List of minimum wages by country
The list below gives the official minimum wage rates in some countries. They are national minimums so it is possible that a political subdivision may have a higher minimum (say the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany). Some countries are more effective than others at enforcing these laws, so that the effective minimum wage may be lower than the official one. A 2005 average exchange rate for the US dollar was used.
| Country | Minimum wage | % of GDP per capita | Annual wage (USD) |
| Afghanistan | N/A | — | — |
| Albania | 11,800 lek per month for government workers over the age of 18; there is no minimum wage for workers in the private sector | 59 | 1,379 |
| Algeria | 10,000 dinars per month | 53 | 1,638 |
| Andorra | €6 per hour and €820 per month | N/A | 12,237 |
| Angola | 5,400 kwanza per month | 39 | 731 |
| Antigua and Barbuda | EC$6.00 an hour for all categories of labor | 44 | 4,6221 |
| Argentina | 630 pesos a month | 54 | 2,604 |
| Armenia | 13 thousand AMD per month | 30 | 341 |
| Australia | AUD 511.86 per week; most workers receive higher wages through enterprise agreements or individual contracts; trainees and apprentices, who combine employment with accredited training have minimum wage rates which vary between AUD 173.00 and AUD 453.00 per week depending on the level of schooling completed | 55 | 20,3151 |
| Austria | none by law; instead, nationwide collective bargaining agreements set minimum wages by job classification for each industry; the accepted unofficial annual minimum wage is €12,000 to €14,000 | 26-30 | 9,649-11,257 |
| Azerbaijan | 150 thousand manat per month | 26 | 381 |
| Bahamas | B$4.00 per hour for the private sector; B$4.45 per hour for government employees | 45/50 | 8,320/9,2561 |
| Bahrain | none; the government has stated that the public and private sectors should pay workers no less than 150 dinars per month; the government's lowest pay grade for its civilian employees is 200 dinars per month | 30/40 | 4,787/6,383 |
| Bangladesh | taka 2,650 for a skilled industrial worker outside an EPZ and taka 3,400 a month for a skilled industrial worker in an EPZ | 123/157 | 494/634 |
| Barbados | BDS$5 per hour for household domestics and shop assistants | 45 | 5,2001 |
| Belarus | 118 thousand rubles a month | 22 | 659 |
| Belgium | €1,243 a month for workers over 21 years of age; 18-year-olds must be paid at least 82% of the minimum, 19-year-olds 88%, and 20-year-olds 94% of the minimum. | 52 | 18,550 |
| Belize | US$2.25 BLZ an hour for all workers | 66 | 2,6332 |
| Benin | 25 thousand CFA francs per month; the government administratively set minimum wage scales for a number of occupations | 96 | 569 |
| Bhutan | 100 ngultrums per day plus various allowances paid in cash or kind | 56 | 590 |
| Bolivia | 436 bolivianos per month | 61 | 649 |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 82 convertible marks in Republika Srpska; 308 convertible marks per month in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. | 26/98 | 626/2,350 |
| Botswana | 2.90 pula an hour for most full-time labor in the private sector | 20 | 1,1801 |
| Brazil | R$350 per month; adjusted annually by the Federal government; each state is free to set its own minimum wage, provided it is not lower than the Federal wage. | 40 | 1,725 |
| Brunei | none | — | — |
| Bulgaria | 160 leva per month | 35 | 1,220 |
| Burkina Faso | 22,800 CFA francs a month in the formal sector; does not apply to subsistence agriculture | 118 | 519 |
| Burundi | 160 Burundian francs per day for unskilled workers | 35 | 37 |
| Cambodia | US$45 per month for the garment and footwear industries; it may vary regionally | 144 | 540 |
| Cameroon | 23,514 CFA francs per month; applicable in all sectors | 56 | 535 |
| Canada | set by each province and territory; minimum hourly wages vary from CAD$6.70 to CAD$8.00 in the provinces and up to CAD$8.50 in Nunavut; Ontario has a minimum wage rate for youths lower than its minimum for adult workers; British Columbia has a lower rate for the first 500 hours in the workforce regardless of age; employers under federal jurisdiction are bound by their host province's general minimum wage (i.e. the lower minimums for youths, etc. in some provinces do not apply at the federal level) (see list of minimum wages in Canada) | 32-421 | 11,157-14,590 |
