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        SECTION 1 User Guide
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1.     T codes are used only for the preparation of the publication  FAMILY SPENDING        Weekly equivalent values    So that expenditure from different sources can be aggregated  it is necessary for all expenditure  amounts to be on an equivalent basis  In order to achieve this  all expenditure amounts collected    Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 5    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Database definitions Family Expenditure Survey    through the questionnaire are converted to WEEKLY EQUIVALENT VALUES  In the dataset   weekly equivalent values can be identified because they are pre fixed  DV   Information on weekly  equivalent values is included as part of the questionnaire  Weekly equivalent values are RAW  variables and so are listed in Section 2 of the User Documentation     Page 6 Date Produced   25 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Family Expenditure Survey Database definitions    Period codes    Where expenditure amounts are not given on a weekly equivalent basis  a weekly equivalent is  calculated by dividing the amount given by the appropriate period  The standard period codes  are coding frame 18 and can be found in Part 5 of Section 3 of the User Documentation     Household questionnaire  The Household Questionnaire must be completed for EVERY adult in the household     The household questionnaire collects information on household characteristics and the  characteristics of the individuals living there  Also collected through the Household  Questionn
2.    DATABASE CHANGES   Section 5 of the User Documentation describes the changes that have taken place in the 1995 96 database when  compared with 1994 95  Several major changes have been introduced for 1995 96  For example  Council Tax and  Council Tax water payments are now fully anonymised on the database  This means that total housing expenditure and  therefore total expenditure are now available on the database using these anonymised data  In previous years housing  expenditure has been excluded as anonymised Council Tax data were not an integral part of the dataset     Parts 1 and 4 show New Raw variables for 1995 96 and new derived variables for 1995 96     Parts 2 and 5 show 1994 95 raw variables that have been deleted for 1995 96 and 1994 95 derived variables that  have been deleted for 1995 96     Parts 3 and 6 show 1994 5 raw variables amended in 1995 96 and 1994 5 derived variables amended in 1995 96     Part 7 shows the new expenditure codes for 1995 96 and Part 8 shows the 1994 95 expenditure codes amended in  1995 96     Part 9 shows the new tables for 1995 96 and Part 10 shows the 1994 95 tables that have been deleted from the  1995 96 dataset     Part 11   Major changes  highlights some of the more important definitional changes for 1995 96    Part 12   Questionnaire changes is based on a paper produced by SSD and describes question deletions  additions and  wording changes that have been implemented for the 1995 96 questionnaires    SECTION 6   VARIABLE RELAT
3.   etc   during the month prior to the date of interview are recorded in the household schedule  The  weekly equivalent of the value of the goods is included in the expenditure on the separate items  given in the tables in this report  This procedure has the advantage of enabling club transactions  to be related to specific articles  Although payments into clubs  etc  are shown in the diary  record book  these entries are excluded from expenditure estimates     Page 6 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Family Expenditure Survey Survey definitions    d  Credit card transactions    From 1988 purchases made by credit card or charge card have been recorded in the survey on an  acquisition basis rather than the formerly used payment basis  Thus  if a spender acquired an  item  by use of credit charge card  during the two week survey period  the value of the item would  be included as part of his expenditure whether or not he made any payment in this period to his  credit card account  On the other hand  if he made any payment  in whole or in part  to his credit  card account covering an item not acquired in the two week survey period then the value of this  item  and the payment to the credit card amount for it  would be ignored  Any payment of  credit charge card interest is included in expenditure if made in the two week period     e  Income Tax    Amounts of income tax deducted under the PAYE scheme or paid directly by those who are  employers or s
4.  Income from self employment    Income from self employment covers any personal income from employment other  than as an employee  for example  as a sole trader  professional or other person  working on his own account or in partnership  including subsidiary work on his  own account by an employee  It is measured from estimates of income or trading  profits  after deduction of business expenses but before deduction of tax  over the  most recent twelve month period for which figures can be given  Should a loss  have been made  income would be taken as the amounts drawn from the business  for own use  Persons working as mail order agents or baby sitters  with no other  employment  have been classified as unoccupied rather than as self employed  and  the earnings involved have been classified as earnings from  other sources  rather  than self employment income     Income from investment    Income from investments or from property  other than that in which the household  is residing  is the amount received during the twelve months immediately prior to  the date of the initial interview  It includes receipts from sub letting part of the  dwelling  net of the expenses of the sub letting   If income tax has been deducted at  source the gross amount is estimated by applying a conversion factor during  processing     Social security benefits  Income from social security benefits does not include the short term payments  such as unemployment or sickness benefit received by an employee 
5.  gas  electricity and telephone accounts  licences  and insurance  education  season tickets and hire purchase during the interview  Each individual  aged 16 or over in the household keeps a detailed record of expenditure every day for two weeks   Children aged between 7 and 15 were asked on a voluntary basis to keep a diary of daily  expenditure  The information provided is kept strictly confidential  If all persons aged 16 and  over in the household co operate each is subsequently paid   10 for the trouble involved in  supplying the information  Children who keep a diary are given a  5 payment  A refusal by an  under 16 to keep a diary does not invalidate the household from inclusion in the survey  A total  of 2 224 children aged between 7 and 15 were asked to complete expenditure diaries  only 39 or  about 2 per cent refused     Reliability    Great care is taken in collecting information from households and comprehensive checks are  applied during processing  so that errors in recording and processing are minimal  The main types  of error that affect the reliability of the survey results are sampling errors  non response bias and  some incorrect reporting of certain items of expenditure and income    There is evidence indicating that some characteristics of the households who decline to respond to  the survey differ from those who co operate  It is therefore possible that their patterns of  expenditure and income also differ  A comparison    has been made of the household
