wellinghall: (Alex)
wellinghall ([personal profile] wellinghall) wrote2008-12-01 08:34 am
Entry tags:

UK household income and expenditure

Household expenditure (£ per week)
Food and non-alcoholic drinks: £46.89
Alcoholic drinks, tobacco and narcotics: £11.12
Clothing and footwear: £23.24
Housing (excluding mortgage interest payments and council tax, which for some reason are included in "other expenditure" below): £47.56
Household goods and services: £30.26
Health: £5.87
Transport: £62.03
Communication (including mobile phone equipment and services): £11.75
Recreation and culture: £58.48
Education: £7.22
Restaurants and hotels: £37.88
Miscellaneous goods and services: £36.01
Other expenditure: £77.59
Total expenditure: £455.89


Number of taxpayers by annual income
£5,225 - £7,500: 2.5m
£7,500 - £10,000: 3.6m
£10k - £15k: 6.4m
£15k - £20k: 4.9m
£20k - £30k: 6.7m
£30k - £50k: 5.2m
£50k - £100k: 1.8m
£100k - : 0.6m


Household ownership of durable goods (2006)
At least one car: 76%
Including: only one car: 44%
Two cars: 26%
Three or more cars: 6%
Central heating: 95%
Washing machine: 96%
Freezer: 97%
Dishwasher: 38%
Landline: 91%
Mobile phone: 80%
Home computer: 67%
DVD player or VCR: 83%
Digital TV service: 71%
Internet connection: 59%


Household savings
No savings: 35%
Less than £1,500: 21%
£1,500 - £10,000: 23%
£10,000 - £20,000: 8%
£20,000 - : 13%

Source: Whitaker's Almanack for 2009, based on various reports for the Office for National Statistics
emperor: (Default)

[personal profile] emperor 2008-12-01 09:52 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, and how many people are in the household? [I assume those are per-week figures, but on further reflection, maybe not]

The taxable-income groups are rather unequel - that information would be better presented as a graph, I feel :)
Edited 2008-12-01 09:53 (UTC)

[identity profile] wellinghall.livejournal.com 2008-12-01 09:55 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, £ per week (didn't I say? - I'd better edit the post). The heading is just "household expenditure" - it probably lumps all households in together, whether they consist of one person or twenty.

The taxable-income groups are as given in the book - the original report may have more data. And I can't be bothered to put a graph on LJ at the moment - maybe when unemployment has eaten rather more deeply into my soul -