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Living conditions and quality of life

Living conditions and quality of life is one of Eurofound's main operational activities for the 2025–2028 programming period. Building on the past 50 years of research, Eurofound continues to monitor living conditions, cohesion and convergence in Europe, aiming to map and analyse key elements for the improvement of living conditions, including people’s perceptions of quality of life and society.

Eurofound’s priorities for 2025–2028 are shaped by the opportunities and challenges arising from four mega-drivers: demographic change, climate change, technological change and re-globalisation. Research in this activity examines the social implications of the transition to a climate-neutral economy, focusing on sustainable behaviours, distributional effects and social cohesion. Eurofound also examines the social impact of technological change and artificial intelligence, including the digital divide and the living conditions of those working in new forms of work. The research focuses on different groups and also examines their needs and access to public services and social protection.

The next iteration of the European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS), to be fielded in 2026, offers a new perspective on the impact of the four mega-drivers and the compounded challenges on quality of life and material living conditions in Europe.

Topic

Recent updates

Eurofound research 2025

In 2025, Eurofound’s annual update on convergence and living conditions in Europe places a special focus on emerging trends and new challenges that Europe is facing. The Agency continues to monitor economic and social inequalities among sociodemographic groups and geographical entities. In this regard, Eurofound plans to carry out new research on regional convergence, expanding the work done in the previous programming period.

Work concluding during 2025 includes:

  • investigation of care provision and the role of informal carers
  • analysis of policy actions undertaken to prevent and address mental health problems in Europe
  • research on trends, risks and opportunities of digitalisation in social protection
  • a study on the implementation of the European Child Guarantee, with a special emphasis on the workforce
  • research on the possible impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on wealth inequality
  • analysis of social cohesion and new forms of inclusive participation
  • evidence on the socioeconomic impact of the transition to a carbon-neutral economy

Research commences on a number of other topics.

  • Caring for care services: Focusing in 2025 on access to care services, including childcare, healthcare and long-term care
  • Social protection: Focusing on children and the European Child Guarantee, producing an overview of the implementation of the European Child Guarantee in the EU Member States and updating the European Child Guarantee Monitor
  • European Green Deal: Investigating the social implications of the green transition on the cost of living, housing and transport
  • Social cohesion: Analysing the level of support from citizens for the green transition and its implications for social cohesion, using data from the Living and Working in the EU e-survey
  • Geographical disparities and convergence: Investigating the trends in and dynamics of disparities between Member States and regions across economic, social, environmental and institutional dimensions

What our experts say

Tadas Leončikas, Head of the Employment Unit

Listen to our podcasts on issues around living conditions and quality of life

Eurofound Talks - A podcast series

Linking in with EU priorities

2025 marks the first year of the five-year period of the EU policy and legislative cycle for 2025–2029. The various strands of work in this research activity, including the research on the impact of the cost of living, housing, public services, vulnerable groups and the European Child Guarantee, aims to support the work of EU policymakers in monitoring and implementing the principles of the European Pillar of Social Rights.

The EU agenda on promoting inclusive and accessible social services for citizens is supported by research on public services, with a focus on care services. This work feeds into the EU’s objective of ensuring high-quality and sustainable care provision throughout the EU as per the European Care Strategy and the Communication on a comprehensive approach to mental health.

The Strategy for the Rights of Persons with Disability 2021–2030 could benefit from Eurofound’s work on the social and employment inclusion of people with disabilities.

Social protection research could inform the Council Recommendation on adequate minimum income ensuring active inclusion and the Council Recommendation on access to social protection for workers and the self-employed.

The European Green Deal could be informed by Eurofound’s investigation of the social impact of the green transition, its impact on energy poverty and social cohesion, and the citizen consensus around it. And the European AI Strategy is supported by the work on the impact of AI on European societies and related living conditions, while the EU digital agenda is informed by Eurofound’s work on e-healthcare and the living conditions of platform and ICT-based mobile workers.

Key outputs

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The post-pandemic recovery of Europe continued in 2023, with strong job creation despite subdued economic growth, against a background of rising geopolitical tension. Eurofound’s research over the year brought to...

2 Maggio 2024
Publication
Annual report
Publications results (314)

The scale of undeclared care work (paid care work that is lawful but not declared to public authorities) in the EU is considerable. Recent estimates suggest that 6.8 million undeclared workers provide care or household services across the EU, with 2.1 million specifically in the care sector.