6.  sample design    The FES sample for Great Britain is a stratified clustered random sample drawn from the small  users file of the Postcode Address File   the Post Office s list of addresses  All Scottish offshore  islands and the Isle of Scilly are excluded from the sample because of excessive travel costs   Postal sectors  ward size  are the primary sample unit  672 postal sectors are randomly selected  during the year after being arranged in strata defined by standard regions  area type  and two  1991 Census variables  proportion of owner occupiers and proportion of renters   The Northern  Ireland sample is drawn as a random sample of addresses from Rating and Valuation lists     Response to the survey   Some 10 000 households are selected each year to be invited to take part in the FES  It is never  possible to cover the entire sample selected  A small number cannot be contacted at all  and in  other households one or more members decline to co operate  In all  some 7 000 households in  the UK  or about 70 per cent of those contacted  co operate fully in the survey each year i e  they    complete both the diary and the questionnaire     Details of response in Great Britain to the 1995 96 survey are shown in the following table     Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 1    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 4  Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey Family Expenditure Survey    ii     iii   iv      lt     Page 2    Response in 1995 96    Sampled households  Ineligible 
7.  the following  paragraphs     a  Goods supplied from a household s own shop or farm  Spenders are asked to record and give the value of goods obtained from their own shop or farm   even if the goods are withdrawn from stock for personal use without payment  The value is    included as expenditure     b  Hire purchase and credit sales agreements  and transactions financed by loans repaid by  instalments    Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 5    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Survey definitions Family Expenditure Survey    Expenditure on transactions under their purchase or credit sales agreements  or financed by  loans repaid by instalments  consists of all instalments which are still being paid at the date of  interview  together with down payments on commodities acquired within the preceding three  months  These two components  divided by the periods covered  provide the weekly averages  which are included in the expenditure on the separate items given in the tables in this report     c  Club payments and budget account payments  instalments through mail order firms and  similar forms of credit transaction    When goods are purchased by forms of credit other than hire purchase and credit sales  agreement  the expenditure on them may be estimated either from the amount of the instalment  which is paid or from the value of the goods which are acquired  Since the particular commodities  to which the instalment relates may not be known  details of goods ordered through clubs
8. IONSHIPS   Section 6 of the User Documentation shows the relationships between variables within the dataset  Part 1 of this    section shows which raw variables are used to make up derived variables and Part 2 lists raw variables which are used  in derived variables     Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 3    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 1  Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation Family Expenditure Survey    OTHER ITEMS OF DOCUMENTATION PROVIDED TO USERS      Household Questionnaire     Income Questionnaire     The FES Diary  adult and young person s      FES Interview Prompt Cards     Household Questionnaire   Interviewers Instructions  amp  Editing Notes    Income Questionnaire   Interviewers Instructions  amp  Editing Notes     FES Diary   instructions to interviewers     FES Diary   editing notes    Page 4 Date Produced   4 February 1999    If you have any queries relating to the 1995 96 FES database please contact the FES team on  0171 217 4184 4244    Contents Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 2  The structure of the 1995 96 database Family Expenditure Survey    THE STRUCTURE OF THE 1995 96 DATABASE    For definitions of the terms used here  please see Part 3   Database definitions     Outline of the structure of the FES database 1995 96    In the FES database  variables are grouped to form a number of different TABLES  The raw tables  contain data as it is received from Social Survey Division  ONS  and the derived tables contain  processed dat
9. ONS  No  38  Jan 1996    2 See the Distribution of eamings of Employees in Great Britain by A R Thatcher  Journal of the Royal Society  Series A  Vol 131  1968   On the reliability of  income data in the Family Expenditure Survey 1970 1977 by A B Atkinson and J Micklewright  Journal of the Royal Statistical Society  Series A  Vol 146   1983   and Family Expenditure Survey Handbook  1980      Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 3    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 4  Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey Family Expenditure Survey    Resources Survey  the Department of Social Security   and the New Earnings Survey and Labour  Force Survey  ONS   and national income statistics     Page 4 Date Produced   25 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 4  Family Expenditure Survey Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey    It must be emphasised that the FES is primarily a survey of expenditure on goods and services by  households  The information obtained by the survey does not permit the construction of  household accounts in the form of an income expenditure balance sheet for a specific period   Information which is obtained about income is used primarily to classify households into income  groups  in order that separate analyses of expenditure can be made for these groups of  households  The definitions of weekly household expenditure and income used are such that it is  not to be expected that expenditure and income will balance  either for an individual ho
10. Pst  orrice ron     amp  NATIONAL  STATISTICS    Family Expenditure Survey  User Documentation  1995 96    SECTION 1  User Guide    Family Expenditure Survey 1995 96   SECTION 1    USER GUIDE   Contents Colour  Part 1   Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation white  Part 2   The Structure of the 1995 96 Database pink  Part 3   Database Definitions yellow  Part 4   Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey blue  Part 5   Survey Definitions green  Part 6   Additional Information salmon    Date Produced   25 February 1999 Contents    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 1  Family Expenditure Survey Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation    GUIDE TO THE 1995 96 USER DOCUMENTATION    Structure of the User Documentation    SECTION 1   USER GUIDE  Part 1   Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation  Part 2   The Structure of the 1995 96 Database  Part 3   Database Definitions  Part 4   Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey  Part 5   Survey Definitions  Part 6   Additional Information    SECTION 2   THE RAW DATABASE  Explanatory note  Part     Raw table definitions in table name order  Part 2   Raw variables in variable order  Part 3   Raw variables ordered by variable description  Part 4   Raw variables in question reference order    SECTION 3   THE DERIVED DATABASE  Explanatory note  Anonymisation in the 1995 96 FES  Part 1   Derived table definitions in table name order  Part 2   Derived variables in variable order  Part 3   Derived variables ordered by variable descrip
