Intra-household inequality and material deprivation and poverty in Europe

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Intra-household inequality and material deprivation and poverty in Europe Tania Burchardt and Eleni Karagiannaki Social Situation Monitor Seminar Multidimensional Poverty in the EU Brussels 12 th March 2018

Background Living standards (e.g. income poverty and material deprivation) are usually assessed using household-level indicators underlying assumption: sharing of household resources is made to the equal benefit of all household members. But we know that resources are not always shared equally within households though most research to date on couples This project is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council Research objective: To examine the implications of intra-household inequality on poverty, inequality and material deprivation in Europe. Focus on multi-family households Today s talk on the implications of intra-household inequality on material deprivation

Research objectives To use data personal deprivation data included the 2014 round of EU-SILC to examine what we can infer about the intra-household allocation of resources. And conversely to examine to what extent intra-household inequality contributes to adult deprivation outcomes Focus on multi-family households: research on these types of household scarce; income pooling/sharing of resources more likely to be incomplete; prevalence of multi-family hhs is non-negligible and varies across Europe

Large cross-country variation in rates of co-residence across Europe Population living in households containing two+ family units, by country, 2014 RS:Serbia RO:Romania SK:Slovakia HR:Croatia PL:Poland BG:Bulgaria LV:Latvia MT:Malta CY:Cyprus HU:Hungary PT:Portugal SI:Slovenia ES:Spain IT:Italy EL:Greece LT:Lithuania CZ:Czeck Republic EE:Estonia LU:Luxemburg Total IE:Ireland AT:Austria BE:Belgium IS-Iceland UK:United Kingdom CH:Switzerland FR:France NL:Netherlands DE:Germany FI:Finland DK:Denmark SE:Sweden NO:Norway 11.9 25.5 32.5 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Percentage 62.3 Data source: EU-SILC

EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) 2014 EU-SILC is the annual micro-data source for EU social indicators, collecting information on income, material deprivation and many household characteristics Countries given common framework of required outputs but flexibility on methods and data collection design (survey, or register plus survey) The 2014 survey was conducted in 28 EU countries plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Serbia N 500,000 adults and 120,000 children Detailed income information (some recorded at personal and some household level) Equivalised [modified OECD scales] net household income= Gross household and individual incomes, minus regular taxes, social security contributions and inter-hh transfers No household grid but enough info to determine most (but not all) household relationships and identify different family units in households family unit defined as single individual or couple with any dependent children.

Material deprivation indicators PD2: Personal deprivation indicator indicates whether the individual cannot afford two or more of the following 7 items 1. replacing worn out clothes by some new (not second hand); 2. two pairs of properly fitting shoes (including a pair of all-weather shoes); 3. get together with friends/family (relatives) for drink/meal at least once per month; 4. regularly participate in leisure activities; 5. spend a small amount of money each week on yourself; 6. internet connection for personal use at home; 7. regular use of public transport Source: 2014 Material deprivation module HD3: Household deprivation indicator indicates whether the individual cannot afford three or more of the following 9 items 1. to pay their rent, mortgage or utility bills; 2. to keep their home adequately warm; 3. to face unexpected expenses; 4. to eat meat or proteins regularly; 5. to go on holiday; 6. to have a television set; 7. to have a washing machine; 8. to have a car; 9. to have a telephone Source: 2014 core EU-SILC dataset

Deprivation rates in terms of HD3 and PD2 indicators by gender, family type and co-residence status

Multivariate analysis Probit model predicting the probability of being deprived in terms of PD2 indicator Regressors gender, age and age squared family type by co-residence status equivalised net household income individual income share i.e. income of each individual as share total household income (used as a proxy of individual s control over household resources) Models first on the pooled sample of all countries and family types with country and family type dummies, Then separate models by country and family type

Effects of personal and household characteristics on the probability of being PD deprived (pooled probit model) Estimated marginal effects from pooled probit model -0.20-0.15-0.10-0.05 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 Age Age squared 0.00 0.01 Gen der Family type Male (ref.) Couples with ch. one family hh (ref.) Couple no ch. one family hh Couple elderly one family hh Single with ch. multi family hh Single no ch. multi family hh Single elderly multi family hh -0.04-0.01 0.01 0.01 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.04 0.03 0.10 0.11 Log household income -0.18 Individual income share -0.04 Note: All blue shaded bars indicate statistically significance at least 10 per cent significance level.

