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Definition | Percentage of people aged 75 years and older who live in a single household alone or in a couple household. |
Goal (rationale) | The indicator aims to capture decisional autonomy regarding one's own life in old age. |
Survey question |
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Source | EU-SILC |
Year | 2010 |
Notes | This indicator has been selected at the recommendation of the Expert Group as a measure for independent living. |
Caveats | Living with other members of the household is not necessarily loss of independence, and multi-generational households can also be seen as independent living. |
Definition | The relative median income ratio is defined as the ratio of the median equivalised disposable income of people aged above 65 to the median equivalised disposable income of those aged below 65. |
Goal (rationale) | Independent and autonomous living also incorporates the concept of financial security which is captured by three indicators. The relative median income ratio is one of these. Comparing the median income of the elderly with the rest of the population the indicator aims to measure the adequacy of retirement incomes for older people to maintain their living standard after retirement and to ensure financial security in old age. The indicator becomes particularly important for estimating relative poverty, because the distribution of economic resources (i.e. pension systems can play an important role in addressing poverty amongst the elderly) may have a direct bearing on the extent and depth of poverty. |
Survey question | Household disposable income is established by summing up all monetary incomes received from any source by each member of the household (including income from work, investment and social benefits) – plus income received at the household level – and deducting taxes and social contributions paid. In order to reflect differences in household size and composition, this total is divided by the number of 'equivalent adults' using a standard (equivalence) scale, the so-called 'modified OECD' scale, which attributes a weight of 1 to the first adult in the household, a weight of 0.5 to each subsequent member of the household aged 14 and over, and a weight of 0.3 to household members aged less than 14. The resulting figure is called equivalised disposable income and is attributed to each member of the household. |
Source | EU-SILC |
Year | 2010 (Survey year) 2009 (income year) |
Notes | It was agreed at the Expert Group meeting that the maximum upper value of 100 will be enforced for this indicator (e.g. for Luxembourg, where the relative median income is higher for 65+, the value for this indicator is fixed at 100) . |
Definition | Percentage of people aged 65 years and older who are not at risk of poverty (people at risk of poverty are defined as those with an equivalised disposable income after social transfers below the at-risk-of-poverty threshold, which is set at 50% of the national median equivalised disposable income after social transfers). |
Goal (rationale) | The indicator is one of the three indicators that aim to measure financial security. Low income is known to have a significant impact on people's health and well-being for it may limit access to basic goods and services, and the possibility to live independently. |
Survey question | See notes for indicator 3.4 |
Source | EU-SILC |
Year | 2010 (Survey year), 2009 (income year) |
Notes | For the purpose of poverty indicators, the equivalised disposable income is calculated from the total disposable income of each household divided by the equivalised household size; consequently, each person in the household is considered to have the same equivalised income. |
Caveats | Poverty is defined in relative rather than absolute terms and is measured in reference to the standard of living in the country in which the individual lives. This, however, may differ significantly across countries depending on their general level of prosperity which should be kept in mind when interpreting the results. Income is defined in monetary terms and excludes transfers such as publicly provided goods and services which might be particularly relevant for older people. |
Definition | Percentage of people aged 65 years and older who are not severely materially deprived. Severe material deprivation refers to a state of economic and durable strain, defined as the enforced inability (rather than the choice not to do so) to afford at least four out of the following nine items:
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Goal (rationale) | It is one of the three indicators that aim to measure financial security. The indicator shows the proportion of individuals and households who cannot afford certain goods considered by most people to be necessary. It measures exclusion by directly capturing people's actual standard of living in the country where they live. Moreover, whereas indicators based on current income (i.e. at-risk-of-poverty rate) are affected by transitory shocks, indicators on material deprivation can compensate for such limitations because they tend to be more stable over time and reflect the underlying circumstances of individuals and households. |
Survey question | Data on the material items mentioned above is collected using a direct question at the household level. |
Source | EU-SILC |
Year | 2010 (Survey year) |
Notes | The indicator is one of the eight headline indicators of the Europe 2020 Strategy. However, it has the limitation that it considers various items of material deprivation with equal weighting (e.g. lacking a TV set is considered equivalent to inability to keep home warm). |
Definition | Percentage of people aged 55 years and older who are not worried about becoming a victim of violent crime. |
Goal (rationale) | The objective is to assess whether the responding older person feels 'crime, violence or vandalism' has be a problem for his/her household. |
Survey question | 'Do you have any of the following problems related to the place where you live? - Crime, violence and vandalism in the local area?' |
Source | ESS 2010 |
Year | 2010 (2008 for Latvia and Romania, 2006 for Austria) |
Notes | A reference to the area (situated close to the place where the respondent live) is clearly indicated; A clear definition is provided for defining 'Crime'; also the translation of the word 'crime' is carefully checked as it has a different meaning in different languages. |
Caveats | The variable is a subjective response and thus affected by different levels of awareness and sensitivity towards area crimes for older people. |
Definition | Percentage of people aged 55 to 74 who stated that they received education or training in the four weeks preceding the survey. |
Goal (rationale) | The indicator measures all education or training, not only those which are work-related. Therefore, it captures the way individuals acquire key competences in the shape of knowledge, skills and attitudes, which are fundamental for each individual in a knowledge-based society. These competences provide added value for the labour market, social cohesion and active citizenship by offering flexibility and adaptability, satisfaction and motivation. |
Survey question | Did you attend any courses, seminars, conferences or received private lessons or instructions within or outside the regular education system within the last 4 weeks |
Source | EU-LFS |
Year | 2011 |
Notes | The information collected relates to all education or training whether or not relevant to the respondent's current or possible future job. It includes formal and non-formal education and training that means in general activities in the school/university systems but also courses, seminars workshops, etc. outside the formal education. |