11. The Family Expenditure Survey  FES  is a voluntary sample survey of private households  The  basic unit of the survey is the  household  which is defined as a group of people living at the same  address  with common housekeeping e g  sharing household expenses such as food and bills  see     Survey Definitions   Section 1  Part 5   Each individual aged 16 or over in the household visited is  asked to keep diary records of daily expenditure for two weeks  For the first time in 1995 96  children aged between 7 and 15 were also asked to complete simplified diaries of their daily  expenditure  Details about regular expenditure and income are also obtained by interviewing all  adult members of the household     To set the spending information in perspective  detailed questions are asked about the income of  each adult member of the household  This enables households to be classified by their total  income  In addition  personal information such as age  sex and marital status is recorded for each  household member     The survey has been conducted each year since 1957  The survey is continuous  interviews are  spread evenly over the year to ensure that seasonal expenditure changes are covered  From time  to time  changes are made to the information sought  Some changes reflect new forms of  expenditure or new sources of income  especially benefits  The survey data may therefore not  provide a consistent time series  and care should be taken when making comparisons over time     The
12. a     The attached flow diagram   OUTLINE OF THE STRUCTURE OF THE FES DATABASE 1995 96   gives an approximation of the location of different categories of data and the flow of data between  the tables that comprise the database  data flow is shown by the arrows   It should be noted that  it gives general flows only and is not definitive     The boxes that are contained in the orange box  surrounded by the dotted line  represent raw data  that is collected through both the diary and the questionnaires  It can be seen that there are raw  data tables relating to diary expenditure  credit card expenditure  loans and so on  Definitions of  the raw database are to be found in SECTION 2 of the User Documentation     ALL of the boxes OUTSIDE the orange area  i e  those not contained within the dotted line   represent derived data  All derived table names are pre fixed  SET  and definitions are to be found  in SECTION 3 of the User Documentation  Eight such tables are named individually on the flow  diagram because they play key roles in the data processing procedure  as described below     All boxes contained in the purple area make use of the EXPENDITURE CODES  as detailed in User  Documentation Section 4  either as a coding frame  called expend keytextl  or as a variable   where the code is pre fixed  d        The data flow    For definitions of expenditure relating to loans  hire purchase and credit clubs etc   SET87  SET86  and SET88  please see Part 5   Survey Definitions     Th
13. aire is information on mortgages  rents  bills  insurance policies  loans  hire purchase   standing orders  season tickets and other irregular expenditure such as that on cars or home  improvements  Information on the irregular purchases is often obtained through retrospective  recall  i e  the question may be    when did you last purchased a             Expenditure on  retrospective recall is converted to a weekly equivalent value  That is  if the recall period is one  year  then the weekly equivalent value is calculated by dividing by 52     See the Household Questionnaire for details on questions and recall periods     Income Questionnaire  The Income Questionnaire must be completed for EVERY adult in the household     The income questionnaire collects information on the income of the individuals in the household  and the household as a whole     See  Survey Definitions   Section 1  Part 5 for income definitions     Diary    The diary is completed by every spender  It is completed daily for 14 days and all expenditure in  that period is recorded    See  Expenditure  in  Survey Definitions   Section 1  Part 5 for further information on the collection  of data through the diary     Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 7    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 4  Family Expenditure Survey Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey    BACKGROUND TO THE 1995 96 FAMILY EXPENDITURE SURVEY    This background note also appears as Appendix A of FAMILY SPENDING 1995 96  The survey    
14. are asked to record in the diary any payments made during the 14 days of  record keeping  whether or not the goods or services paid for have been received  Certain types of  expenditure which are usually regular though infrequent  such as insurance  licences and season  tickets  and the periods to which they relate  are recorded in the household schedule     The cash purchase of motor vehicles is also entered in the household schedule  In addition   expenditure on some items purchased infrequently  thereby being subject to high sampling errors   has been recorded in the household schedule using a retrospective recall period of either three or  12 months  These items include carpets  furniture  holidays and some housing costs  In order to  avoid duplication  all payments shown in the diary record book which relate to items listed in the  household or income schedules are excluded from derived tables  with the exception of SET27 and  SET114  irrespective of whether there is a corresponding entry on the latter schedules  Amounts  paid in respect of periods longer than a week are converted to weekly values the variables names  of which are given the pre fix  dv      Expenditure codes which are used in the database to describe categories of expenditure are  numbered hierarchically according to the main commodity groups  Details of the expenditure    codes are given in Section 4 of the User Documentation     Qualifications which apply to this concept of expenditure are described in
15. ble name order   This part of the document defines the raw tables and gives information on the variables included in each table and the  related coding frames  It can be used to look up details of the variables and coding frames when the table name is  known    Parts 2   4  Raw variable lists   These are variable lists  listing all raw variables and including information on the variable name  description  table  name and question reference  These three lists allow details of a variable  such as the table in which it is found  or the  question to which it relates  to be looked up if the variable name  Part 2   ordered by variable name   variable  description  Part 3   ordered by variable description  or question number  Part 4   ordered by question reference  is  known     SECTION 3   THE DERIVED DATABASE    This section of the User Documentation  in five parts  describes the derived database  A summary of anonymisation   particularly in relation to council tax  is also given following the explanatory notes     Part 1   Derived table definitions in table name order   This part of the document defines the derived tables and gives information on the variables included in each table and  the related coding frames  It can be used to look up details of the variables and coding frames when the table name is  known     Parts 2 and 3   Derived variable lists   These are variable lists  listing all derived variables and including information on the variable name  description  table  na
16. bles using coding frame 8     Social class is based on occupation and is a classification system that has grown out of the  original Registrar General s social class classification  These are defined in the Classification of  Occupations  1990  prepared by the Office for National Statistics  The 5 categories are     I  Professional  etc  occupations  II  Managerial and technical occupations  III  Skilled occupations   N  non manual   M  manual  IV  Partly skilled occupations  V  Unskilled occupations    For the FES  social class of a household refers to the social class based on the occupation of the  head of household where the head is economically active  Where the head is not economically  active  the household is allocated to a separate category of  retired and unoccupied      Regions  variables using coding frame 11     These are the standard regions for statistical purposes as they exist following the reorganisation of    Page 4 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Family Expenditure Survey Survey definitions    local government in 1974 75 and are defined in detail in Regional Trends No 30 1995   Types of administrative area  variables using coding frame 1     These are Greater London  former Metropolitan Counties in England with the Central Clydeside  Conurbation in Scotland  and non metropolitan districts with high and low population densities   i e  3 2 persons or more  and less than 3 2 persons  per acre respectively  7 9 persons per hec
