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How’s Life in France?
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
How’s Life in France?
France’s current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: This chart shows France’s relative strengths and weaknesses in well-being compared to other OECD countries. Longer bars always
indicate better outcomes (i.e. higher wellbeing), whereas shorter bars always indicate worse outcomes (lower well-being) – including for negative
indicators, marked with an *, which have been reverse-scored. Inequalities (gaps between top and bottom, differences between groups, people
falling under a deprivation threshold) are shaded with stripes, and missing data in white.
France’s resources for future well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: ❶=top-performing OECD tier, ❷=middle-performing OECD tier, ❸=bottom-performing OECD tier. ➚ indicates consistent
improvement; ↔ indicates no clear or consistent trend; ➘ indicates consistent deterioration, and “…” indicates insufficient time series to
determine trends since 2010. For methodological details, see the Reader’s Guide of How’s Life? 2020.
Genderw age gap*
AVERAGE
INEQUALITY
House-hold
income
House-hold
w ealth
Housingaffordability
Ov er-crow ding
rate*
Employ -ment rate
Student skills in science
Long hours in paid w ork*
Access to green space
Ex posure to outdoor air pollution*
Students w ith
low skills*
Life ex pectancy
Gap in life ex pectancy by
education
(men)*
Gender gap in hours
w orked*
Time off
Life satisfaction
Socialinter-
actions
Negativ e affect
balance*
Lack of social
support*
Voter turnout
Hav ing no say in
gov ernment*
Homicides*
Gender gap in feeling
safe
INCOME AND WEALTH
WORK AND JOB QUALITY
HOUSING
WORK-LIFE BALANCE
HEALTH
KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS
SOCIAL CONNECTIONS
CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
SAFETY
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
S80/S20 income
share ratio*
Natural Capital Economic Capital Human Capital Social Capital
Greenhouse gas
emissions per capitaProduced fixed assets
Educational
attainment of young
adults
Trust in others
…
Material footprintFinancial net worth of
governmentPremature mortality
Trust in
government
Red List Index of
threatened speciesHousehold debt
Labour
underutilisation rate
Gender parity in
politics
2
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
For more information
Access the complete publication, including information about the methods used to determine trends at:
https://doi.org/10.1787/9870c393-en.
Find the data used in this country profile at: http://oecd.org/statistics/Better-Life-Initiative-2020-country-
notes-data.xlsx.
Deprivations in France
Deprivations in selected indicators of current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: Relative income poverty refers to the share of people with household disposable income below 50% of the national median; financial
insecurity refers to the share of individuals who are not income poor, but whose liquid financial assets are insufficient to support them at the
level of the national relative income poverty line for at least three months; housing cost overburden refers to the share of households in the
bottom 40% of the income distribution spending more than 40% of their disposable income on housing costs; and low satisfaction with life and
with time use refer to the share of the population rating their satisfaction as 4 or lower (on a 0-10 scale).
FRANCE
of the population live in relativeincome poverty
8%
of poor households spend more than40% of their income on housing costs
10%
say they have no friends or familyto turn to in times of need
9%
of the population report lowlife satisfaction
6%
would be at risk of falling into poverty if theyhad to forgo 3 months of their income
32%
are not satisfied with how theyspend their time
14%
Source: OECD (2020), How’s Life? 2020: Measuring Well-Being
3
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Inequalities between men and women in France
Gender ratios (distance from parity) for selected indicators of current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: Grey bubbles denote no clear difference between men and women, defined as gender ratios within 0.03 points distance to parity.
0.79
0.82
0.90
0.90
0.93
0.95
0.96
0.97
0.99
1.00
1.00
1.01
1.07
1.08
1.09
1.14
// 2.00
// 2.07
// 3.99
Feeling safe
Job strain
Employment rate
Earnings
Hours worked (paid and unpaid)
Perceived health
Adult skills (numeracy)
Time off
Life satisfaction
Student skills (science)
Social support
Satisfaction with personal relationships
Having a say in government
Life expectancy
Long-term unemployment rate
Social interactions
Homicide victims
Long working hours(in paid work)
Deaths from suicide, alcohol, drugs
Men doing better OECD average Women doing better
4
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Inequalities between age groups in France
Age ratios (distance from parity) for selected indicators of current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: Age ranges differ according to each indicator and are only broadly comparable. They generally refer to 15-24/29 years for young people,
25/30 to 45/50 years for the middle-aged and 50 years and over for older people. See How’s Life? 2020 for further details. Grey bubbles denote
no clear difference between age groups, defined as age ratios within 0.03 points distance to parity.
