[DSD_EGDNA_INC_HHT@DF_INC_HHT] Household income and saving in the National Accounts: distributions by household type
Updated by provider on June 26, 2025 (1:34 PM).
This table presents household income and saving from the national accounts broken down by income quintile. It includes primary income, disposable income, adjusted disposable income and saving. Primary income is the income that households receive as a result of their involvement in production. It includes gross operating surplus (in the case of households, imputed income from owning your own house), gross mixed income (profits of the self-employed) and compensation of employees (wages and salaries and employers’ social contributions) as well as net interest, distributed income of corporations (dividends) and rent. Disposable income is the income that households receive after taxes on income and wealth, social contributions and benefits, non-life insurance premiums and claims, and other current transfers like remittances. Adjusted disposable income is derived from disposable income, but also includes the value of social transfers in kind received by households. Saving represents that part of disposable income (adjusted for the change in pension entitlements) that is not spent on final consumption goods and services.
In this table, households are grouped on the basis of their composition, taking into account the presence, number and age of the members of the household. Eight categories are shown: a) single person (adult) less than 65 years old, b) single adult aged 65 and older, c) single adult with children living at home, d) a couple (two adults) where both are less than 65 years old without children living at home, e) two adults where at least one is aged 65 or older without children living at home, f) two adults with fewer than 3 children living at home, g) two adults with at least 3 children living at home, and h) others. In this classification, an adult is defined as anyone who is 18 years old or older.<br><br>
Results are presented in national currency and as averages per household and per consumption unit (you can choose these from the ‘Unit of measure’ filter). Results per consumption unit (equivalised income and saving) are obtained by dividing each household’s result by the number of consumption units, reflecting its consumption needs, for example by applying the standard OECD-modified equivalence scale, counting the first adult as 1, any additional people aged 14 and over as 0.5 and all children under 14 as 0.3.<br><br>
The default view of this table is for a single country (‘Reference area’ filter) and single year (‘Time period’ filter). In cases where countries appear to be greyed-out, data may be available for earlier years, and these can be selected by selecting a different start and end year in the ‘Time period’ filter. Users are recommended to select one country at a time to obtain a comprehensive overview of the distributional results for that country for a given period of time. Alternatively, you may select a specific item from the ‘Transaction’ filter to make cross-country comparisons. <br><br>
For more information on the (compilation of) these results, please see the <a href="https://www.oecd.org/sdd/na/household-distributional-results-in-line-with-national-accounts-experimental-statistics.htm"> webpage on household distributional results </a>.
This dataset has 11,554 series:
- from
- 2003=53,224
- to
- 2017=128,248
- min:
- 53,224
- max:
- 128,248
- avg:
- 87,639.75
- σ:
- 24,143.67
- from
- 2003=9,991
- to
- 2017=29,146
- min:
- 9,991
- max:
- 29,146
- avg:
- 18,435.875
- σ:
- 7,558.584
- from
- 2003=27,882
- to
- 2017=48,231
- min:
- 27,882
- max:
- 53,491
- avg:
- 40,616.125
- σ:
- 8,003.913
- from
- 2003=3,915
- to
- 2017=6,764
- min:
- 3,915
- max:
- 9,965
- avg:
- 6,089.5
- σ:
- 1,710.478
- from
- 2003=7,229
- to
- 2017=16,210
- min:
- 4,869
- max:
- 16,210
- avg:
- 9,640.125
- σ:
- 3,620.93
- from
- 2003=12,811
- to
- 2017=24,941
- min:
- 12,811
- max:
- 24,941
- avg:
- 19,797.5
- σ:
- 3,919.368
- from
- 2003=16,907
- to
- 2017=40,146
- min:
- 16,907
- max:
- 41,624
- avg:
- 30,846.75
- σ:
- 8,897.112
- from
- 2003=131,959
- to
- 2017=293,685
- min:
- 131,959
- max:
- 293,685
- avg:
- 213,065
- σ:
- 53,389.382
This dataset has 11,554 series:
- from
- 2003=53,224
- to
- 2017=128,248
- min:
- 53,224
- max:
- 128,248
- avg:
- 87,639.75
- σ:
- 24,143.67
- from
- 2003=9,991
- to
- 2017=29,146
- min:
- 9,991
- max:
- 29,146
- avg:
- 18,435.875
- σ:
- 7,558.584
- from
- 2003=27,882
- to
- 2017=48,231
- min:
- 27,882
- max:
- 53,491
- avg:
- 40,616.125
- σ:
- 8,003.913
- from
- 2003=3,915
- to
- 2017=6,764
- min:
- 3,915
- max:
- 9,965
- avg:
- 6,089.5
- σ:
- 1,710.478
- from
- 2003=7,229
- to
- 2017=16,210
- min:
- 4,869
- max:
- 16,210
- avg:
- 9,640.125
- σ:
- 3,620.93
- from
- 2003=12,811
- to
- 2017=24,941
- min:
- 12,811
- max:
- 24,941
- avg:
- 19,797.5
- σ:
- 3,919.368
- from
- 2003=16,907
- to
- 2017=40,146
- min:
- 16,907
- max:
- 41,624
- avg:
- 30,846.75
- σ:
- 8,897.112
- from
- 2003=131,959
- to
- 2017=293,685
- min:
- 131,959
- max:
- 293,685
- avg:
- 213,065
- σ:
- 53,389.382