6 datasets found
  1. Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • data.europa.eu
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    Updated May 8, 2018
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    Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (2018). Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov_uk/NTlmMTJmMGUtY2ZhZC00MjdmLWI2ZDAtMDMwYmM3ODQyYTI5
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 8, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Defra - Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairshttp://defra.gov.uk/
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Information on farm household income and farm household composition. Source agency: Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Designation: National Statistics Language: English Alternative title: Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England

    If you require the datasets in a more accessible format, please contact fbs.queries@defra.gsi.gov.uk

    Background and guidance on the statistics

    Information on farm household income and farm household composition was collected in the Farm Business Survey (FBS) for England for the first time in 2004/05. Collection of household income data is restricted to the household of the principal farmer from each farm business. For practical reasons, data is not collected for the households of any other farmers and partners. Two-thirds of farm businesses have an input only from the principal farmer’s household (see table 5). However, details of household composition are collected for the households of all farmers and partners in the business, but not employed farm workers.

    Data on the income of farm households is used in conjunction with other economic information for the agricultural sector (e.g. farm business income) to help inform policy decisions and to help monitor and evaluate current policies relating to agriculture in the United Kingdom by Government. It also informs wider research into the economic performance of the agricultural industry.

    This release gives the main results from the income and composition of farm households and the off-farm activities of the farmer and their spouse (Including common law partners) sections of the FBS. These sections include information on the household income of the principal farmer’s household, off-farm income sources for the farmer and spouse and incomes of other members of their household and the number of working age and pensionable adults and children in each of the households on the farm (the information on household composition can be found in Appendix B).

    This release provides the main results from the 2013/14 FBS. The results are presented together with confidence intervals.

    Survey content and methodology

    The Farm Business Survey (FBS) is an annual survey providing information on the financial position and physical and economic performance of farm businesses in England. The sample of around 1,900 farm businesses covers all regions of England and all types of farming with the data being collected by face to face interview with the farmer. Results are weighted to represent the whole population of farm businesses that have at least 25 thousand Euros of standard output as recorded in the annual June Survey of Agriculture and Horticulture. In 2013 there were just over 58 thousand farm businesses meeting this criteria.

    Since 2009/10 a sub-sample of around 1,000 farms in the FBS has taken part in both the additional surveys on the income and composition of farm households and the off-farm activities of the farmer and their spouse. In previous years, the sub-sample had included over 1,600 farms. As such, caution should be taken when comparing to earlier years.

    The farms that responded to the additional survey on household incomes and off-farm activities of the farmer and spouse had similar characteristics to those farms in the main FBS in terms of farm type and geographical location. However, there is a smaller proportion of very large farms in the additional survey than in the main FBS. Full details of the characteristic of responding farms can be found at Appendix A of the notice.

    For further information about the Farm Business Survey please see: https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/series/farm-business-survey

    Data analysis

    The results from the FBS relate to farms which have a standard output of at least 25,000 Euros. Initial weights are applied to the FBS records based on the inverse sampling fraction for each design stratum (farm type by farm size). These weights are then adjusted (calibration weighting) so that they can produce unbiased estimators of a number of different target variables. Completion of the additional survey on household incomes and off-farm activities of the farmer and spouse was voluntary and a sample of around 1,000 farms was achieved. In order to take account of non-response, the results have been reweighted using a method that preserves marginal totals for populations according to farm type and farm size groups. As such, farm population totals for other classifications (e.g. regions) will not be in-line with results using the main FBS weights, nor will any results produced for variables derived from the rest of the FBS (e.g. farm business income).

    Accuracy and reliability of the results

    We show 95% confidence intervals against the results. These show the range of values that may apply to the figures. They mean that we are 95% confident that this range contains the true value. They are calculated as the standard errors (se) multiplied by 1.96 to give the 95% confidence interval. The standard errors only give an indication of the sampling error. They do not reflect any other sources of survey errors, such as non-response bias. For the Farm Business Survey, the confidence limits shown are appropriate for comparing groups within the same year only; they should not be used for comparing with previous years since they do not allow for the fact that many of the same farms will have contributed to the Farm Business Survey in both years.

    Availability of results

    This release contains headline results for each section. The full set of results can be found at: https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/series/farm-business-survey#publications

    Defra statistical notices can be viewed on the on the statistics pages of the Defra website at https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/about/statistics. This site also shows details of future publications, with pre-announced dates.

