Minimum wage worldwide: where can you live off the minimum wage?
We checked which countries have the most favourable ratio of basic grocery prices to minimum wage around the world
This is an archived report. The latest ranking is available here.
Picodi.com analysis team examined the change in petrol prices in the first half of 2021 compared to the previous year and counted how many litres of petrol Australians can buy for the average wage.
The first half of 2021 was characterised by the gradual defrosting of the economy and increase of petrol prices compared to the first half of 2020. In APAC countries, the highest price spikes were noted in India (+24%), Taiwan (+22.9%), and Malaysia (+20.9%).
Australia noted an 8.5% increase in prices, ranking 11th among APAC countries. Petrol prices also increased in countries like Japan (+6.7%), South Korea (+6%), and New Zealand (+2.9%).
In APAC countries, Malaysians fill up petrol the cheapest – in this country, 1 litre of petrol costs $0.49. Hong Kong has the highest prices with $2.44 per 1 litre. In Australia, the average petrol price in the first half of 2021 was A$1.37 or $1.05, which means it placed 9th out of 17 considered countries.
This year, we checked again how many litres of petrol can be bought for the average wage in various APAC countries.
For the third year in a row, the undefeated leader of the ranking is Australia with 4,128 litres of petrol. Singapore and New Zealand complete the podium with 2,037 and 2,026 litres respectively.
In Australia, according to the ABS latest data, the average gross salary amounts to A$1711.60 a week (A$5648.93 net a month). It means that an average Australian can buy 4,128 litres of petrol for the average monthly wage (1st place). In the previous year, Australians could buy 4,288 litres of petrol for the average wage.
Lower in the ranking were countries such as Japan (1,758 litres and 5th place), Taiwan (1,514 litres and 7th place), or China (955 litres and 8th place).
The Philippines, Indonesia, and Cambodia took the last three places with 297, 287 and 216 litres respectively.
Among 104 researched countries, the lowest petrol price was noted in Algeria ($0.34 per litre), and the highest price – in Hong Kong ($2.44 per litre).
In the global purchasing power ranking, the Gulf countries are consistently on the podium:
Americans can buy 4,723 litres of petrol for the average wage, Australians – 4,128 litres, Canadians – 2,616 litres, and Russians – 938 litres.
The worst situation was noted in Cuba. In this country, 26 litres of petrol can be bought for the average wage (2 litres less than in the previous year). Only a little better were Tajikistan and Zambia, with 188 and 214 litres.
It is also worth looking at Venezuela. This country struggles with an unstable economic situation, yet maintained last year’s limits on petrol purchases. Each citizen can buy 120 litres of petrol for about $0.002 per litre. Once the limit is exceeded, the price of petrol increases to $0.50 per litre. According to our calculations, the average wage in this country allows you to buy 230 litres of petrol (120 litres of subsidised and 110 litres in full price) which is 82 litres more than last year.
With increasing petrol prices, leaving your car in the garage might be a good idea. Picodi allows you to travel with DriveMyCar, Uber, Bolt, GoCatch and Klook, and get 5% of your spendings through cashback.
Petrol Index is an annual ranking of petrol prices to wages ratio, conducted by Picodi since 2019.
This report uses the average net monthly wages according to the latest available data provided by offices for national statistics or relevant ministries. In some countries, where official wage statistics are not available, we used information from Numbeo.
The average prices for the first half of 2021 in 104 countries are based on data from globalpetrolprices.com and other local sources. In order to obtain the number of litres, we divided the average wage by the average price of 1 litre of petrol. For currency conversion, we used the Google Finance average exchange rate for the last 90 days.
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