| Cape Verde | none in the private sector; 12,000 Cape Verdean escudos per month for an entry‑level worker as set by large urban private employers by linking their minimum wages to those paid to civil servants | 78 | 1,624 |
| Central African Republic | 6,519 CFA francs a month for agricultural workers; 15,211 CFA francs a month for office workers. | 44/103 | 148/346 |
| Chad | 25,480 FCFA per month | 96 | 580 |
| Chile | 135,000 pesos per month for those aged 18–65; 101,491 pesos for those younger than 18 and for those older than 65; and 87,697 pesos for honorary payments (Chilean Law 20,039 [1]) | 41 | 3,004 |
| People's Republic of China | none nationally, but the Labor Law allows local governments to set a minimum wage | — | — |
| Colombia | 380 thousand pesos a month; established by the government every January, serving as a benchmark for wage bargaining | 72 | 1,965 |
| Comoros | none | — | — |
| Democratic Republic of the Congo | minimum wage laws are suspended as of 2005 | — | — |
| Republic of the Congo | 54,000 CFA francs per month in the formal sector | 70 | 1,228 |
| Costa Rica | ranging from 72,586 colones a month for domestic employees to 285,635 colones for university graduates, for the private sector; set by the National Wage Council | 40-157 | 1,823-7,174 |
| Croatia | 1,850 kunas per month | 45 | 3,733 |
| Cuba | it varies by occupation; on average, 225 pesos a month; supplemented by the government with free education, subsidized medical care (daily pay is reduced by 40 percent after the third day of being admitted to a hospital), housing, and some subsidized food | N/A | 108 |
| Cyprus | 594 Turkish new lira per month | 26 | 5,241 |
| Czech Republic | 7,185 CZK a month | 30 | 3,599 |
| Denmark | none by law | — | — |
| Dominica | set by law for various categories of workers (last revised in 1989); as low as EC$1.00 per hour for some categories of workers (e.g., household employees) if meals are included; for most workers ranges from EC$2.00 per hour for tourist industry workers to EC$3.00 per hour for occupations such as shop clerk; labor laws provide that the labor commissioner may authorize the employment of a person with disabilities at a wage lower than the minimum rate in order to enable that person to be employed gainfully. | >20/39-59 | >770/1,541-2,3111 |
| Dominican Republic | 3,561 pesos a month in the FTZs and 4,920 pesos outside the FTZs; 1,906 pesos per month for the public sector; 13 pesos an hour for farm workers who are covered by minimum wage regulations, based on a 10-hour day | 23-60 | 752-1,942 |
| East Timor | not stipulated in law; in practice, US$85 per month | 270 | 1,020 |
| Ecuador | as of December 2005 the minimum wage plus mandated bonuses provided a gross monthly compensation of approximately US$166, or US$0.95 per hour, in the case of contract workers | 80 | 1,992 |
| Egypt | N/A; determined by the National Council of Wages for government and public sector employees; it differs among sectors | — | — |
| El Salvador | US$5.28 a day for service employees; US$5.16 for industrial laborers; US$5.04 for maquila workers; US$2.47 for agriculture industry workers, with US$3.57 for seasonal agriculture industry workers | 26-56 | 642-1,373 |
| Equatorial Guinea | N/A; set by the government | — | — |
| Eritrea | 325 nakfa per month in the civil service sector | n/c | n/c |
| Estonia | 2,690 EEK per month; approximately 94 percent of the workforce earns above the minimum wage | 26 | 2,565 |
| Fiji | N/A; set for certain sectors | — | — |
| Finland | not in law; however, the law requires all employers, including nonunionized ones, to meet the minimum wages agreed to in collective bargaining agreements in each sector of the workforce; almost all workers are covered under such arrangements | — | — |
| France | €8.03 per hour | 54 | 18,1753 |
| Georgia | 115 GEL a month for public employees; 20 GEL a month for private sector sector workers; 28 GEL a month for pensioners | 9-51 | 132-761 |
| Germany | none by law (but in discussion); set by collective bargaining agreements | — | — |
| Ghana | 13,520 cedis a day | 76 | 387 |
| Greece | €28 daily and €616 monthly; set by the GSEE and the Employers' Association through collective bargaining and routinely ratified by the Ministry of Labor | 46 | 9,193 |
