This classification could use an improvement, not all of these are Eastern or Northern Europe. The UK’s economy for example employs a soft Anglo-Saxon model, whereas Estonia and most of the Nordics use a Nordic model (the best imo). And then there are the cultural associations - many people from Poland and co would argue they are central, not eastern European - because in their view, they associate eastern with Russia.
That said, a more sensible division imho would be:
Northern
- Norway
- Sweden
- Denmark
- Finland
- Iceland
- Faroe Islands
Western
- Netherlands
- Belgium
- Luxembourg
- France
- United Kingdom
- Ireland
- Monaco
Central
- Germany
- Austria
- Czechia
- Poland
- Hungary
Northeastern
- Lithuania
- Latvia
- Estonia
Southwest
- Portugal
- Spain
- Italy
- Vatican
- San Marino
Southeast
- Slovenia
- Croatia
- Bosnia
- Serbia
- Montenegro
- Kosovo
- Greece
- Bulgaria
- Romania
Eastern
- Ukraine
- Belarus
- Moldova
- Russia
No matter how Europe is split up into regions, Russia, Belarus and maybe Hungary, too, should be in a category of their own.
Cool graphic!
But the €-sign belongs after the amount not infront, that’s a grammar mistake. Also it doesn’t explicitly state which dollar is meant
In English, the euro sign is in front of the amount.
English/Dutch: €1 German/French/Spanish/Italian: 1 €
Since this post is in English, the sign is in the correct place.




