Beneficiaries of disability pensions by sex dsb_sprpb02

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 Data on expenditure (gross) and receipts are made available:

  • In millions national currencies (including Euro converted from former national currencies using the fixed rate for all years), in millions Ecu/Euro and in Purchasing Power Standards;
  • At current prices and at constant prices;
  • In percentage of the GDP.

Some data are also calculated per inhabitant.

The indicator "expenditure per capita" is calculated based on the resident population; therefore this value is overestimated for Luxembourg compared with other countries, since a significant proportion of benefits are paid to persons living outside the country (primarily expenditure on health care, pensions and family benefits).

The Purchasing Power Standard (PPS) is an artificial reference currency unit that eliminates price level differences between countries. Thus one PPS buys the same volume of goods and services in all countries. This unit allows meaningful volume comparisons of economic indicators across countries. The PPSs used are those corresponding to the national accounts aggregate “actual individual consumption”.

The GDP used for the calculation of ESSPROS indicators as % of GDP is the one published on the Eurostat online database (table nama_10_gdp , unit= CP_MEUR, na_item= B1GQ).

The implicit deflator for "actual individual consumption" (unit = PD10_NAC and PD10_EUR, na_item= P41) derived from chain-linked National Accounts has been used to obtain figures for expenditure (gross) and receipts at constant prices referring to the year 2010. Only for Spain, Iceland and Turkey the implicit deflator for "Household and NPISH final consumption expenditure" (unit = PD10_NAC and PD10_EUR, na_item= P31¬_S14_S15 ) has been used because the na_item = P41 is not available on the Eurobase tables dedicated to national accounts.

In the net social protection benefits collection, data are made available as:

  • Gross social protection in millions of national currency (including Euro converted from former national currencies using the fixed rate for all years), in millions of ECU/Euro and in percentage of GDP;
  • Net social protection benefits in millions of national currency (including Euro converted from former national currencies using the fixed rate for all years), in millions of ECU/Euro and in percentage of GDP;
  • Percentage of social protection benefits subject to taxation and/or social contributions;
  • Percentage of social protection cash benefits subject to taxation and/or social contributions;
  • Effective combined taxation and social contributions rates on benefits subject to levies;
  • Effective combined taxation and social contributions rates on all social protection benefits;
  • Residual fiscal benefits in millions of Euros.

Benefits subject to taxation and/or social contributions do not refer to benefits which are taxable according to fiscal rules. It refers to the value of benefits for which there is at least one recipient who, in practice, has tax/social contributions deducted from the benefits they receive. It excludes benefits which are not liable to taxes/social contributions under fiscal rules and benefits which are liable to taxes/social contributions under fiscal rules but for which no recipients pay any levies on the benefits they receive in practice. Also, benefits which are the subject of taxes/contributions that are deducted at source prior to disbursement (e.g. social contributions rerouted between schemes) are not taken into account. Residual fiscal benefits should be introduced in the calculation of net social benefits (restricted approach) only if they are not directly accounted for in AITR and/or AISCR.

Data on pension beneficiaries are expressed exclusively in "persons".

ESSPROS data are annual data, corresponding to calendar year. Data on pension beneficiaries refer to the end of the calendar year.

Data for the United Kingdom are on a financial year basis and relate to the year from 1 April to 31 March (for example, data for 1996 relate to the year from April 1996 to March 1997).

Annual.

Starting from 2014 release (data 2012) as soon as a country’s validation is completed, corresponding figures on gross expenditure and receipts are disseminated immediately afterwards in Eurostat website.

Starting from 2015, the same procedure of data dissemination is applied also to Pension beneficiares data.

Starting from 2016, the same procedure of data dissemination is applied also to Net benefits data (2013 as reference year).

Updates in case of revisions are envisaged.

Not applicable.

1. For Greece, due to a complete revision of the data compilation and to a new classification of schemes adopted starting from reference year 2000, all data until 1999 are not comparable with data from 2000 on.

2. From 1990 to 2005, the following break-downs are partially unavailable for France:

  • Actual employers' social contribution by sector of origin;
  • Non means-tested benefits in kind for the sickness and health care function;
  • Non means-tested benefits in kind for the disability function.

3. The National Statistical Authority of Cyprus is currently investigating the possibility to improve the sources and methods used for the calculation of figures pertaining "Paid Sick Leave" benefits. As a result, the corresponding figures published under the section "social protection expenditure" are currently flagged as "provisional" for the period 2007-2015 and are expected to be revised in the future. This revision will also have an impact on the results of "net" benefits for the corresponding function (sickness/health care).

4. In the Netherlands, the total number of beneficiaries without double counting is mainly calculated as the sum of the “first pillar” schemes (universal schemes) covering old age and survivors and early retirement pensioners. 

5. For the United Kingdom the break in series for disability pension between 2006 and 2007 it's due to the fact that employment support allowance has been moved to disability pension under scheme 8 and disability living allowance has been partly moved to disability pension under scheme 29. At the same time, some attendance allowance and injuries disablement benefit pension age have been reclassified from disability pensions to Care allowance in old age function for scheme 29.