| Grenada | set for various categories of workers; for example, agricultural workers were classified into male and female workers; rates for men were EC$5.00 per hour, and for women EC$4.75 per hour; however, if a female worker performed the same task as a man, her rate of pay was the same; the minimum wage for domestic workers was set at EC$400 monthly | 39-85 | 1,778-3,852 |
| Guatemala | 42.46 quetzales a day in agriculture and 43.64 quetzales a day in non-agricultural work; a mandatory monthly incentive bonus for salaried employees of 250 quetzales, effectively raises the minimum wage to 53.8 quetzales per day for agricultural work and 55 quetzales for non-agricultural work | 92-94 | 1,832-1,873 |
| Guinea | the labor code allows the government to set a minimum hourly wage; however, the government has not exercised this provision nor does it promote a standard wage | — | — |
| Guinea-Bissau | 19,030 CFA per month plus a bag of rice | n/c | n/c |
| Guyana | G$22,099 per month; G$3,300 per week for certain categories of private sector workers; affected occupations include retail cashiers and clerks, printers, drivers, and conductors | 83/128 | 855/1,321 |
| Haiti | 36 gourdes a day | 46 | 231 |
| Honduras | broken down by sector and size of business: small (1-15 workers) and large (16 or more workers); the scale ranges from 61.3 lempiras a day for workers in small agriculture to 97.8 lempiras a day for workers in financial and insurance companies and workers in export-oriented businesses, including maquiladoras and commercial agriculture, such as tobacco, coffee, bananas, and seafood production; workers in areas such as construction, services, mining, transportation, communication, etc., had minimum wages between these two rates | 74-117 | 842-1,344 |
| Hong Kong | applies only to foreign laborers | — | — |
| Hungary | 62,500 HUF per month; set by the IRC through agreement among its participants, representatives of the Government, employers, and employees | 34 | 3,758 |
| Iceland | none; minimum wages are negotiated in various collectively bargained agreements and applied automatically to all employees in those occupations, regardless of union membership; while the agreements can be either industry- or sector-wide, and in some cases firm-specific, the minimum wage levels are occupation-specific | — | — |
| India | varies according to the state and to the sector of industry; state governments set a separate minimum wage for agricultural workers; some industries, such as the apparel and footwear industries, did not have a prescribed minimum wage in any of the states in which they operated | — | — |
| Indonesia | 710 thousand rupiah per month; as low as 340 thousand rupiah per month in one area; set by provincial and district authorities based on proposals by tripartite (workers, employers, and government) provincial wage commissions | >33/70 | >420/878 |
| Iran | 122 thousand tomans a month; established annually for each industrial sector and region | 46 | 1,307 |
| Iraq | 5,250 dinars per day for an unskilled worker; 10,500 dinars per day for a skilled worker | 52/104 | 925/1,851 |
| Israel | approximately 45.3% of the average wage; as of January 2006 the minimum wage was 3,335.18 New Israel Shekels per month; 133.41 New Israel Shekels a day for those employed on the basis of a six-day work week; 153.93 New Israel Shekels for those employed on the basis of a five-day work week; the minimum hourly wage is 1/186 of the monthly minimum, or 17.93 New Israel Shekels [2] | 49 | 8,918 |
| Italy | none by law; instead set by a collective bargaining agreements on a sector-by-sector basis; when an employer and a union fail to reach an agreement, courts may determine fair wages on the basis of practice in comparable activities, although this rarely occurs in practice | — | — |
| Ireland | €7.65 per hour for workers with more than two years experience over the age of eighteen. Other rates, between 70% and 90% of the minimum wage, apply for those in training, under the age of eighteen, and those in the first two years of employment after the age of eighteen. | 40 | 19,2934 |
| Jamaica | J$2,400 per week and J$90 per hour for private security guards | 56 | 1,996 |
