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Reference tables to accompany Understanding how accounting for differences in need for public services impacts income inequality statistics (Experimental), covering the period 2014 to 2015 and 2018 to 2019. Equivalisation is the process of adjusting income statistics to account for the fact that households of different compositions will require different incomes to have the same standard of living.
Preliminary estimates for Great Britain from the Wealth and Assets Survey using attitudinal data around individuals' attitudes towards saving for retirement, not dependent on thorough checking and imputation methodology.
Preliminary estimates for Great Britain from the Wealth and Assets Survey using attitudinal data on individuals' attitudes towards pensions, not dependent on thorough checking and imputation methodology.
Preliminary estimates for Great Britain from the Wealth and Assets Survey using attitudinal data not dependent on thorough checking and imputation methodology.
Preliminary estimates for Great Britain from the Wealth and Assets Survey using attitudinal data on individuals' attitudes towards bills and credit commitments, not dependent on thorough checking and imputation methodology.
Provisional estimates of income and inequality measures for financial year ending 2019, alongside historical data.
Main tables from the Effects of taxes and benefits on household income publication from 1977, including average incomes, taxes and benefits and household characteristics of all, retired and non-retired individuals and households in the UK by quintile and decile groups.
Full dataset of economic well-being indicators included or referenced in the quarterly release.
Data relevant to experimental statistics on financial resilience from round 6 of the Wealth and Assets Survey.
Comparison of proxy levels (where an individual completes the survey, but their responses are provided by another household member) and recontact permission rates, by treatment group.