Canlyniadau chwilio ar gyfer kind
Mireinio'r canlyniadau
Clirio'r cyfan192 canlyniadau
Nid oes unrhyw ganlyniadau cyfatebol
Dewis pwnc arall neu clirio pob hidlydd.
Nid yw holl gynnwys y cyfrifia wedi'i ryddhau. Edrychwch am ddatganiadau sydd i ddod ar y calendr datganiadau. Fel arall, gallwch greu set ddata eich fun.
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Households & NPISH (S.14+S.15): Social benefits other than social transfers in kind (D.62): Resource: Y on Y-1 growth %: CP £m: SA
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Generational income: the effects of taxes and benefits
The effects of direct and indirect taxation and benefits received in cash or kind on household income, across the generations and by age.
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Effects of taxes and benefits on household income: historical person-level datasets
Data on the effects of taxes and benefits on household income publication from 2001, 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.
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Effects of Taxes and Benefits on Household Income
Estimates of mean and median annual incomes in the UK, by quintile groups. The redistribution effects on individuals of direct and indirect taxation and benefits received in cash or kind.
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The effects of taxes and benefits on household income, methodology and coherence
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Households receiving more in benefits than paid in taxes
The percentage of households in the UK who receive more in benefits (both cash benefits and benefits in kind) than they pay in taxes (both direct and indirect), from 1977 to 2012/13.
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The Effects of Taxes and Benefits on Household Income, Methodology and Coherence
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The effects of taxes and benefits on household income, technical report
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The effects of taxes and benefits on household income, financial year ending 2018
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Generational income: The effects of taxes and benefits
The effects of direct and indirect taxation and benefits received in cash or kind on household income, across the generations and by age. This data is estimated by combining multiple years of the Living Costs and Food Survey from 1978 to financial year ending March 2017 and the Household Finances Statistics, from financial year ending 2018 to financial year ending 2021 with the exception of 1979 and 1981. All financial amounts are adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH) excluding Council Tax, to their financial year ending March 2018. For example, the mean disposable income for those aged 35 and born in the 1970’s (£35,752) is estimated by taking the average (in real terms) of the household disposable income for these people across the combined dataset.