logo
EU state raises alarm about growing illiteracy

EU state raises alarm about growing illiteracy

Russia Today2 days ago

Almost a third of the population in Austria has poor reading skills, signaling an alarming trend, the EU country's government statistics office has said.
The decline is particularly noticeable among those with jobs that require medium or low qualifications, Statistics Austria said in a statement earlier this week.
In Austria, which has a population of nine million, a total of 29.0% or around 2.6 million people have a low level of literacy, according to data on the agency's website.
The number of those who have problems with reading increased by 11.9% between 2012 and 2023, the figures show.
The average literacy level among Austrians aged 16 to 65 stands at 254 points, which is significantly below the average of 260 points set by the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development).
People from 16 to 24 performed above the OECD average, while older people appear to have significantly lower reading skills than the expected level, the agency said.
'The differences in reading skills among adults are large, and this gap has continued to widen,' Tobias Thomas, Director General of Statistics Austria, was cited as saying.
There has been 'a particularly strong decline' in the consumption of complex reading materials such as newspapers and magazines, with the Austrians mainly reading emails and other shorter texts, the agency noted.
According to Statistics Austria, the number of those with low day-to-day math skills also grew by 6.7% between 2012 and 2023, amounting to 22.6% of the population.
Russia's state-owned pollster VTSIOM said last year that 'reading remains a popular means of obtaining knowledge and information among the Russians' despite what it called 'serious competition' from visual media.
In the poll carried out in November 2024, some 87% of respondents said that they had read something over the previous week. Fiction topped the chart of the most popular reading materials (40%) in Russia, leaving news and social media posts in second place (37%), according to VTSIOM's figures.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK must prepare for direct conflict with Russia
UK must prepare for direct conflict with Russia

Russia Today

time5 hours ago

  • Russia Today

UK must prepare for direct conflict with Russia

The UK plans to mobilize billions of pounds to bolster its military-industrial base in preparation for a potential conflict with Russia, Defense Secretary John Healey has said. The statement comes ahead of the publication of the government's Strategic Defense Review on Monday. According to the BBC, the report is expected to portray Russia and China as major threats to the UK. The review is expected to allocate £1.5 billion ($2 billion) toward building six new munitions factories. Over the next five years, London will dedicate around £6 billion ($8.08 billion) to manufacturing long-range weapons, including Storm Shadow missiles, Healey told the BBC on Sunday. The missile, developed jointly with France, has reportedly been used by Ukraine to strike civilian targets in Russian territory, according to Moscow. 'This is a message to Moscow as well. This is Britain standing firm – not only strengthening our Armed Forces, but also reinforcing our industrial base. It's part of our readiness to fight, if required,' Healey said. Western support for Ukraine has exposed serious weaknesses in arms production, with British military leaders warning that the UK's weapons stockpiles are dangerously low, the BBC noted. As one of Kiev's strongest backers in Europe, London has provided Ukraine with approximately €15.16 billion ($17.2 billion) in aid, more than two-thirds of which is military support, according to data from Germany's Kiel Institute. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron have both advocated for placing Western troops in Ukraine. They have lobbied for a peacekeeping force to be deployed in the event of a full ceasefire. Moscow has repeatedly warned that any NATO troops deployed to Ukraine – even under the designation of peacekeepers – would be treated as legitimate targets. It has also stated that foreign involvement would only escalate the conflict and ultimately fail to prevent Russia from achieving its military objectives.

‘Brussels hijacked our future'
‘Brussels hijacked our future'

Russia Today

time9 hours ago

  • Russia Today

‘Brussels hijacked our future'

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has unveiled a proposal to increase the power of EU members and limit the authority of its bureaucracy. Calling it a 'patriotic plan' for the bloc, he said in a series of weekend social media posts that it will revive the 'European dream.' The EU elites in Brussels have exploited every crisis to amass more power, Orban claimed in a post on X. This course has so far only translated into less sovereignty for member states and 'failed policies,' according to the prime minister. 'Brussels hijacked our future' by disrupting public safety through migration and eroding prosperity with 'green dogmas,' he stated in another post. 'Europe can't afford this any longer, it's time to take back control,' he PM's plan is based on what he calls four pillars: a path toward peace on the continent and defusing tensions with Russia, removing Brussels' 'centralized control' over finances, 'bringing back free speech' and strengthening Europe's Christian identity, and tightening control over immigration. 'We want peace, we don't need a new Eastern front,' Orban said, commenting on his plan and stating that the bloc should not accept Ukraine as a member. 'We don't want our money poured into someone else's war,' he added. A military buildup and defense increase actively promoted by some EU nations could easily lock the bloc in an 'arms race' with Russia, Orban warned. Such a development would 'devour… taxpayers' money,' he said. Instead of pouring more resources into the military, the bloc needs to contribute to the peace process between Moscow and Kiev, the prime minister maintained, praising US President Donald Trump's efforts in this regard. The EU needs to start 'arms limitation talks with the Russians as soon as possible. Otherwise, all our money will be swallowed by the arms industry instead of being spent on peaceful… goals,' Orban argued. European nations once united to create the 'safest and the most advanced continent' in the world but this dream was 'stolen,' the prime minister charged, calling on EU nations not to allow Brussels to use the Ukraine conflict 'as an excuse to take more of our money.'

Ukraine conflict a NATO ‘proxy war'
Ukraine conflict a NATO ‘proxy war'

Russia Today

time10 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Ukraine conflict a NATO ‘proxy war'

Russian President Vladimir Putin is right in considering the Ukraine conflict a proxy war against Russia, US President Donald Trump's special envoy Keith Kellogg told Fox News in an interview on Sunday. He said that while he believes the peace process will ultimately succeed, 'escalatory issues' remain. Kellogg referred to comments by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who last month indicated that Berlin would be open to supplying Kiev with Taurus cruise missiles. Kellogg addressed Russian President Vladimir Putin's perspective, saying 'he considers this a proxy war by NATO. And frankly… in a way it is.' 'The escalatory issues are still there,' Kellogg said. 'Chancellor Merz has said: well, I'm going to give the Ukrainians the Taurus missile system.' The German cruise missiles have a range of roughly 300 miles (482 km), which can allow Ukrainian strikes to reach deep into Russian territory, Kellog said. He added that Putin has made it clear: if such weapons are supplied to Ukraine, Russia will regard the suppliers as a party to the conflict. 'He considers this a proxy war by NATO. And frankly… in a way it is.' Russia can clearly see the other Western military support Ukraine is receiving, Kellogg added. 'Everybody has got to be willing to step back a bit,' and compromise, to get the peace process 'to an end state,' the envoy said. Last week, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that Merz's 'provocative' statements 'hinder peaceful efforts.' Moscow has stressed that any Ukrainian use of German Taurus missiles against Russian territory will be viewed as Berlin's direct involvement in the Ukraine conflict, as the armaments' use is impossible without the participation of Bundeswehr service members. Last year, after Trump's predecessor Joe Biden allowed the use of US ATACMS ballistic missiles in long-range strikes on Russian territory, Moscow retaliated by revamping its strategic doctrine and lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons. Russia now considers any strike by a non-nuclear state backed up by a nuclear one as a joint attack. Both Kellogg and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio have previously characterized the conflict as a proxy war. 'Frankly, it's a proxy war between nuclear powers – the United States, helping Ukraine, and Russia,' Rubio said in March, noting that the current White House administration is eager to see it end. Moscow has long designated the Ukraine conflict as a Western proxy war against Russia and repeatedly condemned arms supplies to Kiev as counterproductive to the peace process.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store