and Iceland, it’s just 16.

Using data from the OECD on average annual wages and Our World in Data’s figures for annual working hours, Visual Capitalist's Srijaa Chatterjee created this visualization ranking countries by how long it takes the average worker to earn $1,000.

The figures are expressed in purchasing power parity (PPP)-adjusted dollars, which account for differences in local price levels and make incomes more comparable across countries. Taxes are not included.

How Many Hours of Work Earn $1,000?

Workers in the lowest-ranked countries need more than five times as many hours to earn $1,000 as workers in the highest-ranked countries. The gap ranges from 16 hours in Luxembourg and Iceland to 86 hours in Colombia.

The data table below shows the number of hours worked per $1,000 earned by country in purchasing power parity-adjusted dollars:

RankCountryHours Worked per $1,000 Earned
1🇨🇴 Colombia86
2🇲🇽 Mexico78
3🇬🇷 Greece60
4🇨🇷 Costa Rica53
5🇭🇺 Hungary51
6🇨🇱 Chile51
7🇨🇿 Czechia48
8🇸🇰 Slovakia47
9🇵🇹 Portugal45
10🇵🇱 Poland43
11🇪🇪 Estonia42
12🇱🇻 Latvia38
13🇰🇷 South Korea38
14🇹🇷 Turkey37
15🇮🇱 Israel34
16🇮🇹 Italy34
17🇯🇵 Japan34
18🇱🇹 Lithuania33
19🇪🇸 Spain30
20🇳🇿 New Zealand28
21🇮🇪 Ireland27
22🇸🇮 Slovenia27
23🇫🇮 Finland25
24🇨🇦 Canada25
25🇫🇷 France25
26🇬🇧 United Kingdom24
27🇸🇪 Sweden24
28🇦🇺 Australia23
29🇺🇸 United States22
30🇧🇪 Belgium21
31🇩🇪 Germany20
32🇦🇹 Austria20
33🇩🇰 Denmark19
34🇳🇱 Netherlands19
35🇳🇴 Norway19
36🇨🇭 Switzerland18
37🇮🇸 Iceland16
38🇱🇺 Luxembourg16

Europe dominates the top of the ranking. Luxembourg, Iceland, Switzerland, Norway, Denmark, and the Netherlands all require fewer than 20 hours of work to earn $1,000.

For comparison, the average American worker needs about 22 hours to earn $1,000, placing the U.S. among the stronger earners but still behind multiple European economies.

Latin America Earns Less While Working More

Colombia and Mexico sit at the bottom of the ranking, requiring 86 and 78 hours of work, respectively, to earn $1,000. Both figures are more than triple the U.S. level and more than four times higher than Luxembourg’s.

While workers in these countries often log similar or even greater annual hours than workers in richer economies, average wages remain substantially lower.

Research highlighted by Our World in Data finds that workers in lower-income countries tend to work longer hours while generating less income per hour worked. Economists point to lower productivity levels, a larger informal sector, reduced access to capital, and weaker wage growth as contributing factors.

Nordic Countries and Luxembourg Stand Out

At the other end of the spectrum are Luxembourg and the Nordic economies. Denmark, Norway, Iceland, and Finland combine relatively high wages with advanced, high-productivity economies.

Analysis from the Becker Friedman Institute and CEPR highlights how strong labor-market institutions, high workforce participation, and substantial investments in education contribute to both high wages and relatively compressed income distributions.

Luxembourg benefits from an especially high concentration of financial and professional services jobs, helping support some of the highest average wage levels in the world.

Why Purchasing Power Matters

The analysis uses purchasing power parity (PPP), which adjusts wages to reflect differences in local price levels. PPP adjustments allow economists to compare what incomes can actually buy in a specific country rather than relying solely on market exchange rates.

Without PPP adjustments, workers in lower-cost countries could appear poorer than they actually are, and vice versa.

Want to explore wage differences across Europe? Check out Mapped: Average Full-Time Salary in Europe by Country on the Voronoi app.

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