17. c status group     Economically inactive    a  Retired   persons who have reached national insurance retirement age  60 and over for  women  65 and over for men  and are not working     b  Unoccupied   persons under national insurance retirement age who are not working  nor  actively seeking work  This category includes certain self employed persons such as mail  order agents and baby sitters who are not classified as economically active     For variables using coding frame 13  Economic Position   see Section 3  Part 5 of the User  Documentation   unpaid family workers are included under economically inactive  although they  are economically active by definition  This is because insufficient information is available to  assign them to an economic status group     Occupation  variables using coding frame 7     The occupational classification used in the survey is the socio economic groups defined in the  Classification of Occupations  1990  prepared by the Office for National Statistics  Separate results  are shown for the following groups  professional workers  employers and managerial workers   intermediate non manual workers  junior non manual workers  skilled manual workers  semi   skilled manual workers  unskilled manual workers  Armed Forces  As far as possible occupation  is classified according to an individual s current or most recent job  if an individual has more  than one job  the most remunerative is used as the basis for the classification     Social Class  varia
18. ctions 2 and 3 where they are listed under  sort  keys  and not under  variables   See the description of TABLE above for more detail     Coding frame    If a variable has a coding frame  it means that it is allowed to take on only certain permitted  values  i e  the variable is not a  free  field      The name of a coding frame is usually the same as the name of the variable using it  however  the  more commonly used coding frames have their own names  These named coding frames are listed  in Part 5  Coding Fames  of Section 3 of the User Documentation  along with the names of the  variables which make use of them     Details of other coding frames can be found in the table definition of the table in which the related  variable is located  Table definitions are given in Part 1 of Section 2 and 3 of the User  Documentation  The table in which a variable is located can be found by using the variable lists  in Part 2 or 3 of Sections 2 and 3     Question reference    The question reference is the question number relating to the variable  as contained within the  Household  if pre fixed by H  or Income  if pre fixed by 1  Questionnaire  Only raw variables have  a question reference  If a raw variable does not have a question reference  one of the following will  be given instead        diary  if the variable relates to diary data      sort key  if the variable is a sort key  see note on  sort keys  above       system  if the variable is a system variable used only for editing pu
19. e diary data is entered into the computer and forms the diary raw data tables  At this stage   every separate instance of expenditure by every person is represented by a separate  record  or  row  and is assigned an EXPENDITURE CODE that indicates the type of item purchased and the  type of transaction  e g  cash  credit card  business expense   See Section 4 for information on  expenditure codes  Data at this level is not provided in the user dataset     SET114 is the first derived table for the diary data and here the data are more aggregated  instead  of having a separate row for every instance of expenditure  there are now only two rows for each  person for each separate expenditure code and each transaction type  one row represents the total  expenditure by that person on that code in week 1 and the other represents the expenditure in  week 2     Following SET114  the diary data that relates to expenditure codes for which data are also  collected through the questionnaires are re directed to SET900 to avoid double counting  They    are not used in any further tables     In SET89  adults  and SET89C  children   some expenditure relating to the expenditure codes but  collected through the questionnaires is added to that collected through the diary  In this set     Page 1 Date Produced   4 February 1999    there is only one row per expenditure code which represents the average weekly expenditure for  each person on items in that code  This SET feeds into various D CODE tabl
20. elf employed are recorded  together with information about tax refunds   For  employers and the self employed the amounts comprise the actual payments made in the previous  twelve months and may not correspond to the tax due on the income arising in that period  e g  if  no tax has been paid but is due or if tax payments cover more than one financial year  However   the amounts of tax deducted at source from some of the items which appear in the Income  Schedule are not directly available  Estimates on the tax paid on bank and building society  interest and amounts deducted from dividends on stocks and shares are therefore made by  applying the appropriate rates of tax  In the case of income tax paid at source on pensions and  annuities  similar adjustments are made  These estimates mainly affect the relatively few  households with high incomes from interest and dividends  and those including persons receiving  pensions from previous employment     f  Rented dwellings    Housing expenditure is taken as the sum of expenditure on rent  rates  council tax  water rates  etc  For local authority tenants the expenditure is gross rent less any rebate  including rebate  received in the form of housing benefit   and for other tenants gross rent less any rent allowance  received under statutory schemes including the Housing Benefit Scheme  Rebate on  rates  council tax water rates is deducted from expenditure on rates council tax water rates   Receipts from sub letting part of the dwel
21. es  In these  the  expenditure codes become VARIABLES and are pre fixed with  D      The four boxes in the centre of the flow diagram represent various levels of aggregated variables at  both household and personal level  Information from the questionnaires not previously included  feeds in at this level  from the two raw data boxes in the lower right corner of the diagram   Details  on p codes are given in Part 4 of Section 3 of the Documentation     De au cu qm         o     am        i     P     RERO Taio cuite m dita eo reed in une dorentutien SECTION 2  AR Ubio NOT ib Adb tick um      derived tables as detailed in user documentation SECTION 3    FRETS Raw and derived tables using expenditure codes  expenditure codes detailed in user documentation SECTION 4        1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 2  The structure of the 1995 96 database Family Expenditure Survey    THIS PAGE HAS BEEN DELIBERATELY LEFT BLANK    Page 3 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Family Expenditure Survey Database definitions    DATABASE DEFINITIONS    The raw database    The raw database contains data  as it was received  from Social Survey Division  At this stage   weekly equivalent dv values have been calculated for questionnaire data  see note on  weekly  equivalent values  on page 3  and some imputation has been carried out by Social Survey Division     The raw database is defined in Section 2 of the User Documentation     The derived database    The derived database cons
