Wonen en werken in Europa
Het onderzoek van Eurofound legt de vele dimensies van wonen en werken in Europa in kaart. Het jaarlijkse jaarboek geeft een momentopname van het werk en het leven van Europeanen zoals verkend in de onderzoeksactiviteiten van het Agentschap in de loop van het voorgaande jaar. Dit dient als input voor het beleidsdebat op EU- en nationaal niveau. Als het EU-agentschap met als visie "Europa's toonaangevende kennisbron voor beter leven en werk te zijn", richtte het onderzoek in 2024 zich op enkele van de meest urgente problemen waarmee mensen en bedrijven in de hele EU te maken hebben, waaronder tekorten aan arbeidskrachten en vaardigheden, toegang tot werken op afstand, de huisvestingscrisis, stijgende kosten van levensonderhoud, vertrouwen en lacunes in de sociale bescherming. Het blijft verslag uitbrengen over de bredere structurele uitdagingen waarmee de EU te maken heeft.

Nieuw en aankomend
Vind hieronder de nieuwste inhoud over dit onderwerp.
26 November 2025
11 November 2025
January 2026
Over Wonen en werken in Europa
Meer informatie over dit onderwerp en de relevantie ervan voor het EU-beleid.
Hoogtepunten voor Wonen en werken in Europa
Dit is een selectie van de meest relevante resultaten voor dit onderwerp.
8 May 2025
Living and working in Europe 2024
Living and working in Europe 2024 provides a snapshot of Eurofound’s key research findings on the changing nature of work and life across the EU. Labour and skills shortages continued to dominate policy debates, as structural issues linked to demographic shifts, poor job quality and the demands of the green and digital transitions intensified recruitment challenges. The report examines how the cost-of-living crisis has persisted – despite easing inflation – and continues to affect households across income levels. It also explores the ongoing housing crisis, which is delaying key life transitions for young people and contributing to growing social inequality. Meanwhile, access to social protection remains uneven, particularly for unemployed and self-employed workers. Eurofound’s latest survey data also reveal a decline in remote work opportunities, despite worker preferences for hybrid arrangements. The report also highlights declining trust in institutions, closely linked to financial insecurity. Taken together, the findings capture the challenges and opportunities of this period of profound transition, reinforcing the importance of inclusive, evidence-based policymaking to support a fair and sustainable Europe.
You can also explore the digital version of Living and working in Europe 2024.
30 January 2025
50 jaar sociale verandering in Ierland en Europa
13 January 2025
Quality of life in the EU in 2024: Results from the Living and Working in the EU e-survey
Eurofound’s e-survey captures the situation of European respondents and their post-pandemic concerns. This factsheet outlines the most recent data on the main challenges faced by Europeans, with a particular emphasis on the rising cost of living, health and mental health, access to healthcare services, work–life balance, and changes in telework opportunities. View the publication or read the findings in digital format via the related content.
10 May 2023
Living and working in Europe – Ireland at EU50 - Eurofound’s annual lecture 2023
8 May 2023
Europe’s year of resilience and resolve
7 December 2022
Living, working and COVID-19 in the European Union and 10 EU neighbouring countries
The Living, working and COVID-19 survey, first launched by Eurofound in early 2020, aims to capture the wide-ranging impact of the pandemic on the work and lives of EU citizens. The fifth round of the Eurofound survey, which was implemented in spring 2022, also sheds light on a new uncertain reality caused by the war in Ukraine, record-high inflation and sharp rises in the cost of living. As a pilot survey, a shorter version of the questionnaire was fielded by the European Training Foundation (ETF) in 10 European Union (EU) neighbouring countries. This joint Eurofound-ETF factsheet presents a selection of results from the survey covering both the EU-27 and the 10 selected EU neighbouring countries.
The results reveal at least one clear commonality across respondents from all countries: serious concerns about the rising cost of living. At the same time, the results point to a large divergence in living and working conditions between respondents in the two groups of countries, but also show large differences within the EU itself and amongst the selected EU neighbouring countries.
Alle inhoud voor Wonen en werken in Europa
Dit gedeelte biedt toegang tot alle inhoud die over het onderwerp is gepubliceerd.