6525.0 - Experimental Estimates of Imputed Rent, Australia, 2003-04 and 2005-06  
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Contents >> Experimental estimates of imputed rent

ESTIMATES OF IMPUTED RENT

Table 4.1 presents the experimental estimates of gross and net imputed rent for owner-occupied dwellings and other housing tenures where a rent imputation has been made. The effect of adding net imputed rent to disposable household income is also shown (on an equivalised basis).


4.1 Experimental estimates of gross and net imputed rent, by housing tenure, 2003-04 and 2005-06(a)

Experimental estimates
Mean equivalised disposable household income (per week)
Mean reported rent paid (per week)
Mean
gross
imputed
rent (per week)
Mean net imputed rent (per week)
Adjusted mean equivalised disposable household income, incl. imputed rent
(per week)
Number of households
Average number of persons in household
Number of households
in sample
$
$
$
$
$
'000
no.
no.

2003-04

Owner without a mortgage
518
-
209
150
610
2 702.9
2.2
3 925
Owner with a mortgage
618
-
213
19
627
2 713.8
3.1
4 085
Renter
From state/territory housing authorities
290
84
150
67
332
376.4
2.1
608
Other subsidised renter(b)
516
124
174
54
548
216.8
2.4
329
Market renter(c)
529
196
-
7
533
1 540.3
2.4
2 135
Occupied rent-free
507
-
176
160
606
152.2
2.2
225
Rent-buy/life tenure scheme
468
**19
181
*83
513
33.5
2.3
54
All households
553
47
164
69
590
7 735.8
2.5
11 361

2005-06

Owner without a mortgage
625
-
236
172
731
2 718.1
2.2
3 452
Owner with a mortgage
716
-
245
5
718
2 772.0
3.1
3 512
Renter
From state/territory housing authorities(b)
356
100
183
83
404
368.8
2.3
525
Other subsidised renter(c)
514
150
206
63
552
206.0
2.3
286
Market renter
603
219
-
7
608
1 686.1
2.3
1 966
Occupied rent-free
545
-
207
195
668
144.2
2.1
176
Rent-buy/life tenure scheme
407
*41
186
93
464
30.9
1.8
44
All households
644
56
185
72
682
7 926.2
2.5
9 961

* estimate has a relative standard error of 25% to 50% and should be used with caution
** estimate has a relative standard error greater than 50% and is considered too unreliable for general use
- nil or rounded to zero (including null cells)
(a) The mean incomes are calculated with respect to the relevant number of persons (i.e. they are person weighted), while the mean rents are calculated with respect to the number of households (household weighted). For more information on person and household weighted measures see Appendix 1 of Household Income and Income Distribution, Australia (cat. no. 6523.0).
(b) Includes households renting from: a parent or other relative not living in the same household; an employer; a housing cooperative or community/church group.
(c) Includes households renting from: a real estate agent; an unrelated person not living in the same household; or an owner/manager of a caravan park.

The estimated mean gross imputed rent for owner-occupiers was higher than the mean imputation for subsidised renters or other tenure types. For both reference periods, owners with a mortgage were imputed a slightly higher gross imputed rent than owners without a mortgage. This is consistent with a slightly higher median value of dwellings for owners with a mortgage.


Appendix 2 includes a comparison of the experimental estimates of the gross imputed rent for owner-occupier households produced at the household level in this study with the sector level estimates published in the Australian System of National Accounts (ASNA).


When housing costs are subtracted from the experimental estimates of gross imputed rent to derive net imputed rent, then, as expected, households who occupied their dwelling rent-free (2% of all private households) had the highest mean net imputed rent. Owners without a mortgage, who account for just over one third of all households, had the next highest mean net imputed rent.


Conversely, owners with a mortgage had the smallest net imputed rent, on average, at only $19 per week in 2003-04 and $5 per week in 2005-06. This reflects positive net rents for about half of the mortgagor households, largely offset by the negative net imputed rents estimated for those households in this group whose housing costs exceeded their estimated gross imputed rent (40% of the mortgagor households in 2003-04 and 45% in 2005-06 had negative net imputed rents).


Table 4.1 also shows the effect of adding net imputed rent to disposable household income. In 2003-04, the addition of net imputed rent to disposable household income contributed an additional 7% to income across all households. The effect in 2005-06 was similar at 6%.


However for some housing tenures the addition of net imputed rent to disposable household income saw a significant increase in their mean equivalised disposable household incomes. The largest effect was seen for households who occupied their dwelling rent-free (20% increase in 2003-04 and 23% increase in 2005-06). The addition of net imputed rent to income also saw significant income increases for owners without a mortgage (18% increase in 2003-04 and 17% in 2005-06) and tenants of state/territory housing authorities (15% increase in 2003-04 and 13% in 2005-06).


The overall effect of the addition of net imputed rent to disposable income is a reduction in the mean income disparities between housing tenures, with a significant decline in the ratio between tenures with the highest and lowest incomes. For example, in 2003-04, the ratio of the mean income of owners with a mortgage to the mean income of tenants of state/territory housing authorities declined from 2.1 to 1.9 when net imputed rent was included.



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