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Euronews (English)
That's according to new research carried out by Bloomberg, which highlighted which countries on the continent are lacking female leadership at the top. It named Ireland and Luxembourg as the two countries in the less-than-flattering position, which comes as a reminder that there is still progress to be made for women to have equal opportunities in top jobs. The 'pink tax': Why are women and men treated differently when it comes to sales?For Ireland, the retirement of Margaret Sweeney, the chief executive of Irish Residential Properties REIT, resulted in all 31 companies listed on Euronext Dubl...
Euronews (English)
PR company Reboot Online crunched the numbers from datasets of 32 European countries and found Norway is the best European country for females to work. The Scandinavian country snagged the top spot based on data from the European Institute for Gender Quality (EIGC) and the World Economic Forum. Criteria is based on each country’s amount of 16–65-year-old women employed, the quality of maternity leave, how many females are in positions of power, and other factors. Where in Europe do you pay the highest capital gains tax?The ranking - Norway leadsNorway scored a 7.1 out of 10 in the analysis, tr...
Euronews (English)
Paris was named the best city for start-up businesses, closely followed by Madrid and Barcelona, in a new report from UK-based training company The Knowledge Academy. The various cities in this ranking earned their scores on a scale of 0-10 judged by the number of available office spaces, rental prices, proximity of top universities, the speed of internet (Mbps) among others. However, the report didn't consider regulatory background, bureaucracy or taxation. Are France and Spain the best places for start-ups?France did very well in this ranking, with two cities in the top five, while Spain dom...
Euronews (English)
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