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Už od 2 eur sa môžete zabezpečiť Costa Rica Mzdy
Cena
Aktuálna hodnota Mzdy v Costa Rica je 753 847,3 CRC/mesiac. Mzdy v Costa Rica klesli na 753 847,3 CRC/mesiac dňa 1. 6. 2024, po tom, čo boli 786 281,6 CRC/mesiac dňa 1. 5. 2024. Od 1. 1. 2009 do 1. 7. 2024, priemerný HDP v Costa Rica bol 597 346,66 CRC/mesiac. Historické maximum bolo dosiahnuté dňa 1. 3. 2024 s hodnotou 815 538,90 CRC/mesiac, zatiaľ čo najnižšia hodnota bola zaznamenaná dňa 1. 2. 2009 s hodnotou 357 554,00 CRC/mesiac.
Mzdy ·
3 roky
5 rokov
10 rokov
25 rokov
Max
Mzdy | |
---|---|
1. 1. 2009 | 460 007,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2009 | 357 554,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2009 | 372 295,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2009 | 384 079,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2009 | 368 721,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2009 | 365 505,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2009 | 387 278,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2009 | 374 577,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2009 | 382 493,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2009 | 393 134,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2009 | 380 196,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2009 | 410 899,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2010 | 393 020,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2010 | 392 783,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2010 | 425 645,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2010 | 413 548,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2010 | 411 465,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2010 | 411 396,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2010 | 435 313,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2010 | 420 864,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2010 | 430 607,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2010 | 430 659,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2010 | 424 391,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2010 | 458 319,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2011 | 583 803,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2011 | 434 781,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2011 | 452 477,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2011 | 457 142,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2011 | 452 643,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2011 | 446 351,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2011 | 471 342,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2011 | 458 311,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2011 | 465 723,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2011 | 458 257,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2011 | 457 153,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2011 | 487 933,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2012 | 625 140,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2012 | 462 242,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2012 | 484 625,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2012 | 477 091,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2012 | 479 173,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2012 | 493 171,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2012 | 475 458,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2012 | 491 340,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2012 | 489 130,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2012 | 490 217,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2012 | 504 128,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2012 | 499 428,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2013 | 666 585,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2013 | 493 325,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2013 | 515 886,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2013 | 515 902,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2013 | 532 874,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2013 | 504 739,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2013 | 511 511,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2013 | 522 816,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2013 | 523 398,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2013 | 526 689,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2013 | 534 933,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2013 | 534 449,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2014 | 711 157,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2014 | 522 082,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2014 | 546 425,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2014 | 544 343,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2014 | 565 434,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2014 | 539 149,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2014 | 545 260,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2014 | 561 244,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2014 | 557 260,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2014 | 584 148,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2014 | 554 004,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2014 | 587 385,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2015 | 550 019,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2015 | 550 850,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2015 | 593 330,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2015 | 585 223,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2015 | 594 811,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2015 | 570 525,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2015 | 582 186,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2015 | 574 161,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2015 | 575 162,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2015 | 604 635,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2015 | 574 554,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2015 | 595 534,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2016 | 782 000,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2016 | 575 003,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2016 | 614 368,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2016 | 616 598,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2016 | 587 727,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2016 | 590 066,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2016 | 590 674,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2016 | 592 219,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2016 | 619 359,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2016 | 591 004,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2016 | 591 618,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2016 | 617 092,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2017 | 792 836,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2017 | 591 714,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2017 | 654 059,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2017 | 611 499,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2017 | 617 217,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2017 | 614 269,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2017 | 586 302,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2017 | 614 313,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2017 | 639 761,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2017 | 623 820,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2017 | 617 040,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2017 | 632 548,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2018 | 624 920,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2018 | 621 387,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2018 | 680 502,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2018 | 637 370,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2018 | 645 007,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2018 | 633 490,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2018 | 630 916,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2018 | 640 116,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2018 | 649 451,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2018 | 651 677,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2018 | 646 308,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2018 | 655 987,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2019 | 656 029,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2019 | 647 227,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2019 | 703 537,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2019 | 663 008,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2019 | 670 866,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2019 | 657 101,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2019 | 657 088,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2019 | 689 593,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2019 | 665 012,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2019 | 681 398,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2019 | 664 884,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2019 | 675 625,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2020 | 678 549,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2020 | 663 622,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2020 | 679 292,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2020 | 652 351,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2020 | 651 003,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2020 | 653 164,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2020 | 691 807,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2020 | 659 396,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2020 | 670 286,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2020 | 678 579,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2020 | 672 054,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2020 | 695 229,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2021 | 709 015,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2021 | 680 532,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2021 | 719 365,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2021 | 705 527,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2021 | 688 779,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2021 | 693 822,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2021 | 723 244,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2021 | 692 400,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2021 | 698 192,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2021 | 696 912,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2021 | 694 957,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2021 | 745 353,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2022 | 704 526,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2022 | 699 452,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2022 | 755 889,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2022 | 731 426,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2022 | 715 090,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2022 | 719 881,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2022 | 747 704,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2022 | 723 354,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2022 | 736 585,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2022 | 718 805,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2022 | 717 114,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2022 | 764 853,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2023 | 725 767,00 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2023 | 720 431,00 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2023 | 788 780,00 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2023 | 752 812,00 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2023 | 733 739,00 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2023 | 762 803,00 CRC/Month |
1. 7. 2023 | 730 029,00 CRC/Month |
1. 8. 2023 | 746 772,00 CRC/Month |
1. 9. 2023 | 752 789,00 CRC/Month |
1. 10. 2023 | 734 212,00 CRC/Month |
1. 11. 2023 | 739 966,00 CRC/Month |
1. 12. 2023 | 778 350,00 CRC/Month |
1. 1. 2024 | 741 312,50 CRC/Month |
1. 2. 2024 | 741 401,50 CRC/Month |
1. 3. 2024 | 815 538,90 CRC/Month |
1. 4. 2024 | 772 573,40 CRC/Month |
1. 5. 2024 | 786 281,60 CRC/Month |
1. 6. 2024 | 753 847,30 CRC/Month |
Mzdy História
Dátum | Hodnota |
---|---|
1. 6. 2024 | 753 847,3 CRC/mesiac |
1. 5. 2024 | 786 281,6 CRC/mesiac |
1. 4. 2024 | 772 573,4 CRC/mesiac |
1. 3. 2024 | 815 538,9 CRC/mesiac |
1. 2. 2024 | 741 401,5 CRC/mesiac |
1. 1. 2024 | 741 312,5 CRC/mesiac |
1. 12. 2023 | 778 350 CRC/mesiac |
1. 11. 2023 | 739 966 CRC/mesiac |
1. 10. 2023 | 734 212 CRC/mesiac |
1. 9. 2023 | 752 789 CRC/mesiac |
Podobné makroekonomické ukazovatele pre Mzdy
Meno | Aktuálne | Predchádzajúci | Frekvencia |
---|---|---|---|
🇨🇷 Miera nezamestnanosti | 7,8 % | 7,3 % | kvartál |
🇨🇷 Miera zamestnanosti | 51,536 % | 49,891 % | kvartál |
🇨🇷 Miera zamestnanosti | 55,9 % | 53,8 % | kvartál |
🇨🇷 Minimálne mzdy | 6 079,01 points | 6 079,01 points | Mesačne |
🇨🇷 Nezamestnané osoby | 201 124 | 182 968 | kvartál |
🇨🇷 populácia | 5,163 mil. | 5,21 mil. | Ročne |
🇨🇷 Zamestnanci | 2,157 mil. | 2,158 mil. | kvartál |
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Čo je Mzdy
