Income quintile share ratio S80/S20 for net market income by sex and age group
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Adults aged between 25 and 59 years by age group according to their income quintile per unit of consumption and type of household when they were teenagers. National.
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Adults aged between 25 and 59 years by age group according to their income quintile per unit of consumption and the activity status of their mother when they were teenagers. National.
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Income quintile share ratio S80/S20 for gross total disposable income by sex and age group
This dataset accompanies the tables ‘Household income and saving in the National Accounts: distributions by income quintile’ and ‘Household consumption in the National Accounts: distributions by income quintile’ and presents the number of individuals belonging to households in each quintile broken down by age group.
Households are grouped into income quintiles on the basis of their equivalised disposable income, ranked from lowest to highest, i.e., the first quintile represents the 20% households with the lowest equivalised disposable income and the fifth quintile the 20% households with the highest. Equivalisation means that results for each household have been recalculated on the basis of its consumption needs, in order to produce comparable results across households of different size and composition. <br><br>
The default view of this table is for a single country (‘Reference area’ filter) and single year (‘Time period’ filter). In cases where countries appear to be greyed-out, data may be available for earlier years, and these can be selected by selecting a different start and end year in the ‘Time period’ filter. <br><br>
For more information on the (compilation of) these results, please see the <a href="https://www.oecd.org/sdd/na/household-distributional-results-in-line-with-national-accounts-experimental-statistics.htm"> webpage on household distributional results </a>.
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Adults aged between 25 and 59 years by age group according to their income quintile per unit of consumption and household economic situation when they were teenagers. National.
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Adults aged between 25 and 59 years by age group according to their income quintile per unit of consumption and the highest educational level of their father and mother when they were teenagers. National.
This dataset accompanies the tables ‘Household income and saving in the National Accounts: distributions by income quintile’ and ‘Household consumption in the National Accounts: distributions by income quintile’ and presents the number of households, individuals, and consumption units per equivalised disposable income quintile, as well as the sociodemographic characteristics of the households and the individuals in these households in each of the income quintiles.
The following socio-demographic breakdowns are shown in the table: the number of households in each quintile by household type and home ownership status; and the number of individuals belonging to the households in each quintile by age, sex, labour market status and education level. <br><br>
In this table, households are grouped into income quintiles on the basis of their equivalised disposable income, ranked from lowest to highest, i.e., the first quintile represents the 20% households with the lowest equivalised disposable income and the fifth quintile the 20% households with the highest. Equivalisation means that results for each household have been recalculated on the basis of its consumption needs, in order to produce comparable results across households of different size and composition. <br><br>
Results are presented in national currency and as averages per household and per consumption unit (you can choose these from the ‘Unit of measure’ filter). Results per consumption unit are obtained by dividing each household’s result by the number of consumption units, reflecting its consumption needs, for example by applying the standard OECD-modified equivalence scale, counting the first adult as 1, any additional people aged 14 and over as 0.5 and all children under 14 as 0.3.<br><br>
The default view of this table is for a single country (‘Reference area’ filter) and single year (‘Time period’ filter). In cases where countries appear to be greyed-out, data may be available for earlier years, and these can be selected by selecting a different start and end year in the ‘Time period’ filter. Users are recommended to select one country at a time to obtain a comprehensive overview of the distributional results for that country for a given period of time. Alternatively, you may select a specific item from one of the socio-demographic breakdowns filters to make cross-country comparisons. <br><br>
For more information on the (compilation of) these results, please see the <a href="https://www.oecd.org/sdd/na/household-distributional-results-in-line-with-national-accounts-experimental-statistics.htm"> webpage on household distributional results </a>.
Income quintile share ratio S40/S100 for disposable income by sex and age group
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Analysis of ‘Income quintile share ratio S40/S100 for disposable income by sex and age group - EU-SILC survey’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/vzmup2bum11kwlpi30mfg on 30 September 2021.
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In 2023, about 26.9 percent of Asian private households in the U.S. had an annual income of 200,000 U.S. dollars and more. Comparatively, around 13.9 percent of Black households had an annual income under 15,000 U.S. dollars.
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Average weekly household expenditure on goods and services in the UK. Data are shown by region, age, income (including equivalised) group (deciles and quintiles), economic status, socio-economic class, housing tenure, output area classification, urban and rural areas (Great Britain only), place of purchase and household composition.
Income quintiles are assigned based on equivalized household disposable income, which takes into account differences in household size and composition using a method proposed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The OECD-modified" equivalence scale assigns a value of 1 to the first adult Age groups refer to the age group of the major income earner. Housing tenure of household Refers to the main source of income for the household, either from wages and salaries, self-employment income, net property income, current transfers received related to pension benefits, or from other current transfers received from non-pension related sources (others). Distributions by generation are defined as follows and are based on the birth year of the major income earner : pre-1946 for those born before 1946, baby boom for those born between 1946 and 1964, generation X for those born between 1965 and 1980 and millennials for those born after 1980. Note that generation Z has been combined with the millennial generation as their sample size is relatively small.
This table contains 186 series (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada); Income quintile (6 items: All quintiles; Lowest income quintile; Second income quintile; Third income quintile; ...); Socio-demographic characteristics (31 items: All households; One-person households; Single less than 65 years; Single 65 years and older; ...).
This is the 24th edition of the households below average income (HBAI) series.
Find out how low income is measured.
This section includes an overview of the background, changes over time and shows:
This section includes the glossary and definitions of the terms used in the report, and more detail on HBAI methodology.
Income quintile share ratio S50/S20 for disposable income by sex and age group
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Income quintile share ratio S80/S50 for disposable income by sex and age group Copyright notice and free re-use of data on: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/about-us/policies/copyright
Need for help with personal care or household activities by level of difficulty experienced in those activities, age and income quintile
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Average disposable income and consumption expenditure per household by quintile of disposable income and by age group of household head in economic households (2022)
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License information was derived automatically
Income quintile share ratio S50/S20 for disposable income by sex and age group Copyright notice and free re-use of data on: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/about-us/policies/copyright
Income quintile share ratio S80/S20 for net market income by sex and age group