
Eurofoundovo Europsko istraživanje o kvaliteti života (EQLS) dokumentira životne uvjete i socijalnu situaciju ljudi te istražuje pitanja relevantna za živote europskih građana.
European Quality of Life Survey 2003
The first European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS) was carried out in 2003. The survey examined quality of life in core life domains covering a range of issues, such as employment, income, education, housing, family, health, work-life balance, life satisfaction and perceived quality of society. A number of reports on the findings of the EQLS 2003 have been published.
The survey was carried out in the summer of 2003.
Over 25,000 interviews were conducted in 28 countries, including the EU25 and three candidate countries, Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey.
Interviews were conducted face to face.
The master questionnaire was translated into 28 different languages.
A dashboard for this survey round is currently not available. Please refer to newer rounds of the survey to access data visualisations.
Much of Eurofound's research in the run-up to the 2024 EU enlargement focused on documenting and better understanding the situation in the new European Union. One of the most important such initiatives was the first-ever European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS). The basic findings confirm the widespread perception of general economic and social divides between the former EU15 and the acceding and candidate countries. The differences between the 10 new Member States and the three candidate countries in areas such as housing and education are also underlined.
Living standards are markedly lower in the NMS than in the former EU15.
NMS and CC3 citizens are generally less satisfied with their quality of life than those in the EU15.
Housing conditions are worse in the NMS and the CC3 than in the EU15.
Workers in the NMS and candidate countries report worse working conditions.
Citizens of the NMS and the CC3 report poorer health and less satisfaction with health services.
The results also provide an insight into areas which are often overlooked – areas where the new Member States may boast an advantage and where there is a common pattern across the enlarged Europe.
Two thirds of citizens across 28 countries are optimistic about the future.
Families and friends provide the main social support for up to 95% of citizens across the EU25/CC3.
Home ownership is more common in the NMS/CC3 (75%) than in the EU15 (60%).
Female employment rates are higher in the NMS and CC3.
Rates of completion of secondary education are higher in the NMS than in the EU15.
Rates of completion of third-level education are similar across the EU25.
This section provides further information targeted in particular at researchers.
The following publications were produced in relation to the EQLS 2003.
Methodology
The first EQLS represents an ambitious attempt to explore quality of life in a wide range of countries. It is a major source of information of the social situation in each country, highlighting the challenges facing an enlarged EU. The strength of the survey is that it provides a synthesis of information on the main aspects of quality of life, both objective and subjective.
Contractor
Intomart GfK and the Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
Coverage
25 EU Member States and Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey
Fieldwork period
Summer of 2003
Target population
General adult population (18 years and older)
Sample
The basic sampling design used in all countries was a multi-stage, random (probability) one. Firstly, sampling points were drawn after stratification by region and degree of urbanisation.
Sample size
Over 25,000 interviews were completed. Around 1,000 persons aged 18 and over were interviewed in each country, except for the ‘smaller’ countries – Cyprus, Estonia, Luxembourg, Malta and Slovenia – where around 600 interviews were conducted.
Type
Face-to-face interviewing
Quality assurance
After data collection, the data were checked thoroughly by the Social Science Center (WZB) with the help of national experts.
Questionnaire
The questionnaire was developed by a research consortium and covers a broad spectrum of life domains with an emphasis on employment and working conditions, housing, family, social and political participation, quality of society, and subjective well-being.
The questionnaire is available in the Annex to the overview report.
Izvješće o istraživanju: Quality of life in Europe
Eurofound experts
You can contact the following experts for questions on the survey.
Daphne Ahrendt
Senior research managerDaphne Ahrendt viša je voditeljica istraživanja u odjelu za socijalne politike u Eurofoundu. Otkako se pridružila Eurofoundu 2013., njezin je rad obuhvaćao širok raspon područja socijalne politike. Trenutačno koordinira Eurofoundove aktivnosti upravljanja anketama i razvoja te vodi pripremu i analizu e-anketa o bolesti COVID-19. Daphne ima više od 20 godina iskustva kao istraživačica radeći na međunarodnim istraživanjima, a prethodno je radila u Jedinici Eurobarometra pri Europskoj komisiji i u Nacionalnom centru za društvena istraživanja u Londonu gdje je radila na Međunarodnom programu društvenih istraživanja. Daphne je magistrirala politiku kaznenog pravosuđa na London School of Economics i diplomirala političke znanosti na Državnom sveučilištu San Francisco.
Eszter Sándor
Senior research managerEszter Sandor viša je voditeljica istraživanja u odjelu za socijalne politike u Eurofoundu. Ima stručnost u metodologiji istraživanja i statističkoj analizi, radila je na pripremi i upravljanju Europskim istraživanjem o kvaliteti života, a nedavno i e-anketom Život, rad i COVID-19 te je odgovorna za kvalitetu skupova podataka. Njezina istraživačka područja su dobrobit mladih i kvaliteta života u kućanstvima i obiteljima, uključujući subjektivnu dobrobit, ravnotežu između poslovnog i privatnog života te životne uvjete. Prethodno je radila kao ekonomska savjetnica u Škotskoj s fokusom na procjene gospodarskog učinka, evaluacije i analizu input-outputa. Magistrirala je ekonomiju i međunarodne odnose na Sveučilištu Corvinus u Budimpešti.