Brussels, 13/02/2008 (Agence Europe) - Figures released by the EU statistical office Eurostat on Tuesday 12 February, expressed in terms of purchasing power, ranged in 2005 from 24% of the EU27 average in the north-east region of Romania, to 303% of the average in Inner London in the United Kingdom.
The three leading regions in the ranking of regional GDP per inhabitant in 2005 were Inner London in the United Kingdom (303% of the average), the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (264%) and Brussels in Belgium (241%). Among the 42 regions exceeding the 125% level, eight were in Germany, five each in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, four each in Italy and Austria, three each in Belgium and Spain, two in Finland, and one region each in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Ireland, Greece, France, Slovakia and Sweden, and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Eurostat notes, however, that in some regions, the GDP per inhabitant figures can be significantly influenced by commuter flows. Net commuter inflows in these regions push up production to a level that could not be achieved by the resident active population on its own, meaning that GDP per inhabitant is overestimated in these regions and underestimated in regions with commuter outflows.
The fifteen lowest regions in the ranking were all, Eurostat says, in Bulgaria, Poland and Romania, with the lowest figures recorded in Nord-Est in Romania (24% of the average), followed by Severozapaden and Yuzhen tsentralen in Bulgaria (both 27%). Among the 69 regions below the 75% level, fifteen were in Poland, eight in Romania, seven in the Czech Republic, six each in Bulgaria, Greece and Hungary, five in Italy, four in Portugal, three each in France (all overseas departments) and Slovakia, one region each in Germany, Spain and Slovenia, and Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. (O.L.)