Statistics Explained

Archive:Europe 2020 indicators - Latvia

Revision as of 15:09, 18 July 2017 by Bleysim (talk | contribs) (Updated context & links.)
Data from June 2017. Most recent data: Further Eurostat information, Main tables. Planned article update: July 2018.

This article is part of a set of statistical articles on Europe 2020 strategy, focusing on the situation in Latvia.

Figure 1: Change since 2008 in relation to national targets (*)
Source: Eurostat (see dedicated web section: Europe 2020 headline indicators)
Explanations on this radar chart are available here.

Main statistical findings

Table 1: National Europe 2020 indicators: most recent data and targets
Source: Eurostat (see dedicated web section: Europe 2020 headline indicators)

Latvia has made notable progress on reducing the number of early leavers from education and training and increasing the share of tertiary graduates. The country reached its respective targets in 2013 and 2011 and continued to meet them in 2016. By 2016, it had already reached its national poverty reduction target by limiting the number of people at risk of poverty after social transfers and/or in households with very low work intensity to 606 000. Unlike the EU-level target, Latvia’s poverty target refers to monetary poverty and very low work intensity only and does not take into account severe material deprivation. The country’s GHG emissions in non-ETS sectors did not rise notably between 1990 and 2012, staying within the national target to limit emissions increases to 17 % by 2020. Since 2008, Latvia has fulfilled its commitment on primary energy consumption and has steadily moved towards its target of 40 % renewable energy in gross final energy consumption; this is the second most ambitious target for this indicator in the EU. By 2016, the country had also met its employment target of 73 %. Progress on R&D intensity has been less favourable, with only a slight increase between 2008 and 2015.

Data sources and availability

More information about the origin of the data and the calculation of indicators can be obtained via the Europe 2020 indicators dedicated website.

Under 'Main tables', click on the icons next to the indicators:

  • 'Explanatory texts (metadata)' for a detailed overview of the collection and compilation methods;
  • 'Information on the leaf' for data availability per country.

A more general overview of quality procedures can be found in Implementation of standard reference metadata for indicators - the ESMS Indicator Profile (ESMS-IP) (PDF file).

Context

Europe 2020 is the EU’s agenda for jobs and growth for the current decade. It emphasises smart, sustainable and inclusive growth as a way to strengthen the EU economy and prepare its structure for the challenges of the next decade. As a main objective, the strategy strives to deliver high levels of employment, productivity and social cohesion in the Member States, while reducing the impact on the natural environment.

See also

Further Eurostat information

Publications

Main tables

Dedicated section

Methodology / Metadata

Other information

External links