Economic indicators

Economic indicators, Featured, Labour Productivity, Productivity

OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps: Ihr Land im internationalen Vergleich

4 minute readAs the world marks International Equal Pay Day on 18 September 2025, the OECD is proud to unveil a new tool in the global effort to close gender gaps: the OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps. This initiative is more than a data repository – it is a call to action, a mirror of persistent inequalities, and a roadmap for reform. The OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps provides internationally comparable data covering all OECD countries to strengthen the monitoring and tracking of progress towards gender equality.

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Economic indicators, Featured, Labour Productivity, Productivity

OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps: How does your country compare?

4 minute readAs the world marks International Equal Pay Day on 18 September 2025, the OECD is proud to unveil a new tool in the global effort to close gender gaps: the OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps. This initiative is more than a data repository – it is a call to action, a mirror of persistent inequalities, and a roadmap for reform. The OECD Dashboard on Gender Gaps provides internationally comparable data covering all OECD countries to strengthen the monitoring and tracking of progress towards gender equality.

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Economic indicators, Featured, Labour Productivity, Productivity

Tracking productivity trends amid economic headwinds: insights from the latest OECD data

5 minute readProductivity growth is central to economic development and competitiveness. The OECD Compendium of Productivity Indicators 2025 offers a comprehensive snapshot of productivity trends, focusing on key components like capital and labour inputs. In this blog post, we unpack the key findings for 2023 and 2024 and reflect on the way ahead.

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Economic indicators, Featured, New Data

Comparing apples with apples: New PPPs highlight persistent disparities in cost of living

4 minute readTo compare macroeconomic indicators across countries, we must adjust for differences in currencies and price levels to ensure we are comparing apples with apples, and not apples with oranges. Purchasing Power Parities (PPPs) are the right tool for this because they are constructed based on prices of a common and comprehensive basket of goods and services, serving both as currency convertors and price deflators. As a result, PPPs are the conversion rates to be used when comparing macroeconomic indicators, such as GDP and price levels, across countries.

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Economic indicators, Featured, Inflation

Does the slowdown in inflation mean that consumers are better off?

7 minute readRecent months brought positive news about declining inflation, with rates finally coming within reach of central banks’ targets and pre-pandemic inflation. This is especially welcome after the surge in inflation rates following the Covid pandemic, supply chain disruptions and start of war in Ukraine, in 2021-22, when in many OECD countries inflation reached figures not seen since the 1980s. However, declining inflation rates do not mean declining prices, only a slowdown in their increase. Average prices of consumer goods and services are now (as of September 2024) about a third higher for an average OECD country than they were in December 2019.

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