TRANSPORT
COSTS SOAR FOR UK HOUSEHOLDS
February 20, 2004
The
average UK household spent £406 per week in 2002-03 with transport
being the largest area of expenditure according to the latest annual
Expenditure and Food Survey published by the Office for National
Statistics. The average household spends £59 per week on transport,
including buying and running vehicles as well as public transport
fares. Spending on recreation and culture represented the second
highest outgoing, with households on average paying out £56
every week on TVs, computers, newspapers, books, leisure activities
and package holidays. This compares with £54 per week in 2001-02.
Food
purchases contributed £40 to weekly household expenditure
- £10 of which went on meat, £5 on fresh fruit and vegetables
and £2 on chocolate and confectionery. Household
spending in the UK averaged £406 per week, with the lowest
income groups spending £135 and the highest ten per cent spending
£883. Households
in the lowest income range spent the highest proportion of their
income on food and housing, fuel and power.
Mobile
phone ownership increased from 27 to 70 per cent between 1998-99
and 2002-03. Fifty five per cent of households now have a home computer
and 45 per cent are connected to the Internet. By contrast 29 per
cent of households own a dishwasher.
Launching
the report, National Statistician, Len Cook commented "The
voluntary co-operation of a representative cross-section of almost
7,000 households shows the richness and diversity of spending habits
in different households across regions. Such vital data is willingly
provided by citizens in their living rooms across the country. For
nearly 50 years, this survey has been the most important regular
source of our understanding of the economic well-being of families
and households in the UK."
EXPENDITURE
ACROSS INCOME BANDS
For
households in the lowest income range the highest categories of
spending were food and non-alcoholic drinks and housing, fuel and
power (excluding mortgage interest payments, council tax/rates).
For households in the upper five deciles, however, the highest expenditure
was for transport and recreation and culture.
As
a proportion of their total expenditure, households in the lowest
income group spent twice as much (16 per cent) on food and non alcoholic
drinks as those in the highest income group (8 per cent).
Spending
on tobacco was highest for households in the middle income groups
who spent up to £7 a week compared to £3.80 for those
in the lowest group and £5.10 in the highest group.
HOW
SPENDING VARIES WITH AGE
Average
weekly expenditure for all households in 2002-03 was £406.
This varied by age from the highest at £497 in households
where the reference person was aged 30 to 49 to the lowest at £177
in households where the reference person was aged 75 or over.
The
proportion of spending going on food and non-alcoholic drinks rose
with age from eight per cent where the reference person was aged
under 30 to 17 per cent for those aged 75 or over. The proportion
spent on restaurants and hotels decreased with age from 11 per cent
of total spending where the reference person was aged under 30 to
six per cent for those aged 75 and over.
Households
where the reference person was aged 50 to 64 spent more than other
age groups on fresh fruit, vegetables and potatoes. Those in the
under 30 age group spent the least. Spending on chocolate and confectionery
was highest for the 30 to 49 age group at £2.30 a week and
lowest for those aged 75 or over at £1.20 a week.
Spending
on newspapers was highest for households with a reference person
aged 65 to 74 at nearly £3 a week and lowest for the under
30 age group at 70p a week.
REGIONAL
SPENDING IN THE UK
Averaged
over the last two years total expenditure varied from £486
a week in London to £335 in Wales. London, the South East
and East of England were the only regions in which average expenditure
was higher than the UK average. Spending in the North East, Yorkshire
and the Humber and Wales was between 12 and 16 per cent lower than
the UK average.
Households
in Northern Ireland spent a higher proportion on clothing and footwear
than anywhere else, 8 per cent compared with the UK average of 6
per cent.
Households
in London spent by far the most on transport services at £17.90
a week, more than double the UK average of £8.40. However,
they spent the least on petrol, diesel and other motor oils at £11.00
a week, compared to a UK average of £14.70.
Rural
areas spent more than other areas on household goods and services,
at £36.90 a week. They were also the highest spending households
on food and non-alcoholic drinks (£46.30 a week), transport
(£73.10 a week) and recreation and culture (£63.50 a
week).
TRENDS
IN HOUSEHOLD SPENDING
Leisure
goods and leisure services were again the largest item of expenditure
with an average of £74 a week, 19 per cent of total expenditure.
Around 17 per cent of total expenditure went on housing (£67
a week) and food and non-alcoholic drinks (£64 a week). Spending
on motoring has increased steadily from £30 a week in 1978
to £62 in 2002-03. This was equivalent to 11 per cent of total
spending in 1978 and 16 per cent in 2002-03.
Total
expenditure on leisure and household services has more than doubled
as a proportion from nine per cent of all expenditure in 1978 to
20 per cent in 2002-03. The largest growth has been in leisure services,
such as holidays and entertainment, from £16 a week in 1978
to £54 a week in 2002-03. Household services, such as telephone
bills and domestic help, also grew substantially from £9 to
£23 a week.
BACKGROUND
TO THE EXPENDITURE & FOOD SURVEY
The
EFS is a voluntary sample survey and is conducted annually. The
field work is carried out by the Office for National Statistics
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.
In
2002-03, 6,927 households in the United Kingdom participated in
the survey, a response rate of 58 per cent in Great Britain and
56 per cent in Northern Ireland. The random sample of households
to be visited is designed so that the EFS is representative of all
regions of the U K and of different types of households. The survey
is continuous: interviews are spread evenly over the calendar year
to ensure that seasonal expenditure is covered.
The
EFS shows how households spend their money; how much goes on food,
clothing and so on; and how spending patterns vary depending upon
income, household composition, and regional location of households.
The survey also contains data on household income and its sources.
The
main historical purpose of the EFS (formerly Family Expenditure
Survey) is to define the 'basket of goods' for the Retail Prices
Index (RPI). The RPI is the primary measure of inflation, and it
has a vital role in the uprating of state pensions and welfare benefits,
tax allowances and savings, as well as being a key macroeconomic
indicator.
Click
here for a summary of the EFS
Survey 2002-03 ( ,
33Kb)
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