What country boasts the highest percentage of recent graduates that have entered the workforce?

Malta boasts the highest percentage of recent graduates to have entered the workforce, with 95.8% of recent graduates now in employment, new data from Eurostat has shown.

According to the data, other European countries to see a large percentage of recent graduates enter the workforce include the Netherlands (93.2%), Germany (91.5%), Austria (89.0%), Ireland (88.7%) and Hungary (87.9%).

At the other end of the spectrum, just over two thirds (67.5%) of recent graduates in Italy have entered the workforce, with relatively low percentages also recorded in Greece (72.5%), Romania (74.8%) and Croatia (78.2%).

Overall, in 2023, 83.5% of recent graduates in the EU secured employment, reflecting a 1.1 percentage point increase from 2022 when the employment rate was 82.4%.

Over the last decade, there has been a consistent rise in the employment rate of recent graduates, starting from 74.3% in 2013. The only significant decline occurred in 2020 due to the pandemic, with the rate dropping to 78.7%, down 2.3 percentage points from 2019’s 81.0%.

Eurostat defines ‘recent graduates’ as ‘individuals aged 20-34, who completed their studies within the past one to three years at medium or tertiary education levels’.

Percentage of recent graduates that have entered the workforce, by EU country

Malta95.8%
Netherlands93.2%
Germany91.5%
Austria89.0%
Ireland88.7%
Hungary87.9%
Sweden87.9%
Belgium86.4%
Poland85.8%
Czechia85.4%
Slovenia85.4%
Latvia85.2%
Estonia84.7%
Luxembourg84.7%
Denmark84.6%
Slovakia84.5%
Bulgaria84.2%
Finland84.0%
Portugal82.4%
Cyprus80.6%
France80.1%
Lithuania80.0%
Spain78.7%
Croatia78.2%
Romania74.8%
Greece72.3%
Italy67.5%

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