    Data Uses

    Data from the Farm Business Survey (FBS) are provided to the EU as part of the Farm Accountancy Data Network (FADN). The data have been used to help inform policy decisions (e.g. Reform of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 of Common Agricultural Policy) and to help monitor and evaluate current policies relating to agriculture in England (and the EU). It is also widely used by the industry for benchmarking and informs wider research into the economic performance of the agricultural industry.

    User engagement

    As part of our ongoing commitment to compliance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics http://www.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/assessment/code-of-practice/index.html, we wish to strengthen our engagement with users of these statistics and better understand the use made of them and the types of decisions that they inform. Consequently, we invite users to make themselves known, to advise us of the use they do, or might, make of these statistics, and what their wishes are in terms of engagement. Feedback on this notice and enquiries about these statistics are also welcome.

    Definitions

    Household income of the principal farmer Principal farmer’s household income has the following components: (1) The share of farm business income (FBI) (including income from farm diversification) attributable to the principal farmer and their spouse. (2) Principal farmer’s and spouse’s off farm income from employment and self-employment, investment income, pensions and social payments. (3) Income of other household members. The share of farm business income and all employment and self-employment incomes, investment income and pension income are recorded as gross of income tax payments and National Insurance contributions, but after pension contributions. In addition, no deduction is made for council tax.

    Household A household is defined as a single person or group of people living at the same address as their only or main residence, who either share one meal a day together or share the living accommodation. A household must contain at least one person who received drawings from the farm business or who took a share of the profit from the business.

    Drawings Drawings represent the monies which the farmer takes from the business for their own personal use. The percentage of total drawings going to each household is collected and is used to calculate the total share of farm business income for the principal farmer’s household.

    Mean Mean household income of individuals is the ”average”, found by adding up the weighted household incomes for each individual farm in the population for analysis and dividing the result by the corresponding weighted number of farms. In this report average is usually taken to refer to the mean.

    Percentiles These are the values which divide the population for analysis, when ranked by an output variable (e.g. household income or net worth), into 100 equal-sized groups. E.g. twenty five per cent of the population would have incomes below the 25th percentile.

    Median Median household income divides the population, when ranked by an output variable, into two equal sized groups. The median of the whole population is the same as the 50th percentile. The term is also used for the midpoint of the subsets of the income distribution

    Quartiles Quartiles are values which divide the population, when ranked by an output variable, into four equal-sized groups. The lowest quartile is the same as the 25th percentile. The divisions of a population split by quartiles are referred to as quarters in this publication.

    Quintiles Quintiles are values which divide the population, when ranked by an output variable, into five equal-sized groups. The divisions of a population split by quintiles are referred to as fifths in this publication.

    Assets Assets include

  2. d

    Data-Driven Drought Prediction Project Model Outputs: Daily Streamflow and...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.usgs.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Nov 19, 2025
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2025). Data-Driven Drought Prediction Project Model Outputs: Daily Streamflow and Streamflow Percentile Predictions for the Colorado River Basin Region [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/data-driven-drought-prediction-project-model-outputs-daily-streamflow-and-streamflow-perce
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Geological Survey
    Area covered
    Colorado River
    Description

    This metadata record describes outputs from 12 configurations of long short-term memory (LSTM) models which were used to predict streamflow drought occurrence at 384 stream gage locations in the Colorado River Basin region. The models were trained on data from 01-Oct-1981 to 31-Mar-2005 and validated over the period of record spanning 01-Apr-2005 to 31-Mar- 2014. The models use explanatory variable inputs described in Wieczorek (2023) (doi.org/10.5066/P98IG8LO) to predict daily streamflow and streamflow percentiles as described in Simeone (2022) (doi.org/10.5066/P92FAASD). Separate models were trained to predict daily streamflow and streamflow percentiles. Two types of percentiles were modeled: (1) fixed-threshold percentiles that are based on comparing all streamflow throughout the year, and (2) variable-threshold percentiles that compare streamflow separately for each day of the year (using a moving 30-day window). Separate models were trained for predicting at lead times of 0, 7 and 14 days ahead. Details on methods and model configurations can be found in Hamshaw and others (2023). The comma separated files are grouped by target variables and lead times as listed in the table below and include model output for the validation period (01-Apr-2005 to 31-Mar-2014). This metadata record also includes model code (see Readme.txt within the CRB_NN_model_archive.zip for more details) and a model performance metrics file (model_validation_performance_metrics_by_gage.csv).

