4. Changing profile of total social protection expenditure
Figure 2 illustrates how the social protection expenditure of selected European countries has been distributed among a range of categories in 2015. Under the European System of integrated Social Protection Statistics (ESSPROS) scheme, expenditure is divided into eight broad categories:
- old age
- sickness and health
- disability
- survivors
- unemployment
- children and family
- housing
- social exclusion not elsewhere classified
In this analysis, some categories have been merged. The category that will be referred to as “old age” will also contain benefits in the survivors’ category. The survivors’ category encompasses benefits “to people who have suffered from the loss of a spouse or a next-of-kin, usually when the latter represented the main breadwinner”1. The expenditure in this category is largely pensions to surviving partners, thus benefitting mainly those in the old age category. Similarly, the sickness and health category has been combined with the disability category.
Whereas GDP can give an indication of a country’s ability to spend on social protection, expenditure per head is a better indication of the experience of recipients. This international comparison is best made using purchasing power standards (PPS). This is an artificial currency unit used to remove the effects of price differences in international comparisons. One PPS will, in theory, buy the same amount in each country at a common point in time.
Figure 2: Selected countries' social protection expenditure in purchasing power standards per head by function of spend, 2015
Source: Eurostat, Office for National Statistics
Notes:
- ''Other'' represents expenditure on social exclusion not elsewhere classified under ESSPROS definitions.
- The whole of the population including children, is used in these calculations.
Download this chart Figure 2: Selected countries' social protection expenditure in purchasing power standards per head by function of spend, 2015
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Norway spent the most on social protection per head at 12,495 PPS. A high proportion of this expenditure was on sickness, health and disability at 46.4% representing 5,800 PPS. This compares with 42.8% spent in Germany and 40.8% spent in the UK in 2015, representing 4,438 PPS and 3,437 PPS per head respectively.
Both the UK and Germany spent proportionately more than Norway on the sickness and health aspect of this figure (UK, 34.9%; Germany, 34.7%; Norway, 30%). However, Norway’s expenditure on disability social protection, at 16.4%, was the highest of the selected countries. Germany’s expenditure, at 8%, was the second-largest, followed by Spain who spent 7.2% of their total social protection expenditure on disability. The three remaining countries – France, the UK and Italy – spent 6.4%, 6.0% and 5.8% on disability respectively.
Compared to other countries, the UK spent the highest proportion of its social protection expenditure on housing, representing 4.7% of social protection expenditure or 400 PPS per head. This compares with the next highest proportion of 2.6% spent by France representing 262 PPS per head.
When comparing housing benefit across countries it is also important to recognise that some countries may offer higher levels of other benefits such as unemployment benefit, allowing beneficiaries to then spend the money on housing. Where this is the case, the amount of housing benefit is likely to be lower as a share of the total social protection budget in that country.
The higher amount of social protection benefit spent on housing in the UK could also be due to higher housing costs relative to other countries. In 2015, the National Housing Federation2 analysed the Eurostat database and found that, on average, private rented households in the UK spend almost 40% of their income on paying their rent, compared with a European average of 28%.
The UK spent the lowest proportion on unemployment representing just 1.4% of the total social protection expenditure or 116 PPS per head. At 5.3% its unemployment rate was the third lowest of the six countries. Norway had the lowest unemployment rate, 4.5% and spent 2.4% of its social protection in this category but Germany’s unemployment rate was 4.6% against a social protection spend that was 3.7% of its total.
The other three counties all had unemployment rates that exceeded 10%, with France’s rate at 10.4%, Italy’s rate at 11.9% and Spain’s rate at 22.1%. Unemployment accounted for 6.2% and 5.9% of social protection expenditure in France and Italy respectively. The equivalent figure for Spain was 9.0%.
Table 1: Annual rate of unemployment across the selected countries in 2015
Download this table Table 1: Annual rate of unemployment across the selected countries in 2015
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Notes for: Changing profile of total social protection expenditure
ESSPROS Manual and User guidelines 2016 Edition.
Koessl, G. (2015). Private renters in UK pay double the European average. National Housing Federation. London. Available at: https://www.housing.org.uk/blog/private-renters-in-uk-pay-double-the-european-average/
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