We have reported this previously in both EAS 2018 and EAS 2019. We didn’t report it this year because the per capita numbers are pretty noisy (at least among the locations with the highest EAs per capita, which tend to be low population countries). But it would be pretty easy to reproduce this analysis using this year’s data.
Here are the countries with the highest EAs per capita. Note that Iceland, Luxembourg and Cyprus, nevertheless have very low numbers of EA (<5) respondents. This graph doesn’t leave out any countries with particularly high numbers of EAs, in absolute terms, though Poland and China are missing despite having >10.
Cool. Seems like English-fluency, education, physical proximity to the UK, and maybe wealth would explain this gradient (as well as the city-level data) pretty well.
Did you think of mapping the global distribution of EAs on a per-capita basis?
We have reported this previously in both EAS 2018 and EAS 2019. We didn’t report it this year because the per capita numbers are pretty noisy (at least among the locations with the highest EAs per capita, which tend to be low population countries). But it would be pretty easy to reproduce this analysis using this year’s data.
Here are the countries with the highest EAs per capita. Note that Iceland, Luxembourg and Cyprus, nevertheless have very low numbers of EA (<5) respondents. This graph doesn’t leave out any countries with particularly high numbers of EAs, in absolute terms, though Poland and China are missing despite having >10.
Cool. Seems like English-fluency, education, physical proximity to the UK, and maybe wealth would explain this gradient (as well as the city-level data) pretty well.