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EU-SILC Provisional Results: Timely and Reliable Income and Living Conditions Data

Explore the benefits and challenges of providing timely and reliable income and living conditions data through the harmonized European Survey (EU-SILC). Discover the trade-off between timeliness and reliability for provisional results, and compare them with final data. Access the provisional results for various indicators and find more information on the INE-Spain website.

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EU-SILC Provisional Results: Timely and Reliable Income and Living Conditions Data

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  1. EU-SILC provisional results available two months after collection, a dream come true? (ARGÜESO, A.; MENDEZ, J.; VEGA, P.) Speaker: Antonio ARGÜESO Director of Social and demographic statistics INE-Spain

  2. There is a need for reliable and timely data on Income and living conditions In Europe The answer: a well-defined harmonized european Survey (EU-SILC) But it takes a lot of time to clean the data and provide high-quality information (more than two years) How often? Annual, to get a timely picture Of the situation • Why do EU-SILC data treatment take more than one year in all countries? • Because the product is a microdata file, that must be coherent and must have quality

  3. But timeliness is another dimension of quality Distance (between raw data and “perfect” ones) So, where is the optimum? Here? 2-3 months after collection Or there? 15 months after time

  4. The idea: The best microdata file can de delivered only after 15 months of data treatment (final results) Users: researchers, Academy But the best trade-off between timeliness and reliability for main indicators (provisional results), can it be reached sooner? Users: Media, public policies And the exercise: let’s tabulate the raw data collected in 2007 and 2008 (after a minimum automatic treatment) and compare them with those already published as final ones. How far are they ?

  5. Let’s start with the easiest case (non monetary data) Households with difficulties to make ends meet (%)

  6. At-risk-of-poverty rate by regions (%) So, at the national level the provisional data seem to be right, Let’s look at data by sex and age group:

  7. At-risk-of-poverty rate by age and sex (%)

  8. Monetary data: average income per capita by regions (in €)

  9. The decisions: - A new publication (and press release) containing provisional results at national level has been already issued. Provisional data. published: march 2010 EU-SILC 2009 Detailed (final) data. scheduled: nov 2010 T+4 months Provisional data. Scheduled. nov 2010 EU-SILC 2010 Detailed (final) data. scheduled: nov 2011 Provisional data: 1) At risk of poverty rate by age and sex group (national level) 2) Average income per household, person and consumption unit 3) Ability to make ends meet 4) Capacity to afford some aspects of living standards 5) Housing related arrears

  10. See provisional results & more info at: http://www.ine.es/jaxi/menu.do?L=1&type=pcaxis&path=%2Ft25%2Fp453&file=inebase

  11. Thanks for your attention!

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