    Model configurations included in the data release. PUB refers to "Predictions in Ungaged Basins" model configuration and Q refers to streamflow.
    Data FilePrediction target variableForecast lead timeModel Configurations
    streamflow_model_predictions_0day_ahead.csvDaily Streamflow (mm/day)0 days

    Streamflow-0d, 

    PUB-Streamflow-0d

    streamflow_model_predictions_7day_ahead.csvDaily Streamflow (mm/day)7 days

    Streamflow-7d

    streamflow_model_predictions_14day_ahead.csvDaily Streamflow (mm/day)14 daysStreamflow-14d
    percentile_fixed_model_predictions_0day_ahead.csvFixed Percentile0 days

    Fixed-0d,

    PUB-Fixed-0d

    Q-to-Fixed-0d

    percentile_fixed_model_predictions_7day_ahead.csvFixed Percentile7 daysFixed-7d
    percentile_fixed_model_predictions_14day_ahead.csvFixed Percentile14 daysFixed-14d
    percentile_variable_model_predictions_0day_ahead.csvVariable Percentile0 days

    Variable-0d,

    PUB-Variable-0d,

    Q-to-Variable-0d

    percentile_variable_model_predictions_7day_ahead.csvVariable Percentile7 daysVariable-7d
    percentile_variable_model_predictions_14day_ahead.csvVariable Percentile14 daysVariable-14d

  3. f

    Agreement of secondary hyperalgesia areas in the heat/capsaicin (left part...

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • plos.figshare.com
    Updated May 9, 2013
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    Petersen, Karin L.; Dahl, Jørgen B.; Rowbotham, Michael C.; Werner, Mads U. (2013). Agreement of secondary hyperalgesia areas in the heat/capsaicin (left part of table), brief thermal sensitization (BTS [middle part of table]) and the burn injury (right part of model) model, at Measurement1 (rows) and Measurement 2 (columns). [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0001666427
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    Dataset updated
    May 9, 2013
    Authors
    Petersen, Karin L.; Dahl, Jørgen B.; Rowbotham, Michael C.; Werner, Mads U.
    Description

    Data indicate the distribution of observations split into quartiles (<25%, 25–50%, 51–75%, >75%) giving a 4×4 contingency table (total number of observations for each quartile are indicated in lower row [Measurement 2] and right-hand column [Measurement 1]). The numbers in the lower right-hand corner, in each panel, are the total number of observations. The numbers in bold indicate completely agreement between observations: Measurement 1 and Measurement 2. Perfect agreement for the heat/capsaicin (A), brief thermal stimulation (B) and the burn injury (C) models were seen in 51%, 54% and 49% of the observations, respectively. The weighted Cohen’s kappa statistics were 0.66 (95% CI: 0.57–0.74) for the heat/capsaicin model, 0.74 (0.65–0.82) for the brief thermal stimulation and 0.74 (0.65–0.82) for the burn injury model.

  4. Pay - male and female employees - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated Mar 11, 2016
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2016). Pay - male and female employees - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/pay-male-and-female-employees-cbc
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 11, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Gender pay gap reporting is due to be introduced nationally for all employers from 2017. This shows a snapshot of the Council as at March 2016. All staff are included in the calculation for the mean and median hourly earnings. The quartile salary information shows the amount of men and women in each quartile. This is the range from the lowest paid employee to the highest paid employee split into 4 equal parts.

  5. F

    Net Worth Held by the Top 0.1% (99.9th to 100th Wealth Percentiles)

    • fred.stlouisfed.org
    json
    Updated Sep 19, 2025
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    (2025). Net Worth Held by the Top 0.1% (99.9th to 100th Wealth Percentiles) [Dataset]. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WFRBLTP1246
    Explore at:
    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 19, 2025
    License

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain

    Description

    Graph and download economic data for Net Worth Held by the Top 0.1% (99.9th to 100th Wealth Percentiles) (WFRBLTP1246) from Q3 1989 to Q2 2025 about net worth, wealth, percentile, Net, and USA.