25 March 2025

Eurofound’s e-survey captures the situation of European respondents and their post-pandemic concerns. This factsheet outlines the most recent data on the main challenges faced by Europeans, with a particular emphasis on the rising cost of living, health and mental health, access to healthcare

13 January 2025

This programming document sets out Eurofound’s work programme for 2025 and outlines Eurofound's planned activities for the period 2025–2028, providing the policy and institutional context.

06 January 2025

Eurofound's multiannual work programme for 2025–2028 addresses the opportunities and challenges arising from four key mega-drivers: climate change, demographic change, technological change and re-globalisation and geopolitical reconfiguration.

06 January 2025

Increasing emphasis on independent living and social inclusion is driving deinstitutionalisation – the shift away from a reliance on residential institutions towards family- and community-based settings for the provision of care and services. The aim is to ensure that people at risk of marginalisati

25 October 2024

This report focuses on unemployment and minimum income benefits for people of working age. Individuals with short or no employment records (mainly young people), the self-employed, those with non-standard working arrangements, and the long-term unemployed are often not entitled to higher-tier, or

08 October 2024

During the pandemic, many young people had to change their plans for the future. While at the end of 2023 young people’s labour market situation was more favourable than it had been in recent years, many obstacles remained on their route to independence, such as the rising cost of living and

21 May 2024

The post-pandemic recovery of Europe continued in 2023, with strong job creation despite subdued economic growth, against a background of rising geopolitical tension. Eurofound’s research over the year brought to light evidence on the key issues shaping the daily lives and work of Europeans.

02 May 2024

This background paper focuses on one important aspect of social protection: unemployment benefits, both first tier (usually contributory) and lower tier (predominantly tax-based, non-contributory and means-tested). Unemployment benefits help to cushion the impact of job loss on household finances an

02 February 2024

The various economic and social shocks of the past decade and a half – most recently the COVID-19 pandemic – have ongoing consequences for the living standards and prospects of Europeans, and sometimes these outcomes have been uneven across age groups. Social policies – such as those in the areas of

19 December 2023

Online resources results (223)

Pay trends in Italy since the July 1993 agreement

Italy's tripartite central agreement of 23 July 1993 laid the basis for the structural reduction of inflation and eventual entry into EU Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). Following the agreement, wage increases were initially lower than the inflation rate, and dependent workers' share of the

New collective agreements signed in public services

In recent years, German public services have seen a sharp decline in employment. Caused by a persistently high public budget deficit and exacerbated by the introduction of "new public management" or "lean state" concepts, the number of public service jobs was reduced by about half a million between

The trade unionist of the 1990s?

The face of UK trade unionism is changing, according to evidence published by the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in Trade unionists today [1] (August 1997), based on analysis of the autumn 1996 Labour Force Survey. In the past, according to the TUC, the typical UK trade unionist was once generally

Welfare reform results from negotiations between government and trade unions

The finance law for 1998 approved by the Italian Government in November 1997 contains a number of proposals for welfare reform in the areas of social security and pensions. As regards pensions, the Government has signed an agreement with the Cgil, Cisl and Uil trade union confederations which makes

Substantial wage increases and a new bargaining situation for the medical profession

As a result of the 1996 wage settlement, medical physicians employed at Norwegian hospitals gained substantial wage increases. These increases can in part be explained by an increase in basic wages, and in part by prolonging weekly working hours through permitting more overtime and at the same time

Survey argues that UK employees are better off than their European neighbours

A combination of falling unemployment and soaring corporate profit has still not generated demands from UK workers for a round of substantial pay increases. The annual rate of growth of average earnings fell slightly from 4.5% in April 1997 to 4.25% in both May and June, according to the latest

Hospital administration and working conditions reform proposed

A public debate has begun in Portugal about the privatisation of public hospitals. Medical, paramedical and nursing unions have reacted largely negatively to proposed changes in the regulation of industrial relations, employment contracts and working conditions, and strikes were due in August

Continuity and change in pay and working time

One of the most significant transformations of British industrial relations in recent years has been the shift from national to enterprise-level bargaining. Multi-employer bargaining arrangements have tended to be replaced with multi-establishment, single employer bargaining, although there are also

Strikes in the hospital sector

The law on social welfare, adopted in November 1995, included provisions on a range of matters, such as: the submission of the social security budget to parliamentary vote; the setting up of a new tax known as "social security deficit clearance" (Remboursement de la dette sociale); the abolition of

Proposal for reform of the welfare state

On 5 March 1997, the Italian Prime Minister, Romano Prodi, informed the political parties and social partners about the report drawn up by the "Commission for macroeconomic compatibility of social expenditure", a committee of experts established by the Government and chaired by Professor Paolo


Blogs results (32)
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Discussions on Germany at European level invariably focus on the country’s strong economic performance and how this relates to the labour market and broader society. This is a narrative I have myself contributed to in a previous blog piece. However, Eurofound’s European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS)

7 Marzo 2018
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The European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS), carried out by Eurofound every four years, explores a variety of aspects related to living standards, health, family and work–life balance, as well as people's happiness levels, satisfaction with their lives, and their perceptions regarding the quality of

21 Febbraio 2018
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In this blog piece, originally published in Social Europe, Eurofound Research Officer Daniel Molinuevo looks at the service providers delivering long-term care to older people in Europe.

