Percentage of the population living in households at risk of persistent poverty

“Percentage of the population living in households persistently at risk of poverty” data from EU-Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) is being used for international comparability. For the main UK data series on persistent low income households see the Income Dynamics experimental statistics.

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Headline data

Source: Eurostat

Geographical Area: United Kingdom

Unit of Measurement: Percentage (%)

This table provides metadata for the actual indicator available from UK statistics closest to the corresponding global SDG indicator. Please note that even when the global SDG indicator is fully available from UK statistics, this table should be consulted for information on national methodology and other UK-specific metadata information.

Indicator available

Percentage of the population living in households at risk of persistent poverty

Indicator description

The percentage of people who are living in households which are deemed at risk of poverty in the national context. Monitoring national poverty is important for country-specific development agendas. National poverty lines are used to make more accurate estimates of poverty consistent with the country’s specific economic and social circumstances, and are not intended for international comparisons of poverty rates.

Geographical coverage

United Kingdom

Unit of measurement

Percentage (%)

Definitions

Household - A ‘private household’ means “a person living alone or a group of people who live together in the same private dwelling and share expenditures, including the joint provision of the essentials of living”. EU-SILC implementing regulation number 1983/2003 on updated definitions, defines households in terms of sharing household expenses and (for non-permanent members) in terms of duration of stay and (for temporarily absent members) in terms of duration of absence. Definitions sourced from “Income and Living Conditions” Metadata (Eurostat).

Household income - The total disposable income of a household is calculated by adding together the personal income received by all of household members plus income received at household level. Missing income information is imputed.

Disposable household income includes i) All income from work (employee wages and self-employment earnings), ii) Private income from investment and property, iii) Transfers between households, iv) All social transfers received in cash including old-age pensions Note - Some of the income components are mandatory only from 2007 - Imputed rent, Interest paid on mortgage, and v) Employer’s social insurance contributions. From 2007 onwards, all countries have to supply gross income information.
The current definition of total household disposable income used for the calculation of EU-SILC based indicators excludes i) Imputed rent - i.e. money that one saves on full (market) rent by living in one’s own accommodation or in accommodation rented at a price that is lower than the market rent, and ii) Non monetary income components, in particular value of goods produced for own consumption, social transfers in kind and non-cash employee income except company cars.

Equivalence scale - To take into account the impact of differences in household size and composition, the total disposable household income is “equivalised”. The equivalised income attributed to each member of the household is calculated by dividing the total disposable income of the household by the equivalisation factor.

Equivalisation factors can be determined in various ways. Eurostat applies an equivalisation factor calculated according to the OECD-modified scale first proposed in 1994. This gives a weight of 1.0 to the first person aged 14 or more, a weight of 0.5 to other persons aged 14 or more and a weight of 0.3 to persons aged 0-13.

Available disaggregations
Calculations

No calculations were performed in the data acquisition of this indicator as appropriate data was readily available in the final format specified by this indicator. For insight into the details of potential calculations please refer to the original source metadata or source contact.

Other information

At persistent risk of poverty rate by age and gender (cut-off point - 60% of median equivalised income) This indicator is being used as an approximation of the UN SDG Indicator. Where possible, we will work to identify or develop UK data to meet the global indicator specification. This indicator has been identified in collaboration with topic experts.

Data last updated 14 September 2021
Metadata last updated 01 December 2021

This table provides information on metadata for SDG indicators as defined by the UN Statistical Commission. Complete global metadata is provided by the UN Statistics Division.

Indicator name

Proportion of men, women and children of all ages living in poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions

Target name

By 2030, reduce at least by half the proportion of men, women and children of all ages living in poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions

Global indicator description
UN designated tier

Tier II

UN custodian agency

United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEFF), World Bank (WB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

Link to UN metadata United Nations Sustainable Development Goals metadata for target 1.2 opens in a new window
Organisation

Eurostat

Periodicity

Annual

Earliest available data

1998

Geographical coverage

United Kingdom

Link to data source Persistent at-risk-of-poverty rate by sex and age - EU-SILC survey (ilc_li21) opens in a new window
Release date 06 May 2020
Next release

TBC

Statistical classification

Official International

Contact details

http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/help/support

Other information

Income and living conditions (ilc) metadata

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