  6. g

    EasyGSH-DB WAVS: Percentiles of Significant Wave Height (1996-2015)

    • gimi9.com
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    EasyGSH-DB WAVS: Percentiles of Significant Wave Height (1996-2015) [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/eu_9742cc94-6462-4a93-9371-66b3438221c7/
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    Description

    The raster data (GeoTIFF format, location reference: ETRS89 UTM 32N) in the annual zip archives contain analyses of the (50 %-.95 %- or 99 %-) percentile of the significant wave height. A file refers to a simulation period of one year (1.1. — 31.12.). The grid width is dx=dy=100m. The products were derived from simulation results of a spectral seagoing model of the 3. Generation (SWAN) is derived. A spectral seagoing model based on SWAN and assuming a spatially and temporally constant mean water level (NHN+ 0 m) and without considering currents was created. In areas where the seagoing is significantly influenced by the water-deep-dependent wave break, the analysis results were set to a uniform error value (99). The time simulation and output interval is one hour. The model expansion and discretisation (unstructured computational grid) correspond to the model parameters of the coupled hydrodynamic telemac tomawac model used in EasyGSH to validate product results as part of a multi-model approach. The generated data are part of the seagoing analyses in EasyGSH-DB with the aim of creating application-oriented synoptic reference data on geomorphology, sedimentology and hydrodynamics in the German Bay for a referenceable, continuously processed basic data set of 20 years for Deutsche Bucht. English Download: The data for download can be found under References, where the data can be downloaded directly or via the web page redirection to the EasyGSH-DB portal. For further information, please refer to the download portal (https://mdi-de.baw.de/easygsh/EasyEN_index.html).

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Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (2018). Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov_uk/NTlmMTJmMGUtY2ZhZC00MjdmLWI2ZDAtMDMwYmM3ODQyYTI5
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Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England

Explore at:
htmlAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
May 8, 2018
Dataset provided by
Defra - Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairshttp://defra.gov.uk/
License

Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically

Description

Information on farm household income and farm household composition. Source agency: Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Designation: National Statistics Language: English Alternative title: Farm Household Income and Household Composition, England

If you require the datasets in a more accessible format, please contact fbs.queries@defra.gsi.gov.uk

Background and guidance on the statistics

Information on farm household income and farm household composition was collected in the Farm Business Survey (FBS) for England for the first time in 2004/05. Collection of household income data is restricted to the household of the principal farmer from each farm business. For practical reasons, data is not collected for the households of any other farmers and partners. Two-thirds of farm businesses have an input only from the principal farmer’s household (see table 5). However, details of household composition are collected for the households of all farmers and partners in the business, but not employed farm workers.

Data on the income of farm households is used in conjunction with other economic information for the agricultural sector (e.g. farm business income) to help inform policy decisions and to help monitor and evaluate current policies relating to agriculture in the United Kingdom by Government. It also informs wider research into the economic performance of the agricultural industry.

This release gives the main results from the income and composition of farm households and the off-farm activities of the farmer and their spouse (Including common law partners) sections of the FBS. These sections include information on the household income of the principal farmer’s household, off-farm income sources for the farmer and spouse and incomes of other members of their household and the number of working age and pensionable adults and children in each of the households on the farm (the information on household composition can be found in Appendix B).

This release provides the main results from the 2013/14 FBS. The results are presented together with confidence intervals.

Survey content and methodology

The Farm Business Survey (FBS) is an annual survey providing information on the financial position and physical and economic performance of farm businesses in England. The sample of around 1,900 farm businesses covers all regions of England and all types of farming with the data being collected by face to face interview with the farmer. Results are weighted to represent the whole population of farm businesses that have at least 25 thousand Euros of standard output as recorded in the annual June Survey of Agriculture and Horticulture. In 2013 there were just over 58 thousand farm businesses meeting this criteria.

Since 2009/10 a sub-sample of around 1,000 farms in the FBS has taken part in both the additional surveys on the income and composition of farm households and the off-farm activities of the farmer and their spouse. In previous years, the sub-sample had included over 1,600 farms. As such, caution should be taken when comparing to earlier years.

The farms that responded to the additional survey on household incomes and off-farm activities of the farmer and spouse had similar characteristics to those farms in the main FBS in terms of farm type and geographical location. However, there is a smaller proportion of very large farms in the additional survey than in the main FBS. Full details of the characteristic of responding farms can be found at Appendix A of the notice.

