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The Laeken Indicators: Some Results and Methodological Issues in Acceding and Candidate Countries

The Laeken Indicators: Some Results and Methodological Issues in Acceding and Candidate Countries Anne-Catherine Guio - Eurostat -. Developments at EU level in the field of social inclusion. Launching of the Lisbon strategy (March 2000)

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The Laeken Indicators: Some Results and Methodological Issues in Acceding and Candidate Countries

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  1. The Laeken Indicators: Some Results and Methodological Issues in Acceding and Candidate Countries Anne-Catherine Guio - Eurostat -

  2. Developments at EU level in the field of social inclusion Launching of the Lisbon strategy (March 2000) « the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world capable of sustainable growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion » + Open method of coordination (OMC)

  3. The OMC in the field of social inclusion • Fixing common objectives/guidelines for the EU as a whole (Dec 2000, Nice) • Preparing national action plans on social inclusion (first Nap/incl summer 2001) • Establishing common indicators to monitor progress (Laeken, Dec2001) • Exchanging best practices across MS : peer review

  4. Laeken indicators • 18 indicators, a consistent whole • 10 primary, 8 secondary + national 3rd level • 4 important dimensions: financial poverty, employment, health, education: multidimensionality • The work is on going…

  5. Monetary aspects of poverty risk For EU15 Member States : • Between 1994 and 2001 the income based indicators were calculated for the Member States on the basis of the ECHP • EU-SILC will replace ECHP • We are now entering in a transition period…

  6. Monetary Laeken indicators in ACC and CAN • Change of practices (consumption-based indicators versus income-based indicators) • No ex-ante harmonized survey • Use of national data sources • Huge effort of ex-post harmonization • Till EU-SILC (launch in 2005, results in 2006)

  7. Income Definition • Harmonized with ECHP income definition • BUT including income in kind • Substantial component of income in these countries • Precursor of SILC income definition • Particular attention to exclude non-regular income (lottery winnings, insurance claim receipts, sales…) usually included in national definition

  8. At-risk-of-poverty rate, at level of total population, 2001

  9. Poverty measured as a relative concept • Threshold: 60% of the national median equivalised income (+ 40%, 50%, 70%) • Relative rather than absolute • Defined in relation to the level of prosperity in each country • Crucial to take into account the level of the threshold

  10. At-risk-of-poverty threshold, single person, 2001

  11. Breakdowns of poverty risk, expressed in % of poverty risk for total population, 2001

  12. Equivalence scale sensitivity At-risk-of-poverty rate

  13. At-risk-of-poverty rate, by age

  14. Further research: Deprivation • Possible candidate to provide complementary information in the portfolio of common indicators • Set of deprivation items will be available in EU-SILC • Methodological issues are being studied in Eurostat for the moment • Some information already available in national surveys for ACC and CAN…

  15. Deprivation

  16. Conclusions • Valuable comparative information on poverty in an Enlarged Union • Crucial to invest in the harmonized instrument EU-SILC and in data quality • Important to consider theFULL portfolio of Laeken indicators – multidimensionality • Importance of considering differences of at-risk-of-poverty thresholds and deprivation level • Indicators in development – dynamic process • Importance of sensitivity analysis (equiv. scale…)

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