Since 2010, the OECD average improved for household disposable income, the employment rate, the gender wage gap, long working hours and housing overcrowding
Since 2010, there has been no progress in reducing income inequality and improving housing affordability when looking at the OECD average
Relative to 2010, people live longer and have higher life satisfaction, a smaller proportion are exposed to harmful air pollution, and a larger proportion are and feel more safe
Feelings of lacking social support and voter turnout have changed little, on average
Countries with greater average well-being also tend to be more equal
Italy’s household disposable income, 2010-17
Only a few well-being averages have deteriorated
Hungary is the only OECD country where more than half of all well-being averages improved
OECD countries with lower average well-being in 2010 have been catching up
Most headline indicators of well-being inequalities display no clear trend