Most everyone living in Norway is already acutely aware of the country's high prices, and a new study confirms it once again. Income levels, though, are also among the highest.
The study, conducted by Eurostat to examine purchasing power in Europe's 31 countries, shows that prices in Norway are an average 38 percent higher than those in the 25 European countries that are members of the European Union.
Prices in Norway were fully 60 percent higher on average than in Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, according to survey data from 2004.
Thursday, December 22, 2005
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