1st: countries sorted by development of the number of notes entered per day (2009-2012)
(example: belgium had 4591.25 notes entered per day in 2009, in 2012 it was 5176.38, so they improved by 12.74 %)
1. | Monaco | + 3,851.52 % | |
2. | Estonia | + 2,753.74 % | |
3. | Cyprus | + 143.64 % | |
4. | Ireland | + 56.34 % | |
5. | Non-Euro Countries | + 34.09 % | |
6. | Luxemburg | + 23.54 % | |
7. | Belgium | + 12.74 % | |
8. | Spain | + 7.74 % | |
9. | Germany | + 1.1 % | |
10. | France | - 2.26 % | |
11. | Italy | - 10.61 % | |
12. | Slovenia | - 12.65 % | |
13. | Netherlands | - 14.53 % | |
14. | Greece | - 19.06 % | |
15. | Malta | - 25.2 % | |
16. | Finland | - 32.11 % | |
17. | San Marino | - 32.19 % | |
18. | Portugal | - 34.77 % | |
19. | Austria | - 38.43 % | |
20. | Slovakia | - 40.12 % | |
21. | Vatican City | - 60.14 % |
of course you would expect estonia at the top, as it wasn’t yet a euro country in 2009, but monaco even beat them. the best ranking of the bigger ebt countries is belgium at number 7. the top trio of ebt, germany, finland and netherlands, can be found on numbers 9, 16 and 13, with only germany having improved.
the second ranking will take into account how big the contribution (or the negative influence) was to the situation of ebt in total. in 2009 the number of notes entered per day was 44.776, in 2012 it’s 39.995. how big was a country’s share of this loss? i don’t have any time to post the ranking until later tonight, until then feel free to discuss the numbers