At-risk-of-poverty rate before social transfers (pensions included in social transfers) by household type - EU-SILC survey ilc_li09b

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The data involves several units of measure, depending on the variable. For more information, see the methodological guidelines and description of EU-SILC target variables available in CIRCABC. Most indicators are reported as shares. Some are reported in other units (e.g., percent, thousands of persons, monetary units, etc.). More information is available in Eurobase, living condition database section.

The reference period is the survey year. The nucleus or annual variables are collected yearly using the reference period as specified in Annex II of EU regulation 2019/2242 and as well as in the Methodological guidelines.

For all countries, the reference period for income variables in EU-SILC is the previous calendar year. Ireland, until 2019, collected income information for the 12-month period immediately preceding the sample household's interview date. For most of the countries, the fieldwork was carried out from January until July 2022. The lag between the income variables and the other variables varies across countries (Figure 2).

 

Figure 2: Lag between the income reference period and current variables by countries, 2022

 

Source: EU-SILC data 2022 (extraction October 2023)

Annual

EU-SILC was designed to keep respondent burden controlled, to avoid a high non-response rate and to ensure the quality of the information collected. The method of interview significantly impacts the interview duration. The interview duration in 2022 is almost two hours for Croatia and Germany, while for some countries the interview duration per household is less than 30 minutes (Sweden, Latvia, Netherlands, and Montenegro,).

Annex 6 - Mode of data collection and fieldwork, provides more information about the length of interview by country.

The metadata is issued in the SIMS format for European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions.

EU comparative quality reports and national quality reports can be found in CIRCABC or on the Eurostat website.

Explanatory notes related to the implementation methodology and indicators in Eurobase

Main topic

2021

2022

Note about indicators

 

Household type:

For Portugal: The Eurostat methodology to calculate household type differs from the one used by INE and available at www.ine.pt.

Variables not collected

The income variables not collected:

HY070: Romania; HY110: Czechia; HY120: Austria, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Switzerland; HY121: Malta; HY170:  Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Malta, Netherlands, Austria, Romania, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland; PY021: Switzerland, Serbia; PY020: Austria, Switzerland; PY030: Malta, Romania

The income variables not collected:

HY060: Romania, HY081: Estonia; HY110: Czechia; HY120: Malta, Netherlands, Austria; HY121: Estonia, Spain, Lithuania, Malta, Netherlands, Austria; HY131: Estonia; HY145: Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, France, Cyprus, Lithuania, Hungary, Malta, Netherland, Austria, Finland, Sweden; HY170: Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Austria, Finland, Sweden; PY020: Austria, PY021: Austria, PY030: Romania, PY035: Hungary.

Differences in the concepts

Deviation from the standard definitions for reference population:

-       Bulgaria: all citizens officially living in Bulgarian territory (population de facto).

-       Estonia: persons living in collective households are included in the reference population.

-       Finland: private households and all the persons composing these households refer to the permanent usual residency in Finland at the end (31 December) of the calendar year before the survey year.

-       Portugal: The reference population corresponds to the set of all private households and their current members living in Portugal (Mainland, Açores and Madeira) by the end of 2020.

-       Sweden: The person must be listed in the Swedish population register and be in Sweden for six consecutive months or more. Short-term visits to another country do not shorten the duration of stay in Sweden.

 

Deviation from the standard definition for household membership:

-       Netherlands: There are some minor differences in the treatment of special categories like lodgers or people temporarily away (e.g., students). These people are only included as a household member if they are registered at the households' address.

-       Poland includes as household members: persons absent from the household because of their occupation if their earnings are collected to the household's expenditure.

-       Portugal: On the contrary of EU-SILC concept, “Persons absent for long periods, but having household ties: persons working away from home” were not considered as household members if the absence was for more than 6 months; the income obtained from them was considered as a private transfer.

Norway: persons will be considered as household members if they spend most of their nights at the address of the household.

Deviation from the standard definitions for reference population:

-       Denmark: Persons with their legal address within Denmark.

-       Estonia: persons living in collective households are included in the reference population.

-       Finland: Those persons who according to the Population Information System had a legal domicile in Finland on 31 December belong to the permanent resident population (Municipality of Residence Act 201/1994).

-       Sweden: The person must be listed in the Swedish population register and be in Sweden for six consecutive months or more. Short-term visits to another country do not shorten the duration of stay in Sweden.

