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    Default Compare your income


    "What's your perception of income inequality? Statistics on income inequality often make the headlines but people don't necessarily know how income is truly distributed.

    The OECD's tool Compare your income allows you to see whether your perception is in line with reality. In only a few clicks, you can see where you fit in your country's income distribution.

    Now find out what's your share of the pie!"

    http://www.compareyourincome.org/en
    YDNA: R1b-L21 > DF13 > S1051 > FGC17906 > FGC17907 > FGC17866


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    Compare your income – Methodology and conceptual issues

    There are a number of conceptual issues to take into account when trying to define how rich or poor
    someone is relative to the rest of the population. To help you better understand our methodology,
    here are some of the questions we considered when building Compare your income.

    Where do the data come from?

    Most of the data on the actual distribution of income are drawn from the OECD Income Distribution
    Database (http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=IDD). This database is based on national
    sources (household surveys and administrative records) and on common definitions, classifications
    and data-treatments. The method of data collection used for the OECD Income Distribution
    Database aims to maximise international comparability as well as inter-temporal consistency of
    data. This is achieved by a common set of protocols and statistical conventions (e.g. on income
    concepts and components) to derive comparable estimates. Due to the increasing importance of
    income inequality and poverty issues in policy discussion, the database is now annually updated. The
    OECD is currently working on extending its database to a number of other key partner countries.

    How is income defined and why do we consider net income?

    The definition of income used here refers mainly to cash income – excluding components such as
    imputed rents – regularly received over the year. Net income is defined as total market income (i.e.
    gross earnings, self-employment income, capital income), plus the current transfers received, less
    the taxes and social security contributions paid. This is the income that people have available to buy
    goods and services, so it is a better measure of material living standards than pre-tax income or
    some measure of earnings alone.

    Why is income measured at the level of the household?

    The welfare of an individual in a household will depend not only upon their own income, but also on
    that of other household members. By measuring income at the household level, we are implicitly
    assuming that all individuals within the household are equally well off and therefore occupy the
    same position in the income distribution. In practice that might not be true, but it is the least
    arbitrary assumption that we can make based on the available data.

    The OECD Income Distribution Database provides information on the equivalised disposable (i.e. net)
    income. ‘Equivalising’ means adjusting a household’s income for its size, so that we can look at the
    income of all households on a comparable basis. The needs of a household grow with each
    additional member but – due to economies of scale in consumption– not in a proportional way.
    Needs for housing space, electricity, etc. will not be four times as high for a household with four
    members than for a single person. With the help of equivalence scales each household is assigned a
    value in proportion to its needs. The equivalence scale used in the OECD Income Distribution
    Database divides household income by the square root of the household size. This implies that, for
    instance, a household of four persons has needs twice as large as one composed of a single person.

    To bring back data at the household level, we then multiply income statistics available in the OECD
    Income Distribution Database by the square root of the household size. For instance, in the case of a
    household consisting of a couple with two children, we multiply the income data from the OECD
    Income Distribution Database by two (i.e. square root of four).

    How is the poverty line computed?

    We compute the income needed to be considered non-poor as half the median income of
    households of the same size of the respondent’s. The median income is the income that divides the
    income distribution into two equal groups, half having income above that amount, and half having
    income below that amount.
    Data on median income come from the OECD Income Distribution Database.

    How are ‘income diagrams’ computed?

    In order to further compare the perceived inequality in a society with the actual distribution of
    income, we divide the population into seven income classes. The ‘lower-income’ class (lowest bar)
    covers all individuals with a net income below 50% of median income of the total population.
    Therefore, the demarcation of the lowest group is equal to the definition of poverty used in this tool.

    The ‘average-income’ class covers all individuals with a net income between 50 and 150% of the
    median income and spans three bars: from 50 to 80% of the median income; from 80 to 110% of the
    median income; and from 110 to 150% of median income. Similarly, the ‘higher-income’ class
    identify all individuals with a net income above 150% of the median income and covers the three
    highest bars of the diagrams: from 150 to 200% of the median income; from 200 to 250% of the
    median income and above 250% of the median income.

    Obviously, the demarcation of classes remains somewhat arbitrary. However, the demarcation of
    single groups is not the focus of our analysis. The intention of the definition of these income classes
    is basically the graphical illustration of the density function of incomes.

    Drawing such income diagrams requires information on income at the percentile level, which is
    currently not available in the OECD Income Distribution Database. For most OECD countries,
    information on income percentiles have been provided to the OECD by national data providers, and
    is based on those national sources that are deemed to be most representative for each country.
    Such information is currently not available for four OECD countries: Chile, Japan, Korea and Turkey.

    To which year do data refer?

    The information available in the OECD Income Distribution Database is more up-to-date when
    compared to information available through many other statistical sources, but still reflects the long
    time-lags that characterise data collection in this field in most OECD countries. For most countries
    data on income and poverty shown in this tool refer to 2014 or 2013. To bring the figures up to date,
    we have adjusted them in line with changes in the consumer price index for all goods up to 2015.
    YDNA: R1b-L21 > DF13 > S1051 > FGC17906 > FGC17907 > FGC17866


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