Dataset

Labour market outlook dashboard

This dashboard offers a comprehensive overview of the evolution of key labour market outcomes across EU member states, from 2006 onwards

Publishing date
25 March 2024
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The Labour Market Outlook dashboard offers a comprehensive overview of the evolution of key labour market outcomes across EU member states, from 2006 onwards. 

Derived from harmonised EU Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) data, the dashboard provides valuable insights into the trends and shifts in essential labour market indicators. It displays several traditional labour market metrics like employment and unemployment rates, prevalence of long-term unemployment, along with some “contemporary” measures such as the frequency of working from home or the exposure to generative AI.

Moreover, the dashboard delves beyond aggregate-level information, offering insights into disparities across gender and educational attainment levels.

This dashboard is part of the Future of Work and Inclusive Growth in Europe project at Bruegel, which aims to develop multiple dashboards on labour market topics. It has been produced with the financial support of the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth.

About the authors

  • Giulia Gotti

    Giulia was a Research analyst at Bruegel until September 2024. She obtained a MSc in Policy Economics at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam and a BSc in Economics at the University of Bologna.

    Before joining Bruegel, Giulia did a traineeship at the European Central Bank in the Fiscal Policies division where she worked in the Debt Sustainability Analysis team. Prior to that, she pursued a Schuman traineeship at the European Parliament in the Economic Governance Unit in DG IPOL. 

    Giulia is an Italian native speaker. She is fluent in English and has a working knowledge of Spanish.

  • Duygu Güner

    Duygu joined Bruegel in June 2022 as part of the Future of Work and Inclusive Growth team.

    She is an applied economist, and her research mainly focuses on structural labour markets issues such as barriers to labour force participation, gender gaps, informality, skill shortages and unemployment.

    Before joining Bruegel, she has been actively involved in research for more than 10 years in a diverse setting. She participated in multiple projects for various institutions including JRC-Seville, the World Bank, the International Labour Organization, and the Ministry of Labour and Social Security of Turkey.

    She holds an MA in Economics and a BSc in Management Engineering from Istanbul Technical University (Turkey). Currently, she is finalising a PhD in Economics at KU Leuven.

  • Nina Ruer

    Nina works at Bruegel as a research assistant. She holds a Master's of Research (MRes) in Analysis and Policy in Economics from the Paris School of Economics (PSE). Her master's thesis, titled "The Gender Pay Gap in Student Employment in France," was a comprehensive study that delved into income disparities among university students in France. Prior to that, she earned a B.Sc. in Economics with a final year in "Magistère" from Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne.

    Prior to joining Bruegel, she was a research assistant on a series of projects funded by PSE where she gained hands-on experience in finding and cleaning replication datasets for Randomized Control Trials (RCTs). She also developed multiple surrogate index functions for long-term forecasting. Another set of projects focused on collecting subjective forecasts, where she assessed the calibration of various groups for forecast accuracy.

    Nina is a dual Dutch and French citizen and is a French native speaker, fluent in Dutch and English.

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