Journal of Scientific Papers

ECONOMICS & SOCIOLOGY


© CSR, 2008-2019
ISSN 2071-789X

3.1
2019CiteScore
 
91th percentile
Powered by  Scopus



Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)


Strike Plagiarism

Partners
  • General Founder and Publisher:

     
    Centre of Sociological Research

     

  • Publishing Partners:

    University of Szczecin (Poland)

    Széchenyi István University, (Hungary)

    Mykolas Romeris University (Lithuania)

    Alexander Dubcek University of Trencín (Slovak Republic)


  • Membership:

     

    Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP)

    American Sociological Association


    European Sociological Association


    World Economics Association (WEA)

     


    CrossRef

     


Material and social deprivation in the European Union: Country-level analysis

Vol. 17, No 1, 2024

Gülşah Sedefoğlu

 

Istanbul Ticaret University, Türkiye

E-mail: gsedefoglu@ticaret.edu.tr

ORCID 0000-0002-7012-184X

 

Material and social deprivation in the European Union: Country-level analysis

 

Hanna Dudek

 

Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Poland

E-mail: hanna_dudek@sggw.edu.pl 

ORCID 0000-0001-8261-2745


 

Abstract. The study focuses on material and social deprivation as an important aspect of quality-of-life research in the European Union (EU). It analyses thirteen material and social deprivation items considered by the Eurostat. The study aims to compare country rankings based on severe material and social deprivation rates and country rankings obtained from composite indicators covering thirteen material deprivation items. Additionally, using Eurostat data, it evaluates material and social deprivation across EU countries in 2015-2022. The study employs different normalization and weighting methods to construct the composite indicators for country-level data. The results obtained through various methods are observed to exhibit a high degree of concordance. In particular, the severe material and social deprivation rate was found to be a good representative of material and social deprivation in a multidimensional approach. Regardless of the method used, throughout the analyzed period, Bulgarians and Romanians were in the worst situation within the EU. Slovenia and Cyprus improved their situation the most compared to other EU countries, while France, Germany, and Spain notably worsened their position between 2015 and 2022.

 

Received: February, 2023

1st Revision: July, 2023

Accepted: March, 2024

 

DOI: 10.14254/2071-789X.2024/17-1/2

JEL ClassificationF63, I32, O52, C82

Keywords: material and social deprivation, the EU countries, composite indicators, country rankings