| Japan | ranges from 606 yen to 710 yen per hour; set on a regional (prefectural) and industry basis, with the input of tripartite (workers, employers, public interest) advisory councils | 32-37 | 11,436-13,3991 |
| Jersey | JEP 5.24 per hour for all workers, however trainees rate is JEP 3.94 per hour | 50.5 | 20 1941 |
| Jordan | 90 dinars per month | 69 | 1,523 |
| Kazakhstan | 9,200 KZT a month | 22 | 831 |
| Kiribati | none; in practice, between A$1.60 to A$1.70 per hour | 343-364 | 2,303-2,4475 |
| North Korea | N/A | — | — |
| South Korea | 3,100 won per hour and 24,800 won per day as of September 2005; reviewed annually | 38 | 6,296 |
| Kuwait | 200 dinars per month for public sector citizen employees and 90 dinars for public sector non-citizen employees; no legal minimum wage in the private sector | 32 | 8,219 |
| Kyrgyzstan | 100 som per month | 6 | 29 |
| Laos | 4 thousand kip a day | 21 | 96 |
| Latvia | 80 lats a month | 24 | 1,700 |
| Lebanon | 300 thousand pounds per month | 40 | 2,388 |
| Libya | none; wages are forbidden by the Green Book and paid in the form of "entitlements" | — | — |
| Liechtenstein | none | — | — |
| Lithuania | 550 litas per month | 32 | 2,379 |
| Luxembourg | varies according to the worker's age and number of dependents; for a single worker over the age of 18 is €1,403 per month for unskilled workers, and €1,684 per month for skilled workers | 28/33 | 20,938/25,131 |
| FYR Macedonia | none | — | — |
| Madagascar | 50,600 ariary per month | n/c | n/c |
| Malaysia | 350 ringgit per month for plantation workers; raised to 700 ringgit by productivity incentives and bonuses | 44 | 2,211 |
| Maldives | none for the private sector; the government establishes wage floors for government employment | — | — |
| Malta | 56 Maltese lira a week for adults, combined with an annual mandatory bonus of 214 Maltese lira and a 38 Maltese lira annual cost of living increase allowance; citizens are also entitled to additional government subsidies for housing, health care, and education | 67 | 9,151 |
| Mali | 28 thousand CFA francs per month | n/c | n/c |
| Marshall Islands | US$2.00 per hour for government and private sector employees | N/A | 4,1601 |
| Mauritania | 21,000 ouguiya per month for adults | n/c | n/c |
| Mauritius | between 492-644 MUR per week, depending of wheter or not in the EPZ | n/c | $17-$22 |
| Mexico | 48.67 pesos a day in Zone A (Baja California, Federal District, State of Mexico, and large cities); 47.16 pesos a day in Zone B (Sonora, Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Jalisco); and 45.81 pesos a day in Zone C (all other states) | 15-16 | 1,093-1,161 |
| Federated States of Micronesia | US$2.00 per hour for government workers and US$1.35 for private-sector workers in Pohnpei; US$1.25 per hour for government workers in Chuuk; US$1.49 per hour for government workers in Kosrae; US$0.80 per hour for government workers in Yap; US$2.64 for employment with the national government | N/A | 2,600-5,491 |
| Moldova | 200 lei a month for public sector employees and 550 lei for private sector employees | 23/64 | 190/524 |
| Monaco | same as the French minimum wage for full-time work, plus a 5% adjustment | N/A | 19,084 |
| Mongolia | 40 thousand tugrik per month for public and private sector workers; virtually all civil servants earn more, and many in private businesses earn considerably more; some employees receive housing benefits | 55 | 404 |
| Morocco | 2,023 dirhams per month in the industrialized sector and 56 dirhams per day for agricultural workers | 159 | 2,738 |
| Myanmar | 136 kyat a day for salaried public employees; supplemented by various subsidies and allowances | 34 | 33 |
| Namibia | no statutory minimum wage law; the mining, construction, and agricultural sectors set basic levels of pay through collective bargaining | — | — |
| Nauru | none | — | — |
| Nepal | 1,894 NRS a month for unskilled labor; 1,944 NRS for semi-skilled labor; 2,054 NRS for skilled labor; 2,244 NRS for highly skilled labor; additional allowances for food and other benefits totaled 500 NRS per month | 99-117 | 318-377 |
| Netherlands | €1,264 per month plus 8% holiday allowance, summing to €1,349.14 (the amount is less for those 22 years old or younger) | 53 | 20,134 |