A. Younger and middle-aged people
B. Younger and older people
// 0.37
0.70
0.71
0.93
0.99
1.01
1.05
1.05
1.05
1.10
1.12
1.18
// 1.67
// 3.49
Employment rate
Long-term unemployment rate
Earnings
Feeling safe
Adult skills (numeracy)
Social support
Time off
Satisfaction with personal relationships
Life satisfaction
Satisfaction with time use
Job strain
Having a say in government
Social interactions
Long working hours (in paid work)
Middle-aged people doing better OECD average Younger people doing better
// 0.58
0.65
0.84
0.91
0.99
1.04
1.05
1.05
1.09
1.09
1.10
1.20
// 1.67
// 3.92
Employment rate
Earnings
Long-term unemployment rate
Satisfaction with time use
Job strain
Social support
Time off
Satisfaction with personal relationships
Feeling safe
Life satisfaction
Adult skills (numeracy)
Having a say in government
Social interactions
Long working hours (in paid work)
Older people doing better OECD average Younger people doing better
5
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Inequalities between people with different educational attainment in France
Education ratios (distance from parity) for selected indicators of current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: Grey bubbles denote no clear difference between groups with different educational attainment, defined as education ratios within
0.03 points distance to parity.
// 0.30
// 0.49
0.68
0.75
0.86
0.87
0.89
0.95
0.95
0.97
0.98
0.99
1.08
// 1.78
Job strain
Long-term unemployment rate
Having a say in government
Earnings
Perceived health
Employment rate
Feeling safe
Life expectancy (men)
Life satisfaction
Social support
Satisfaction with personal relationships
Life expectancy (women)
Satisfaction with time use
Long working hours (in paid work)
People with tertiary education doing better OECD average People with upper secondary education doing better
6
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Inequalities between top and bottom performers in France
Vertical inequalities for selected indicators of current well-being, 2018 or latest available year
Note: For all figures, countries are ranked from left (most unequal) to right (least unequal).
5.4
4.3
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Household income of the top 20% relative to the bottom 20%
51.7 50.6
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Share of wealth owned by the top 10%, percentage
3.4
2.8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Earnings of the top 10% relative to the bottom 10%, full-time employees
1.69 1.67
0
1
2
PISA score in science of the top 10% relative to the bottom 10%
2.12
0
1
2
3
4
Life satisfaction scores of the top 20% relative to the bottom 20%
2.78 2.73
0
1
2
3
4
Satisfaction with time use scores of the top 20%relative to the bottom 20%
7
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Trends in current well-being since 2010 in France - I
Note: The snapshot depicts data for 2018, or the latest available year, for each indicator. The colour of the circle indicates the direction of
change, relative to 2010, or the closest available year: = consistent improvement, = consistent deterioration, = no clear trend,
and white for insufficient time series to determine trends. The OECD average is marked in black. For methodological details, see the Reader’s
Guide of How’s Life? 2020. * = Purchasing Power Parity.
Household income
(household net adjusted disposable income,
USD at 2017 PPPs*, per capita)
Average
Household wealth
(median net wealth, USD at 2016 PPPs)Average
S80/S20 income share ratio
(the household income for the top 20%,
divided by the household income for the
bottom 20%)
Inequality
Housing affordability
(share of disposable income remaining after
housing costs)
Average
Overcrowding rate
(share of households living in overcrowded
conditions)
Inequality
Employment rate
(employed people aged 25-64, as a share of
the population of the same age)
Average
Gender wage gap
(difference between male and female median
wages expressed as a share of male wages)
Inequality
Long hours in paid work
(share of employees usually working 50+
hours per week)
Inequality
Hea
lth Life expectancy
(number of years a newborn can expect to
live)
Average
Inco
me
and
Wea
lth
Ho
usi
ng
Wo
rk a
nd
Jo
b Q
ual
ity
FRA~32 000
OECD~ 28 000
OECD~162 000
FRA~132 000
OECD5.4
FRA4.3
OECD79.2
FRA79
FRA6
OECD12
OECD76.5
FRA74
OECD12.9
FRA9.9
OECD7
FRA7.7
OECD80.5
FRA82.6
8
HOW’S LIFE? 2020 © OECD 2020
Trends in current well-being since 2010 in France - II
Note: See note on page 7.
Kn
ow
led
ge
and
Ski
lls Student skills in science
(PISA mean scores)Average
En
viro
nm
enta
l
Qu
alit
y
Exposure to outdoor air pollution
(share of population > WHO threshold)Inequality
Life satisfaction
(mean value on a 0-10 scale)Average
Negative affect balance
(share of population reporting more negative
than positive feelings and states yesterday)
Inequality
Homicides
(per 100 000 population)Average
Gender gap in feeling safe
(percentage difference that women feel less
safe than men when walking alone at night)
Inequality
Wo
rk-l
ife
Bal
ance Time off
(time allocated to leisure and personal care,
hours per day)
Average
Social interactions
(hours per week)Average
Lack of social support
(share of people who report having no friends
or relatives whom they can count on in times
of trouble)
Inequality
Civ
ic
En
gag
emen
t
Voter turnout
(share of registered voters who cast votes)Average
Su
bje
ctiv
e W
ell-
bei
ng
Saf
ety
So
cial
Co
nn
ecti
on
s
OECD7.4
FRA7.3
OECD13
FRA13
OECD489
FRA493
FRA79.8
OECD62.8
FRA0.5
OECD2.4
OECD-16
FRA-10.6
FRA16.2
OECD15
OECD6
FRA6.2
OECD69
FRA75
OECD8.6
FRA8.7