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The image displays a table labeled "Employment rates, education and average annual income, 2015" with three columns for "Country", "Employment rate (16-64 years, %)", "25-64 year olds with a college/university education (%)" and "Average income (€)". Data for each country is as follows: Austria 71.1 employment, 30.6 education, 23,260 income; Bulgaria 62.9 employment, 27.5 education, 3,332 income; Greece 50.8 employment, 29.1 education, 7,520 income; Latvia 68.1 employment, 31.6 education, 5,828 income; Luxembourg 66.1 employment, 41.1 education, 34,320 income; Norway 74.8 employment, 43.2 education, 41,483 income; Portugal 63.9 employment, 22.9 education, 8,435 income; UK 72.7 employment, 41.6 education, 20,945 income.
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This table shows european percentages of employment of sixteen to sixty-four years old people, college education of twenty-five to sixty-four years old people, and their revenue, broken down by countries, for the year 2015. It is evident that they are disparities of these three categories according to locations.
Indeed, Portugal and Greece have the fewest people with higher education, with only 22.9% and 29.1% of qualified inhabitants, whilst Norway and the UK have the most proportion of them, counting 43.2% and 41.6% of qualification.
It seems to directly impact the employment rate, which is much higher in Norway (74.8%) than in Greece (50.8%).
In addition, a high rate of unemployment lower the average income of a country, putting Norway at the top rank of average income, with more than fourty thousands euros per year.
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