| New Zealand | NZ$10.25 per hour for workers 18 years old or older, and NZ$8.20 per hour for those aged 16 or 17 [3] | 57 | 15,011 |
| Nicaragua | each key sector of the economy has a different minimum wage; in every sector the minimum wage was below the 2,602 cordobas that the government estimated an urban family needed monthly for a basic basket of goods | <215 | <1,866 |
| Norway | none | — | — |
| Oman | set for various categories of workers; 100 rials per month for most citizens, plus 20 rials for transportation and housing | 30 | 3,745 |
| Pakistan | PKR 2,500 per month for unskilled workers applying only to industrial and commercial establishments employing 50 or more workers | 66 | 504 |
| Palau | US$2.50 per hour; does not include foreign workers | N/A | 5,200 |
| Panama | ranges from 0.82 balboas to 1.56 balboas per hour, depending on the region and sector; the law establishes minimum wage rates for specific regions and for most categories of labor, excluding public sector workers | 43-82 | 2,047-3,8946 |
| Papua New Guinea | 37.50 kina per week for adult workers in the private sector; 75% of the adult minimum wage for new entrants into the labor force between 16 and 21 years of age | 71/95 | 475/633 |
| Paraguay | 1.08 million guaranies per month for private sector workers; there is no public sector minimum wage | 180 | 2,098 |
| Peru | 500 soles per month | 65 | 1,820 |
| Philippines | ranges from P325 a day for nonagricultural workers in the National Capital Region (NCR) to P180 a day for agricultural workers in the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM); set by tripartite regional wage boards | 73-132 | 850-1,534 |
| Poland | 899 PLN per month | 42 | 3,334 |
| Portugal | €374.70 per month; covers full-time workers as well as rural workers and domestic employees ages 18 and over | 32 | 5,592 |
| Qatar | none | — | — |
| Russia | 1,100 rubles per month | 9 | 467 |
| Romania | 370 lei per month | 36 | 1,644 |
| Rwanda | N/A; it varies according to the nature of the job | — | — |
| Samoa | WST$2.00 per hour | 84 | 1,5351 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | EC$150 per week for full-time domestic workers; EC$200 per week for skilled workers | 27/35 | 2,889/3,852 |
| Saint Lucia | EC$300 a month for office clerks; EC$200 for shop assistants; EC$160 for messengers | 15-29 | 711-1,333 |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | EC$25 per day for agriculture industry workers; EC$30 per day for industrial workers earned | 61/73 | 2,407/2,889 |
| San Marino | €6.7 per hour | N/A | 15,5987/16,2488 |
| Saudi Arabia | none; de facto minimum wage for citizen workers is set based on the minimum monthly contribution to the pension system, which is now 1,500 riyals a month | 36 | 4,804 |
| São Tomé and Príncipe | 400,000 dobras per month for civil servants | n/c | n/c |
| Senegal | 175.91 FCFA per hour (farming wage), 209.10 FCFA (industrial wage) | 47.000 FCFA/month (industrial wage) | 91 |
| Serbia and Montenegro | €52 per month | 25 | 776 |
| Sierra Leone | 40,000 leones per month | n/c | n/c |
| Singapore | no laws or regulations | — | — |
| Slovakia | 6,900 SKK per month | 31 | 2,669 |
| Slovenia | 122,600 tolarjev a month | 45 | 7,634 |
| Solomon Island | SI$1.50 per hour for all workers except those in the fishing and agricultural sectors, who receive SI$1.25 | 65/78 | 388/4662 |
| Somalia | none | — | — |
| South Africa | R950 a month for farm workers in urban areas and R872 a month in rural areas; for domestics depends on the number of hours worked and ranges from R3.87 an hour to R5.25 an hour; set by sector | 28-38 | 1,424-1,9322 |
| Spain | €540.90 per month | 30 | 8,072 |
| Sri Lanka | N/A; thirty-eight wage boards established by the Ministry of Labor set minimum wages and working conditions by sector and industry | — | — |
| Sudan | SDD 12,500 per month | n/c | n/c |
| Suriname | none | — | — |
| Swaziland | 300 emalangeni a month for a domestic worker; 420 emalangeni a month for an unskilled worker; 600 emalangeni a month for a skilled worker | n/c | n/c |
| Sweden | none by law; set by collective bargaining contracts every year | — | — |
| Switzerland | none by law; it is normally 3,000 CHF a month set by collective agreements | 57 | 28,911 |