22. households   hotels  institutions   empty  demolished derelict  Effective sample  i e  i less  ii    Co operating households  Refusals   Households at which no  contact could be obtained    No of   of effective  households sample  11 611    1 461    10 150 100  6 663 65 6  3 222 31 7   265 2 6    Date Produced   25 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 4  Family Expenditure Survey Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey    In the Northern Ireland Survey  the effective sample was 1 087 households  The number of co   operating households was 659  giving a response rate of 60 6 per cent  Out of the co operating  households  134 were selected at random to form part of the UK FES giving a total UK sample of  6 797 households     The fieldwork    The fieldwork is carried out by the Social Survey Division of the Office for National Statistics  ONS   in Great Britain and by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency of the Department of  Finance and Personnel in Northern Ireland using almost identical questionnaires  Households at  the selected addresses are visited and asked to co operate in the survey  A detailed questionnaire  covers household topics and income information  Interviews are now conducted using portable  computers with the questions being asked using computer assisted personal interviewing  CAPI    rather than using paper questions  Information is collected about the household  about incomes   and about certain regular payments such as rent 
23. ich override the subjective main residence rule     i  Children under 16 away at school are included as members    ii  Older persons receiving education away from home  including children aged  16 and 17  are excluded unless they are at home for all or most of the record   keeping period    ii  Visitors staying temporarily with the household and others who have been    in the household for only a short time are treated as members provided they will be  staying with the household for at least one month from the start of record keeping     Household composition   A consequence of these definitions is that household compositions quoted in this report include  some households where certain members are temporarily absent  For example   one adult and  children  households will contain a few households where one parent is temporarily away from  home     Adult    Persons who have reached the age of 18 or who are married are classed as adults    Children   Persons who are under 18 years of age and unmarried are classed as children    However  in the definition of clothing  clothing for persons aged 16 years and over is classified as  clothing for men and women  clothing for those aged five but under 16 as clothing for boys and  girls  and clothing for those under five as babies     Spenders    Members of households who are aged 16 or more  excluding those who for special reasons are not  capable of keeping diary record books  are described as spenders     Economically active   These a
24. ists of variables that have been adjusted in some way in relation to the  state in which they were received from Social Survey Division  This adjustment might involve only  a change in name  or it might involve some calculation or aggregation     The derived database is defined in Section 3 of the User Documentation     Variable name    The variable name  sometimes just written  variable  in the documentation  is the database  reference name of the variable  Variable lists ordered by variable name can be found in Part 2 of  both Section 2 and Section 3 of the User Documentation     Variable description    The variable description is a brief description in  English  of the variable  Variable lists ordered by  variable description can be found in Part 3 of both Section 2 and Section 3 of the User  Documentation     Table    In the FES database  the data is stored in a number of different TABLES  Usually  a single table  contains information on a number of variables that are related to one another in some way  An  example is the table called  rents1  which contains information about rented accommodation  table  rents2 contains further rents information      Conceptually  a table can be perceived as consisting of rows and columns  the  column headings   are the names of the variables contained in that table and each    row    represents an individual     record     A  row  or  record  is uniquely labelled in terms of the  SORT KEYS  for that table  If the  sort keys are  for exam
25. iture Codes  of the User  Documentation      A  and  B  codes  A codes and B codes are aggregate codes  some at household level and some at personal level     They are all derived codes and so are listed in Section 3  The Derived Database  of the User  Documentation  The fact that they are pre fixed  a  or  b  has no significant meaning     Product codes  p codes   Product codes  or p codes  are aggregate codes  some at household level and some at personal  level  Part 4 of Section 3 of the User Documentation gives descriptions of these codes in  English     as an aid to understanding their structure  along with more detailed explanatory notes on their  use     Codes suffixed  c   These codes represent the expenditure of children  aged between 7 and 15  who completed a diary     The codes are aggregated to household level  Variables suffixed  c  are only available as  expenditure or product codes     Codes suffixed  t   These codes represent total expenditure by children and adults  They are aggregated to household    level by adding the original  adult  variable to those suffixed  c    i e  p522   p522c   p522t    Variables suffixed  t  are only available as expenditure code or product codes     Codes suffixed  cq    These codes represent the total expenditure of children  aged between 7 and 15  who completed a  diary  The codes are aggregated to a personal level  All variables have been set up specifically for  Family Spending and are stored in the table SET300c    T  codes
26. ling are not deducted from housing costs but appear  net  of the expenses of the sub letting  as investment income     g  Rent free dwellings    Payments for rates and  council tax  water rates etc   are regarded as the cost of housing  Rebate  on rates  council tax water rates  including rebate received in the form of housing benefit   is  deducted from expenditure on rates  council tax water rates  Receipts from sub letting part of  the dwelling are not deducted from housing costs but appear  net of the expenses of the sub   letting  as investment income     h  Owner occupied dwellings    Payments for rates  council tax  water rates  ground rent  mortgage interest payments  insurance  of structure etc   are regarded as the cost of housing  Rebate on rates council tax water rates   including rebate received in the form of housing benefit   is deducted from expenditure on  rates council tax water rates  Receipts from letting part of the dwelling are not deducted from  housing costs but appear  net of the expenses of the letting  as investment income  Mortgage  capital repayments and amounts paid for the outright purchase of the dwelling or for major  structural alterations are not included as housing expenditure  but are entered under  Other  payments recorded      i  Second hand goods and part exchange transactions    Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 7    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Survey definitions Family Expenditure Survey    The survey expenditure data are based 
