In The EU, One In 10 Can’t Afford An Adequate Meal Every Two Days

In The EU, One In 10 Can’t Afford An Adequate Meal Every Two Days

Almost one in 10 people in the European Union (EU) would not be able to afford an adequate meal every two days in 2023, an increase on the previous year, but Portugal has the third lowest percentage.

Data published today by the EU’s statistical office, Eurostat, indicates that last year “9.5% of the EU population could not afford a meal containing meat, fish or a vegetarian equivalent every two days”, a figure 1.2 percentage points higher than in 2022, when it was 8.3%.

 

“Furthermore, focusing on people at risk of poverty, in 2023 the percentage at EU level was 22.3%, indicating an increase of 2.6 percentage points compared to 2022,” of 19.7%, he adds.

By country, the highest percentage of people at risk of poverty unable to afford an adequate meal was recorded in Slovakia (45.7%), followed by Hungary (44.9%) and Bulgaria (40.2%).

On the other hand, the lowest percentage was recorded in Ireland (4.2%), followed by Cyprus (5.0%) and Portugal (5.9%).

In the EU, the difference between the total population and the population at risk of poverty in terms of access to an adequate meal was 12.8 percentage points.

By member state, Hungary recorded the largest gap, with 30.2 percentage points, followed by Slovakia (27.9 percentage points) and Greece (27.3 percentage points), while Sweden, Cyprus, Luxembourg, Portugal and Ireland recorded the smallest differences,

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