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  • 7-November-2023

    English, PDF, 152kb

    Health at a Glance 2023: Key findings for Slovenia

    Health at a Glance provides the latest comparable data and trends on population health and health system performance. This Country Note shows how Slovenia compares to other OECD countries across indicators in the report.

  • 14-September-2023

    English, PDF, 229kb

    Embracing a One Health Framework to Fight Antimicrobial Resistance in Slovenia

    Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) – the ability of microbes to resist antimicrobials - remains an alarming global health threat that jeopardises the effectiveness of many 20th century public health advances. In recent years, Slovenia made important strides in tackling AMR. Yet, more progress is needed.

  • 25-April-2023

    English

    Taxing Wages: Key findings for Slovenia

    The tax wedge for the average single worker in Slovenia decreased by 0.7 percentage points from 43.5% in 2021 to 42.8% in 2022. The OECD average tax wedge in 2022 was 34.6% (2021, 34.6%).

  • 30-November-2022

    English

    Revenue Statistics: Key findings for Slovenia

    The OECD’s annual Revenue Statistics report found that the tax-to-GDP ratio in Slovenia increased by 0.2 percentage points from 37.2% in 2020 to 37.4% in 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, the OECD average increased from 33.6% to 34.1%.

  • 1-septembre-2021

    Français

    Slovénie: Ambassadeur, Représentant permanent auprès de l'OCDE

    Notice biographique du représentant permanent de la Slovénie auprès de l'OCDE

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  • 19-May-2021

    English, PDF, 286kb

    Preventing Harmful Alcohol Use: Key Findings for Slovenia

    People in Slovenia consume on average 11.9 litres of pure alcohol per capita per year, roughly equivalent to 2.4 bottles of wine or 4.6 litres of beer per week per person aged 15 and over. In addition, in Slovenia, some population groups are at higher risk than others.

  • 18-March-2021

    English

    Slovenia’s lack of enforcement of foreign bribery remains a serious concern as allegations of political interference in criminal investigations and prosecutions escalate

    Foreign bribery enforcement is lacking in Slovenia, which has had no foreign bribery cases reach trial stage since 1999.

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  • 9-March-2020

    English, PDF, 1,242kb

    How's life in Slovenia?

    This note presents selected findings based on the set of well-being indicators published in How's Life? 2020.

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  • 4-December-2018

    English, PDF, 546kb

    Good jobs for all in a changing world of work: The new OECD Jobs Strategy – Key findings for Slovenia

    The digital revolution, globalisation and demographic changes are transforming labour markets at a time when policy makers are also struggling with slow productivity and wage growth and high levels of income inequality. The new OECD Jobs Strategy provides a comprehensive framework and policy recommendations to help countries address these challenges.

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  • 21-August-2018

    English

    OECD Tax Policy Reviews: Slovenia 2018

    This report is part of the OECD Tax Policy Reviews. The Reviews are intended to provide independent, comprehensive and comparative assessments of OECD member and non-member countries’ tax systems as well as concrete recommendations for tax policy reform. By identifying tailored tax policy reform options, the objective of the Reviews is to enhance the design of existing tax policies and to support the adoption of new reforms. This report provides a comprehensive tax policy assessment of the taxes paid by individuals in Slovenia as well as tax reform recommendations. The report is divided into six chapters, with a summary of the main findings upfront, followed by more detailed recommendations at the end of chapters 3 to 6.  Chapter 1 sets the scene for tax reform in Slovenia. Chapter 2 focuses on the labour market, social policy and tax policy related challenges. The ensuing chapters assess the financing of the social security system (Chapter 3), identify strategies to strengthen the design of personal income tax (Chapter 4), indirect taxes (Chapter 5), and the taxation of capital income at the individual level (Chapter 6).
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