27. me and coding frame  where relevant   These two lists allow details of a variable to be looked up if the variable  name  Part 2   ordered by variable name  or variable description  Part 3   ordered by variable description  is known     Page 2 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 1  Family Expenditure Survey Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation    Part 4   P codes  Product codes  or p codes  are aggregated codes  some at household level and some at personal level  Part 4 gives  descriptions of these codes in  English  as an aid to understanding their structure     Part 5   Coding frames  This part of the document gives definitions of some of the more important coding frames  along with the names of the  variables which make use of them     SECTION 4   EXPENDITURE CODES    In the Family Expenditure Survey  information about expenditure is collected at a detailed level  It is collected  through both the diary  which respondents fill in daily for a fortnight  and through the Household Questionnaire     Items of expenditure are assigned a six digit code which represents the type of expenditure  the code might represent   bread    mortgage payments  or  visits to the cinema   for example   These six digit codes are listed in Part 1 of this  section   Expenditure Codes   Summary    Part 2 of this section   Expenditure Codes   Detail   is the  data dictionary  It gives an indication of the types of  items to be found under each expenditure code    SECTION 5
28. ntributions and other  deductions  e g  payments into firm social clubs  superannuation schemes  works  transport  benevolent funds etc  Employees are asked to give the earnings actually  received including bonuses and commission the last time payment was made and   if different  the amount usually received  It is the amount usually received which is  regarded as the normal take home pay  Additions are made so as to include in  normal earnings the value of occasional payments  such as bonuses or  commissions received quarterly or annually  One of the principal objects in  obtaining data on income is to enable expenditure to be classified in ranges of    Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 9    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Survey definitions Family Expenditure Survey    Page 10    normal income  Average household expenditure is likely to be based on the long   term expectations of the various members of the household as to their incomes  rather than be altered by short term changes affecting individuals  Hence if an  employee has been away from work without pay for 13 weeks or less he is regarded  as continuing to receive his normal earnings instead of social security benefits   such as unemployment or sickness benefit  that he may be receiving  Otherwise   his normal earnings are disregarded and his current short term social security  benefits taken instead  Wages and salaries include any earnings from subsidiary  employment as an employee and the earnings of HM Forces    
29. on information about actual payments and therefore  include payments for second hand goods and part exchange transactions  New payments only are  included for part exchange transactions  i e  the costs of the goods obtained less the amounts  allowed for the goods which are traded in  Receipts for goods sold or traded in are not included in  income     Page 8 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Family Expenditure Survey Survey definitions    j  Business expenses    The survey covers only private households and is concerned with payments made by members of  households as private individuals  Spenders are asked to state whether expenditure which has  been recorded on the schedules includes amounts which will be refunded as expenses from a  business or organisation or which will be entered as business expenses for income tax purposes   e g  rent  telephone charges  travelling expenses  meals out  Any such amounts are deducted from  the recorded expenditure in the derived tables  with the exception of SET27 and SET114      Income   The standard concept of income in the survey is  as far as possible  that of gross weekly cash  income current at the time of interview  i e  before the deduction of income tax actually paid   national insurance contributions and other deductions at source    Although information about most types of income is obtained on a current basis  some data   principally income from investment and from self employment  are estimated 
30. or is that the purchase of these items by children from pocket money will  usually be recorded simply as pocket money since children under 16 do not keep expenditure  records     National Lottery spending is significantly under recorded in the FES  Purchases of tickets for the  Saturday night draw are well recorded  but under recording of scratchcards is acute     Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 5    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Family Expenditure Survey Survey definitions    SURVEY DEFINITIONS    These definitions also appear in Appendix D of FAMILY SPENDING 1995 96     Household    A household comprises one person living alone or a group of people living at the same address  having meals prepared together and with common housekeeping  Resident domestic servants are  included  The members of a household are not necessarily related by blood or marriage  As the  survey covers only private households  people living in hostels  hotels  boarding houses or  institutions are excluded  Households are not excluded if some or all members are not British  subjects  but no attempt is made to obtain information from households containing members of  the diplomatic service of another country or members of the United States armed forces  Nor are  attempts made to obtain information from Roman Catholic priests living in accommodation  provided by the parish church     Retired households    Retired households are those where the head of the household is retired  All male heads of  ho
31. over a twelve month    period     The following are excluded from the assessment of income     a  money received by one member of the household from another  e g  housekeeping money   dress allowance  children s pocket money  other than wages paid to resident domestic  servants    b  withdrawals of savings  receipts from maturing insurance policies  proceeds from sale of    financial and other assets  e g  houses  cars  furniture  etc    winnings from betting  lump   sum gratuities and windfalls such as legacies     C  the value of educational grants and scholarships not paid in cash     d  the value of income in kind  including the value of goods received free and the abatement  in cost of goods received at reduced prices  and of bills paid by someone who is not a  member of the household     e  loans and money received in repayment of loans     Details are obtained of the income of each member of the household  The income of the  household is taken to be the sum of the incomes of all its members  The information does not  relate to a common or a fixed time period  Items recorded for periods greater than a week are  converted to a weekly value     Particular points relating to some components of income are as follows   a  Wages and salaries of employees    The normal gross wages or salaries of employees are taken to be their earnings    These are calculated by adding to the normal  take home  pay amounts deducted at  source  such as income tax payments  national insurance co