| Syria | 3,200 Syrian pounds per month for public sector workers, plus benefits, including compensation for meals, uniforms, and transportation; 3,500 Syrian pounds per month for private sector workers; private sector companies usually paid much higher wages than the minimum | 241 | 3,421 |
| Taiwan | NT$15,840 a month | 40 | 5,994 |
| Tajikistan | 12 somoni per month | 13 | 46 |
| Tanzania | 48 thousand shillings per month for employment in the formal sector | n/c | n/c |
| Thailand | ranges from 139 baht to 181 baht per day, depending on the cost of living in various provinces; set by provincial wage committees that sometimes include only employer representatives | 35/45 | 899/1,170 |
| Togo | range from 10,000 to 16,000 CFA francs | n/c | n/c |
| Tonga | none | — | — |
| Trinidad and Tobago | TT$9.00 per hour | 24 | 2,9791 |
| Tunisia | 194 dinars per month for the industrial sector; 7.33 dinars per day for "specialized" agricultural workers and 7.71 dinars per day for "qualified" agricultural workers | 49-60 | 1,469-1,794 |
| Turkey | 489 lira per month | 86 | 4,367 |
| Turkmenistan | 1 to 1.5 million TMM per month in the state sector | ~14-21 | ~500-750 |
| Tuvalu | A$130 biweekly in the public sector; adopted by the private sector in most cases | N/A | 2,581 |
| Uganda | 6,000 shillings per month | n/c | n/c |
| Ukraine | 350 hryvnia per month | 47 | 820 |
| United Arab Emirates | none; officials do not approve any labor contracts that stipulate substandard wages | — | — |
| United Kingdom | £5.35 per hour for 22-year-olds and above (except those within the first six months of their job and receiving accredited training); £4.45 per hour for 18-to-21-year-olds and those within the first six months of their job and receiving accredited training; £3.30 per hour for under-18s who have finished compulsory education; none for those who have not yet finished compulsory education (the age when a person finishes compulsory education is either 15 or 16, depending on where their birthday falls in the school year) | 19,098 | |
| United States | the federal minimum wage is US$5.15 per hour, although workers under age 20 can be paid US$4.25 an hour for their first 90 days; some states also have minimum wage laws ranging from US$2.65 in Kansas (for some jobs not covered by the federal rate, i.e. those that receive substantial gratuity), to US$7.63 an hour in Washington; some cities and counties have living wage ordinances of up to US$15.00 an hour although the groups of workers it applies to are often limited (29 USC Sec. 206) (OK Statutes 40-197.5) (Revised Code of Washington Sec. 49.46.020) [4] See List of U.S. state minimum wages | 251 | 10,712 |
| Uruguay | 2,500 pesos per month | 26 | 1,226 |
| Uzbekistan | 9,400 soum per month | 25 | 111 |
| Vanuatu | 20 thousand vatu per month | ~150 | ~2,300 |
| Venezuela | 512 thousand bolivars a month | 46 | 2,856 |
| Vietnam | for foreign‑investment joint ventures (monthly): 626 thousand VND in urban districts of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City; 556 thousand VND in rural districts of Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and districts of Hai Phong, Bien Hoa City, and Vung Tau City; and 487 thousand VND elsewhere; the government may temporarily exempt certain joint ventures from paying the minimum wage during the first months of an enterprise's operations or if the enterprise is located in a very remote area, but the minimum wage in these cases can be no lower than 417 thousand VND; adjusted for inflation and other economic changes; for the state sector: 350 thousand VND a month | 52-78 | 318-477 |
| Yemen | none | — | — |
| Zambia | 83,200 kwacha per month for nonunionized workers | n/c | n/c |
| Zimbabwe | gardener, Z$800,000; cook/housekeeper, Z$850,000; child‑ or disabled‑minder, Z$900,000); and child‑ or disabled‑minder with Red Cross certification, Z$950,000 | n/c | n/c |
1 40 h/week; 2 45 h/week; 3 35 h/week; 4 39 h/week; 5 36¼ h/week; 6 48 h/week; 7 36 h/week; 8 37½ h/week
References
- Country Reports on Human Rights Practices (2005) (United States Department of State)
- Romania: FedEE review of minimum wages in Europe
- CIA World Factbook's yearly average dollar exchange rates
- GDP information from list of countries by GDP (nominal) per capita
Categories
Economics lists | Lists of countries | Employment compensation