For further information about the Farm Business Survey please see: https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/series/farm-business-survey

Data analysis

The results from the FBS relate to farms which have a standard output of at least 25,000 Euros. Initial weights are applied to the FBS records based on the inverse sampling fraction for each design stratum (farm type by farm size). These weights are then adjusted (calibration weighting) so that they can produce unbiased estimators of a number of different target variables. Completion of the additional survey on household incomes and off-farm activities of the farmer and spouse was voluntary and a sample of around 1,000 farms was achieved. In order to take account of non-response, the results have been reweighted using a method that preserves marginal totals for populations according to farm type and farm size groups. As such, farm population totals for other classifications (e.g. regions) will not be in-line with results using the main FBS weights, nor will any results produced for variables derived from the rest of the FBS (e.g. farm business income).

Accuracy and reliability of the results

We show 95% confidence intervals against the results. These show the range of values that may apply to the figures. They mean that we are 95% confident that this range contains the true value. They are calculated as the standard errors (se) multiplied by 1.96 to give the 95% confidence interval. The standard errors only give an indication of the sampling error. They do not reflect any other sources of survey errors, such as non-response bias. For the Farm Business Survey, the confidence limits shown are appropriate for comparing groups within the same year only; they should not be used for comparing with previous years since they do not allow for the fact that many of the same farms will have contributed to the Farm Business Survey in both years.

Availability of results

This release contains headline results for each section. The full set of results can be found at: https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/series/farm-business-survey#publications

Defra statistical notices can be viewed on the on the statistics pages of the Defra website at https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/about/statistics. This site also shows details of future publications, with pre-announced dates.

Data Uses

Data from the Farm Business Survey (FBS) are provided to the EU as part of the Farm Accountancy Data Network (FADN). The data have been used to help inform policy decisions (e.g. Reform of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 of Common Agricultural Policy) and to help monitor and evaluate current policies relating to agriculture in England (and the EU). It is also widely used by the industry for benchmarking and informs wider research into the economic performance of the agricultural industry.

User engagement

As part of our ongoing commitment to compliance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics http://www.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/assessment/code-of-practice/index.html, we wish to strengthen our engagement with users of these statistics and better understand the use made of them and the types of decisions that they inform. Consequently, we invite users to make themselves known, to advise us of the use they do, or might, make of these statistics, and what their wishes are in terms of engagement. Feedback on this notice and enquiries about these statistics are also welcome.

Definitions

Household income of the principal farmer Principal farmer’s household income has the following components: (1) The share of farm business income (FBI) (including income from farm diversification) attributable to the principal farmer and their spouse. (2) Principal farmer’s and spouse’s off farm income from employment and self-employment, investment income, pensions and social payments. (3) Income of other household members. The share of farm business income and all employment and self-employment incomes, investment income and pension income are recorded as gross of income tax payments and National Insurance contributions, but after pension contributions. In addition, no deduction is made for council tax.

Household A household is defined as a single person or group of people living at the same address as their only or main residence, who either share one meal a day together or share the living accommodation. A household must contain at least one person who received drawings from the farm business or who took a share of the profit from the business.

Drawings Drawings represent the monies which the farmer takes from the business for their own personal use. The percentage of total drawings going to each household is collected and is used to calculate the total share of farm business income for the principal farmer’s household.

Mean Mean household income of individuals is the ”average”, found by adding up the weighted household incomes for each individual farm in the population for analysis and dividing the result by the corresponding weighted number of farms. In this report average is usually taken to refer to the mean.

Percentiles These are the values which divide the population for analysis, when ranked by an output variable (e.g. household income or net worth), into 100 equal-sized groups. E.g. twenty five per cent of the population would have incomes below the 25th percentile.

Median Median household income divides the population, when ranked by an output variable, into two equal sized groups. The median of the whole population is the same as the 50th percentile. The term is also used for the midpoint of the subsets of the income distribution

Quartiles Quartiles are values which divide the population, when ranked by an output variable, into four equal-sized groups. The lowest quartile is the same as the 25th percentile. The divisions of a population split by quartiles are referred to as quarters in this publication.

Quintiles Quintiles are values which divide the population, when ranked by an output variable, into five equal-sized groups. The divisions of a population split by quintiles are referred to as fifths in this publication.

Assets Assets include

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