32. ple  caseno  case number   persno  person number  and itemnum  item  number  then there is a separate row in the table not only for every case  but for every person  within that case and for every item purchased by that person     The raw data tables are defined in Part 1 of Section 2 of the User Documentation and the derived    data tables are defined in Part 1 of Section 3     Table name    Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 1    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Database definitions Family Expenditure Survey    The table name is the database reference name of the table     Page 2 Date Produced   25 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Family Expenditure Survey Database definitions    Tables suffixed  c     These are tables containing information collected on child expenditure  where the child is aged  between 7 and 15 and completed a diary  The variables in these tables are related to one another  in some way and all are suffixed  c      Tables suffixed  t     These are tables containing information collected on total expenditure  children and adults   Each  variable contained within these tables are suffixed  t  and represent data where the original  adult   variable has been added to those for children     Sort keys    Sort keys are simply variables  but in the context of a table they have a special meaning  they  are the variables that are needed to uniquely define a  row  within the table  The sort keys are  indicated in the table definitions in Part 1 of Se
33. quisite  or   d  has the household accommodation by virtue of some relationship to the owner who is not a    member of the household     When two members of different sex have equal claim  the male is taken as head of household   When two members of the same sex have equal claim  the elder is taken as head of household     Members of household    Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 1    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Survey definitions Family Expenditure Survey    In most cases the members of co operating households are easily identified as the people who  satisfy the conditions in the definition of a household  above  and are present during the record   keeping period  However  difficulties of definition arise where people are temporarily away from  the household or else spend their time between two residences  The following rules apply in  deciding whether or not such persons are members of the household     Page 2 Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Family Expenditure Survey Survey definitions    married persons living and working away from home for any period are included as  members provided they consider the sampled address to be their main residence  in general   other people  e g  relatives  friends  boarders  who are either temporarily absent or who  spend their time between the sampled address and another address  are included as members  if they consider the sampled address to be their main residence  However  there are exceptions  wh
34. re persons aged 16 or over who fall into the following categories    a  Employees at work   those who at the time of interview were working full time or part time  as employees or were away from work on holiday  Part time work is defined as normally  working 30 hours a week or less  excluding meal breaks  including regularly worked    overtime     b  Employees temporarily away from work   those who at the time of interview had a job but  were absent because of illness or accident  temporary lay off  strike etc     C  Government training schemes   those participating in government programmes and    schemes who in the course of their participation receive training  such as Employment  Training  including those who are also employees in employment     Date Produced   4 February 1999 Page 3    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 5    Survey definitions Family Expenditure Survey  d  Self employed   those who at the time of interview said they were self employed   e  Unemployed   those who at time of interview were out of employment  and have sought    work within the last four weeks and were available to start work  or were waiting to start a  job already obtained     f  Unpaid family workers   those working unpaid for their own or a relatives business  For  variables using coding 13  Economic Position   see Section 3  Part 5 of the User  Documentation   unpaid family workers are included under economically inactive because  insufficient information is available to assign them to an economi
35. rposes  and therefore  probably not of use to users of the database   A list of variables ordered by question reference is given in Part 4 of Section 2 of the User    Documentation     Anonymisation    Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 3    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Database definitions Family Expenditure Survey    Variables which could lead to the identification of a household or an individual are not released to  users     An  anonymised  version of sensitive derived variables is provided in the user dataset  Variables  which have been anonymised can be identified because they are suffixed  p  Unanonymised  versions are suffixed  u  and are not accessible to external users of the FES  The principles of  anonymisation  particularly in relation to council tax  are explained in Section 3 of the User  Documentation     Page 4 Date Produced   25 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 3    Family Expenditure Survey Database definitions    Expenditure codes    Each expenditure amount collected through the diary and some collected through the  questionnaire are given a code which represents the type of item that was purchased  The  expenditure codes make up a coding frame called expend keytextl  Variables representing  household aggregates of the expenditure codes are called d codes  or d variables   the variable  name is the expenditure code pre fixed with  d   A complete listing of the expenditure codes and  more details on their use can be found in Section 4  Expend
36. s responding  in the 1991 FES with information from the Census of Population  Results from the study indicate  that response was lower than average in Greater London  and higher in non metropolitan areas   Non response tended to increase with increasing age of the head of the household  up to age 65   Households which contained three or more adults  or where the head was born outside the United  Kingdom  or was classified to an ethnic minority group were more likely than others to be non   responding  Non response was also above average where the head of the household had no post   school qualifications  was self employed  or was in a manual social class group     It is thought that averages of household income recorded in the FES are too low  principally  because certain forms of income  including investments  occupational pensions or self   employment  may be under estimated  Evidence for this is limited  for example studies    have  shown that earnings data in the survey tend to be slightly deficient  The main identified  weaknesses in the survey were found to be an understatement of earnings by women in part time  employment  and an under representation of the highest one per cent of earners  However  FES  levels are generally within a few per cent of levels indicated by other sources such as the Family    1 A Comparison of the Census characteristics of respondents and non respondents to the 1991 The Family Expenditure Survey by Kate Foster  Survey  Methodology Bulletin  
37. tare    The types of administrative area are defined by the Office for National Statistics on the basis of  the definitions of local authority areas and the Central Clydeside Conurbation used by the  Registrars General for England and Wales  Scotland  and Northern Ireland  Since the 1989  survey  local authorities in England and Wales and in Scotland are those existing after the  reorganisation of local government in 1974 and 1975  For Northern Ireland local authority areas  as they existed after the reorganisation of local government in 1973 are used  classified by the  population density factors applied generally in the United Kingdom  All Northern Ireland districts  are treated as non Metropolitan     Expenditure    Any definition of expenditure is to some extent arbitrary  and the inclusion of certain types of  payment is a matter of convenience or convention depending on the purpose for which the  information is to be used  Total expenditure represents current expenditure on goods and  services  Total expenditure  defined in this way  excludes those recorded payments which are  really savings or investments  e g  purchases of national savings certificates  life assurance  premiums  contributions to pension funds   Similarly  income tax payments  national insurance  contributions  mortgage capital repayments and other payments for major additions to dwellings  are excluded  Expenditure data are collected in the diary record book and in the household  schedule  Informants 