Predicted probabilities for household income and individual income share

The effect of individual income shares as predictor of PD2 risk varies substantially across different countries (country level models) DK: Denmark UK: United Kingdom ES: Spain IE: Ireland FI: Finland DE: Germany BE: Belgium LU: Luxemburg AT: Austria EE: Estonia NL: Netherlands FR: France SE: Sweden MT: Malta CY: Cyprus IT: Italy EL: Greece CZ: Czech Republic PT: Portugal HR: Croatia SI: Slovenia HU: Hungary PL: Poland LT: Lithuania RO: Romania BG: Bulgaria SK: Slovakia LV: Latvia Marginal effects on the individual s income share estimated by country level models -0.20-0.16-0.16-0.17-0.17-0.01-0.01-0.01-0.02-0.02-0.02-0.03-0.03-0.04-0.04-0.04-0.04-0.05-0.05-0.06-0.06-0.07-0.07-0.08-0.08-0.08-0.25-0.20-0.15-0.10-0.05 0.00 0.05 Note: All blue shaded bars indicate statistically significance at least 10 per cent significance level. 0.01 0.03

.and across family types (family type level models) Marginal effect on individual income shares in models by family type Adults in multi-family households Elderly single Elderly couple Single no children Couple no children Single with children Couple with children -0.16-0.12-0.12-0.08-0.03 0.05 Adults in one-family households Elderly single Elderly couple Single no children Couple no children Single with children Couple with children -0.03 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.03-0.20-0.15-0.10-0.05 0.00 0.05 0.10 Note: All blue shaded bars indicate statistically significance at least 10 per cent significance level.

The combined HD-PD index Treat HD and PD as two dimensions of an overall deprivation index following the Alkire & Foster (2007, 2011) adjusted headcount index methodology for the MPI - Define an individual as poor if they are deprived in either dimension (HD >= 3 or PD >= 2) - Headcount ratio (H) = individuals deprived in either dimension as a proportion of all individuals - Intensity (A) = average number of deprivation items of the poor MPI = H x A

PD accounts for just over half of combined deprivation measure across all countries Combined HD PD MPI type measure Headcount 0.26 Intensity 0.32 Adjusted Headcount Ratio 0.08 % contribution of HD3 44.6% % contribution of PD2 55.4% EU-28 countries + 4 (Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Serbia)

...but the relative importance of HD and PD varies across countries Contribution of PD to combined MPI HD-PD measure, by country FI:Finland CY:Cyprus HR:Croatia CZ:Czeck Republic EL:Greece EE:Estonia SK:Slovakia NO:Norway SI:Slovenia IE:Ireland PL:Poland LV:Latvia RS:Serbia NL:Netherlands PT:Portugal DK:Denmark LT:Lithuania IT:Italy HU:Hungary AT:Austria SE:Sweden All ES:Spain LU:Luxemburg BG:Bulgaria BE:Belgium FR:France UK:United Kingdom DE:Germany IS-Iceland MT:Malta RO:Romania CH:Switzerland 0.229 0.345 0.354 0.367 0.429 0.441 0.446 0.455 0.461 0.488 0.489 0.490 0.496 0.508 0.515 0.525 0.526 0.531 0.531 0.542 0.550 0.554 0.571 0.575 0.577 0.586 0.587 0.596 0.609 0.610 0.626 0.640 0.650 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 Proportion of combined measure

PD indicator captures some variation in the benefit obtained from household resources by different members Control over resources (as proxied by individual s contribution to total household income) matters and matters more in multi-family households (i.e. between families sharing/pooling less complete) Economic, social and cultural context matter - cross-national variations not wholly explained by compositional effects Both HD and PD matter for individual living standard Adopting a combined measure would provide extra information deprivation risk assessment

For more information about the project visit the project website http://sticerd.lse.ac.uk/case/_new/research/intra-household/