 

Deviation from the standard definition for household membership:

-       Belgium: A small deviation for tertiary students. Tertiary students often residence at a private address in their university town, while coming back home during the weekend. They remain officially registered at their parents’ address. In BE-SILC, they belong to their parents’ household.

-       Netherlands: There are some minor differences in the treatment of special categories like lodgers or people temporarily away (e.g., students). These people are only included as a household member if they are registered at the households' address.

-       Austria: Person living permanently in the accommodation, i.e., at least six months.

-       Poland: Persons absent from the household because of their occupation, if their earnings are collected to the household's expenditure, and are considered as members of surveyed household (not another one).

Break in series

Specifically for each country the break in series description is the following:

-      Germany: The new integrated German micro-census entered into force in 2020 and the EU-SILC was integrated in it. For the EU-SILC 2020 and 2021, survey was a full multi-mode-design implemented.  The COVID-19 crisis had a large impact on data collection processes. Due to the COVID-19 crisis, the interviewers were instructed to realize interviews in the form of CATI or CAWI instead of CAPI.

-      Slovenia: In 2021, the sample was increased due to a change in the mode of data collection to Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI). The response rate was lower, and the fieldwork period was longer. In 2010, changes applied in the PH030. And in 2011 in the Overcrowding rate (HH030).

-      Sweden: In 2021, the number of questions in the questionnaire used to derive PH030, i.e., GALI, have decreased from four to two questions (previous change in 2014). As well, the new longitudinal estimation procedure uses calibration estimation. To be flagged only longitudinal estimates. The new estimation procedure to compute personal cross-sectional weights for selected respondent (PB060) is expected to have a negligible impact on the comparability. The new longitudinal estimation procedure uses calibration estimation. The new estimation procedure to compute personal cross-sectional weights for selected respondent (PB060) is expected to have a negligible impact on the comparability.

-      Norway: In 2021, New weighting routine and as well the new methods for estimating taxes for incomes before social transfers (Impact on HY022, HY023).

Some of the countries the break in series were before 2021: Belgium (2019, 2020);  Bulgaria (2016), Czechia (2016); Cyprus (2008); Germany (2015, 2020), Denmark (2020); Spain (2008); France (2008, 2020); Ireland (2017, 2020); Hungary (2018); Luxembourg (2020); Malta (2020); Netherlands (2016); Poland: (2008, 2010, 2014, 2017, 2020); Slovenia: (2020); Sweden (2014, 2019); Finland (2018, 2019); Switzerland (2014, 2017, 2020); North Macedonia (2014). For more information, please see the overview of breaks in series in Eurostat website.

 

The HY022 and HY023 are calculated by new formula (including Net instead of Gross) for the following countries EE and SE.

Specifically for each country the break in series description is the following:

France: For the first time in 2022, the FR-SILC survey will include 4 overseas departments (French Guiana, Réunion, Martinique and Guadeloupe).

Luxembourg: In 2022, the introduction of the CAWI mode has entailed a higher participation among certain segments of the population, such as foreigners or employees from international organisations. As well, the use of the MyGuichet portal should have led to an over-representation of certain subpopulations, such as the young and the educated people, who are more familiar to using Luxembourg's e-government portal.

Finland: The variable PL032 (PL031) has been formed equivalently over the survey years 2019, 2021, 2021 and 2022, based on the ESTAT recommendations and common agreement on the procedure with ESTAT (The revisions of sy2019-sy2020 data files). The corrections were made for the PL032 values 7 (In retirement...) and 8 (Permanently disabled...) abolishing the registers use for defining permanently disables or/and unfit to work. As well, new administrative data sources were launched into the topics on labour market participation / main activity status. So, the variables PL211A--PL211L could be flagged.

Sweden: In 2022 the data collection method in the Swedish SILC was changed from CATI to mixed mode combining CAWI and CATI. This means that the respondents from 2022 and onwards may choose if they want to respond via telephone interview, or via a web-based questionnaire. In order to evaluate the effects of the change in data collection method, Statistics Sweden conducted a split-sample experiment where the results from the mixed mode data collection were compared with results from a parallel data collection where only telephone interviews were used. The comparison between the control group (CATI only) and the experiment group (CAWI and CATI) showed that some of the SILC variables have been affected by the change in data collection method. Variables for which a statistically significant difference is observed (p-value < 0.05) and where further analyses also indicate a break in series. This change impacted the variable PW191, PH010, PH030, PW230 and PD060.

The HY022 and HY023 are calculated by new formula (including Net instead of Gross) (except EE, FI, and SE).

For more information, please see the overview of breaks in series in Eurostat website.