Wages constitute a critical facet of macroeconomic analysis, integral to understanding broader economic trends and patterns. This category, delving into the nuances of remuneration, plays a pivotal role in shaping economic theories and policy formulations. On Eulerpool, our professional platform dedicated to presenting macroeconomic data in a meticulous and comprehensible manner, the Wages category is meticulously curated to provide users with unparalleled insights into the dynamics of earnings within an economy. This detailed examination is essential for government bodies, businesses, academic researchers, and economic enthusiasts who seek to decipher the complex web of factors influencing wages. Firstly, wages are fundamentally defined as the monetary compensation paid by employers to employees in exchange for labor performed over a specified period. This concept extends beyond the surface level of monthly salaries or hourly rates, encompassing a plethora of forms such as bonuses, overtime pay, and non-monetary benefits. In the context of macroeconomics, wages are not only a reflection of individual earnings but also a crucial indicator of economic health, productivity, and labor market conditions. Understanding the fluctuations and trends in wages provides critical insights into the living standards, consumer spending capabilities, and overall economic stability of a country. The analysis of wages in the macroeconomic sphere often begins with the distinction between nominal and real wages. Nominal wages refer to the gross amount of money earned by workers before any deductions like taxes or social security contributions. While nominal wages offer a straightforward measure of earnings, they do not account for changes in purchasing power due to inflation. On the other hand, real wages are adjusted for inflation, reflecting the actual buying power of the wages earned. This distinction is vital for a comprehensive understanding of wage trends, as it underscores the impact of inflation on living standards and economic well-being. The determinants of wages are multifaceted, involving an interplay of supply and demand in the labor market, institutional factors, and macroeconomic policies. Labor supply is influenced by demographic factors, educational attainment, and labor force participation rates. A larger workforce or higher levels of education can increase the supply of labor, potentially exerting downward pressure on wages. Conversely, labor demand is shaped by economic growth, industrial expansion, and technological advancements. Higher demand for labor, particularly in burgeoning industries, can drive up wages. Institutional factors such as minimum wage laws, collective bargaining agreements, and labor market regulations also play a crucial role in determining wage levels. Minimum wage legislation sets the lowest legal salary that employers can pay, aiming to protect workers from exploitation and ensure a basic standard of living. Collective bargaining, where labor unions negotiate salaries and working conditions on behalf of employees, can lead to higher wages and improved benefits. Furthermore, labor market policies such as unemployment insurance, taxation, and social security systems can influence wage dynamics by affecting both labor supply and demand. Macro-economic policies, encompassing fiscal and monetary measures, significantly impact wage trends. Fiscal policies, including government spending and taxation, affect aggregate demand and can stimulate job creation, thereby influencing wage levels. Monetary policies, through interest rate adjustments and control over money supply, can also indirectly affect wages by influencing inflation rates and economic growth. For instance, low-interest rates can spur investment and job creation, potentially leading to higher wages. The relationship between wages and productivity is a cornerstone of macroeconomic analysis. Productivity, defined as the output per unit of labor, is a critical determinant of wage levels. Higher productivity typically results in higher wages as firms can afford to pay more due to increased output and efficiency. This relationship underscores the importance of investments in education, training, and technology to enhance labor productivity and, consequently, wage levels. Furthermore, wage inequality is a pressing issue within the macroeconomic discourse. Disparities in wages can arise due to various factors, including differences in education, experience, gender, and industry sectors. Wage inequality has significant socio-economic implications, potentially leading to reduced social mobility, increased poverty levels, and heightened social tensions. Analyzing wage distribution and inequality is essential for formulating policies aimed at promoting equitable economic growth and social cohesion. Globalization and technological advancements have also brought about significant shifts in wage dynamics. The integration of global markets has led to increased competition, influencing wage patterns across countries. Outsourcing and offshoring practices can result in wage pressures in higher-income countries while potentially boosting wages in developing economies. Technological advancements, particularly automation and artificial intelligence, are reshaping labor markets by altering the demand for certain skills and occupations, thereby impacting wage structures. In Slovakia, the examination of wages within the macroeconomic framework sheds light on the country’s economic trajectory and labor market conditions. The Slovak economy, characterized by its robust industrial base, particularly in the automotive and manufacturing sectors, presents unique wage dynamics. The transition from a centrally planned economy to a market-oriented system has also influenced wage patterns, with market forces playing a more pronounced role in wage determination. Government policies in Slovakia, including minimum wage regulations and labor market reforms, aim to enhance wage levels and labor conditions. The country’s integration into the European Union has further influenced wage dynamics through increased labor mobility, foreign investment, and adherence to EU labor standards. Analyzing the interplay of these factors provides a comprehensive understanding of wage trends in Slovakia. In conclusion, the Wages category on Eulerpool offers a profound exploration of earnings within the macroeconomic context. By delving into the determinants, implications, and trends of wages, this category provides invaluable insights for a diverse audience. Whether for policy formulation, business strategy, or academic research, understanding wages is indispensable for comprehending broader economic phenomena. As a professional website dedicated to macroeconomic data, Eulerpool is committed to delivering accurate, insightful, and comprehensive information on wages and other critical economic indicators.