The average living costs in your country is 150 dollars per month. I can hardly pay my monthly electricity bill during winter with $150. I'm so tired to pay an outrageous price just to get electricity at home. fuck, fuck, fuck...
For me who live a little further east in the EU, that amount is not enough even during the summer if we take into account a family of 4 members. Unfortunately, increasing electricity consumption combined with the EU's green plan and switching to renewable energy sources are likely to further increase the price of electricity - because green does not mean cheap (at least for now).
I think the prices are pretty accurate, but these are the average prices of a product or service in a country. I pay flat internet (40 Mbps +) + landline (flat calls in-country) around EUR 20, while the site states that the price of 60 Mbps is slightly less than EUR 30, although users are delivered max speed considering their infrastructure - while the price is mostly the same up to 100 Mbps.
However, it should be emphasized that the key thing that affects the standard of living is the minimum wage. Thus, the minimum gross wage is highest in Luxembourg, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Belgium (EUR 2,201.93 to EUR 1,625.72), while it is lowest in Bulgaria, Romania, and Croatia. (EUR 332.34 - EUR 562.77). When these minimum wages are transferred to the net amount (what a worker receives in his bank account), then, for example, in Croatia, a worker who works for the minimum wage receives only EUR 453. It should be noted that prices in countries with lower wages are the same or even higher than in countries with higher wages, which is a paradox, but it is true.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_European_Union_member_states_by_minimum_wage