18 Gennaio 2018
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In this blog piece, originally published in Social Europe, Eurofound Research Manager Anna Ludwinek looks at the substantial section of the population that is not working and does not figure in unemployment statistics, but retains significant employment potential.

20 Dicembre 2017
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Europe – a world-class place to live and work? ‘A world-class place to live and work.’ That is how President Juncker described Europe at the summit to formally proclaim the EU Pillar of Social Rights in Gothenburg last month. And he added: ‘Europe is more than just a single market, more than money

7 Dicembre 2017
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In-work poverty increased during the economic and financial crisis that hit European shores in 2008. By 2014, ten per cent of European workers were at risk of poverty, up from eight per cent in 2007. Ten per cent is a significant figure: the working poor represent a substantial group that can’t be i

13 Ottobre 2017
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Average unemployment rates continue to fall across Europe, employment is growing again in middle-paying jobs, offshoring is on the decline, the proportion of routine jobs is falling, and efforts to make work more sustainable have borne fruit.

6 Giugno 2017
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Equality of opportunity and upward social mobility are important aspects of the European social model. Until quite recently concerns about rising inequalities were often countered by assurances about protecting social mobility, and the assertion that an individual’s status is mainly down to their wo

26 Aprile 2017
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There are limits to the effectiveness of member states’ pension reforms. Europe, it’s often said, is experiencing a worsening ageing crisis. European governments grappling with this and the related unsustainability of many pension schemes have taken measures to keep older workers longer in employmen

26 Settembre 2016
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In this blog piece, originally posted on Social Europe, Eurofound Director Juan Menéndez-Valdés looks the complex and multi-faceted story of what it is to live and work in the European Union of today.

13 Giugno 2016

Upcoming publications results (10)

This policy brief provides the yearly update on convergence in the EU using the methodology and software developed by Eurofound. This year, the analysis focuses on social fragmentation and investigates whether the economic and social distances between sociodemographic groups have increased in recent

December 2025
Forthcoming
Publication
Policy brief

Europe is faced with a housing crisis that affects people of all ages, however younger people are disproportionately impacted. Many young adults are unable to afford their own home, often having to remain living in their parental home. This crisis has wide-reaching consequences, influencing opportun

December 2025
Forthcoming
Publication
Research report

This report maps the state of digitalisation of social benefit systems in the EU Member States and Norway. It examines to extent to which interaction with citizens and back-office processes have been digitalised. The study highlights areas where digital technologies have been introduced to improve

October 2025

This report provides an overview of the situation of children across Europe, including the services they use and the areas and issues that require attention from policymakers. The report focuses on identifying inequalities between different groups of children and analysing how these have changed

July 2025
Forthcoming
Publication
Research report

This report investigates the polarisation of attitudes and opinions among Europeans over 20 years, based on data from the European Social Survey. It investigates trends and national variations in polarisation, examining whether values and attitudes have become oppositional over time, and explores th

July 2025

Poor mental health, especially anxiety and depression, affects many people in the EU. Trends impacting mental health include the change from physical to digital work environments, climate change, inequality and people’s concerns about their economic situation. While poor mental health was already pr

July 2025

This study examines wealth inequality trends across European Union countries, utilising data from the European Central Bank’s Household Finance and Consumption Survey (HFCS) and covering the period 2010 to 2021. It explores key drivers of wealth distribution, including housing wealth, savings behavi

July 2025
Forthcoming
Publication
Research report

Digitalisation has been on the EU policy agenda since 2000. While significant progress has been made in this regard, the digital transformation is not yet complete. This report seeks to deepen our understanding of the evolution towards a digital Europe. By applying the convergence lens, this report

June 2025

As countries face increasing pressures when it comes to the provision of care services, unpaid caregivers make an invaluable contribution. Care is needed at all ages of life, particularly when individuals face health issues or disabilities. This report investigates the situation of unpaid carers,

June 2025
Forthcoming
Publication
Research report
Data results (1)
24 Ottobre 2023
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