38. tion  Part 4   Specification of product codes  Part 5   Coding frames for derived codes    SECTION 4   EXPENDITURE CODES  Explanatory note  Part 1   Expenditure Codes   Summary  Part 2   Expenditure Codes   Detailed    SECTION 5   DATABASE CHANGES  Explanatory note  Part 1   New raw variables for 1995 96  Part 2   1994 95 raw codes that have been deleted for 1995 96  Part 3   1994 95 raw codes amended for 1995 96  Part 4   New derived variables for 1995 96  Part 5   1994 95 derived variables that have been deleted for 1995 96  Part 6   1994 95 derived codes amended for 1995 96  Part 7   New expenditure codes for 1995 96  Part 8   1994 95 expenditure codes amended for 1995 96  Part 9   New tables for 1995 96  Part 10   1994 95 tables that have been deleted for 1995 96  Part 11   Major changes  Part 12   Questionnaire changes    SECTION 6   VARIABLE RELATIONSHIPS  Explanatory note  Part 1   List of target variables showing source variables  Part 2   List of source variables showing targets    Date Produced   4 February 1999    Colour    yellow card  white   pink   yellow   blue   green  salmon    green card  pink   white  yellow  pale pink  green    orange card  pink   white   white   yellow   pale pink  green   blue    blue card  pink   blue  yellow    red card  pink  yellow  pink  green  yellow  pink  green  yellow  green  yellow  pink  blue  white    pink card  pink  white  pink    Page 1    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 1  Guide to the 1995 96 User Documentation Family Expendit
39. ure Survey    Use of the 1995 96 User Documentation  Explanatory notes on the use of the sections of the documentation are given at the beginning of each section     The following gives a summary only  See    Database Definitions    in Part 3 and    Survey Definitions    in Part 5 for  explanation of terms     SECTION 1   THE USER GUIDE    This section begins with a guide to the contents and the use of the User Documentation  Part 1   Guide to the 1995 96  User Documentation   YOU ARE HERE      Part 2 explains The structure of the 1995 96 database and includes a useful flow diagram which gives a pictorial  summary of the database structure  Part 3   Database definitions   gives some definitions of the terms used both on  the flow diagram and in other parts of the Documentation     Part 4 is Background to the 1995 96 Family Expenditure Survey which includes information on the sampling  methodology and non response  Definitions are given in Part 5   Survey Definitions     The name and address to contact if you have any queries is given in Part 6   Additional information  along with  details of the other items of User Documentation that are available on request     SECTION 2   THE RAW DATABASE    This section of the User Documentation describes the raw database  The raw database contains data  as it was  received     That is  before any calculations or aggregations have been carried out     The document is in four parts  as outlined below     Part 1   Raw table definitions in ta
40. usehold are 65 years of age or more  all female heads of household are 60 years of age or more   For analysis purposes two categories are used in this report     a   A retired household mainly dependent upon state pensions   also known as a pensioner  household  is one in which at least three quarters of the total income of the household is  derived from national insurance retirement and similar pensions  including housing and  other benefits paid in supplement to or instead of such pensions  The term  national  insurance retirement and similar pensions  includes national insurance disablement and  war disability pensions  and income support in conjunction with these disability  payments  In a small number of cases it also covers unemployment  sickness and  industrial injury benefits paid to men and women over retirement age  A small proportion  of persons in these households may be working a few hours a week     b   Other retired households  are households which do not fulfil the income conditions of   pensioner  households because more than a quarter of the household s income derives  from occupational retirement pensions and or income from investments  annuities etc     Head of household    The head of the household must be a member of that household  He she is the person  or the  husband of the person who     a  owns the household accommodation  or   b  is legally responsible for the rent of the accommodation  or   C  has the household accommodation as an emolument or per
41. usehold or  even when averaged over a group of households  Hence  the difference between expenditure and  income is not a measure of savings or dis savings     Experience of household surveys in the United Kingdom and in other countries indicates that  reported expenditure on a few items  notably alcohol and tobacco  is below the levels which might  be expected by comparison with other sources of information  For example  the estimated average  expenditure of all households in the FES on beer is about two thirds of corresponding estimates  from statistics produced by HM Customs and Excise  Chapter 14 of the FES Handbook  Kemsley   Redpath and Holmes  examines the possible causes of the understatement of alcohol and tobacco  expenditure in the FES results  as well as other problems of understatement  It concludes that it  is mainly due to non response by very heavy drinkers and smokers     There is some evidence to suggest that the non response bias in alcohol expenditure increased in  1995 96 due to higher non response  Changes to the wording of the expenditure diary may also  have caused respondents to under record the total amount spent on alcohol  Additionally  these  changes may have caused respondents to be less precise in their descriptions  leading to an  increase in the amount recorded as ther drinks rather than specific items eg  wine and beer     The survey is also thought to understate expenditure on confectionery  soft drinks and ice cream    One contributory fact
42. who has been    away from work for 13 weeks or less  and who is therefore regarded as continuing to  receive his normal earnings     Date Produced   4 February 1999    1995 96   SECTION 1  PART 6    Family Expenditure Survey Additional information    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION    The following additional information on the Family Expenditure Survey Database is available on  request       Specification of the tables in FAMILY SPENDING in terms of FES variables    Specification of the calculations and derivations for derived variables    This information can be obtained from   Alyson Whitmarsh or Christine Smith   Office for National Statistics   Rm 1923   Millbank Tower   Millbank   LONDON SWIP 4QQ   Tel  0171 217 4184 or 4244  Any queries on the FES database should be referred to the FES team on 0171 217 4184 4244   Family Expenditure Survey data and User Documentation are Crown copyright   Office for    National Statistics 8 Crown Copyright 1996     If you wish to pass FES data on to a third party in any form  contact ONS Marketing and  Sales   tel 0171 270 4627 for approval     The FES Production Team      Alyson Whitmarsh Peter Mayne  Christine Smith John King   William Hodgson Graham Thompson  Shaun Flanagan Claire Kennard  Martin Young Michael Kramer  Geoff Leaper Sarah Lewis   John Latimer Kevin Argue    Date Produced   25 February 1999 Page 1    
    
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