Housing Occupancy and Costs methodology

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Reference period
2017-18 financial year
Released
17/07/2019

Explanatory notes

Introduction

1 This publication presents a summary of the findings from the 2017–18 Survey of Income and Housing (SIH). The survey collected detailed information about the income, wealth and household characteristics of persons aged 15 years and over in private dwellings throughout Australia (excluding very remote areas).

2 The Survey of Income and Housing, User Guide, Australia, 2017–18 (cat. no. 6553.0), here on referred to as the User Guide, will assist users to understand and utilise results from the SIH.

3 The SIH was conducted continuously from 1994–95 to 1997–98, and then in 1999–2000, 2000–01 and 2002–03. From 2003–04 the SIH has been conducted every two years. The 2017–18 SIH collected information from a sample of 14,060 households over the period July 2017 to June 2018.

4 Previous surveys of household income were conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) in 1979, 1982, 1986 and 1990. These surveys were generally conducted over a two-month period, compared to a twelve-month period for the SIH. The SIH also included improvements to the survey weighting and estimation procedures, changes to the scope and coverage of household income and changes to interviewing methods from 1994-95 onwards.

5 In 2003–04, 2009–10 and 2015–16 the SIH was integrated with the Household Expenditure Survey (HES). In 2005–06, 2007–08, 2011–12, 2013–14 and 2017–18, the SIH was run as a stand-alone survey.

6 The ABS collects additional housing information in the SIH every six years. Additional housing topics were last collected in 2013–14, which included housing mobility, housing condition and dwelling characteristics, home purchase for first home buyers, loan financing for owners with a mortgage and rental arrangements. Previously the additional housing content was presented in Housing Mobility and Conditions, 2007–08 (cat. no. 4130.0.55.002). In 2013–14, the content was included as an additional data cube in Housing Occupancy and Costs, 2013–14 (cat. no. 4130.0).

7 Other household collections conducted by the ABS which cover housing are:

  • Census of Population and Housing
  • General Social Survey
     

8 Household collections conducted by the ABS which cover housing for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are:

9 Care should be taken when comparing data from the different sources due to the different methodologies used in these collections.

Changes in this issue

10 The key change in 2017–18 compared with 2015–16 is:

  • Data cube 21 presents the new National Housing and Homelessness Agreement (NHHA) measure for Rental Affordability, replacing the previous national reporting measures most recently presented as data cube 22 in the 2015–16 release.
     

Refer to the 'Explanatory Notes' of Household Income and Wealth, Australia (cat. no. 6523.0) for details on other changes to the 2017–18 SIH.

Confidentiality

11 To protect the confidentiality of individuals, a technique called perturbation is used to randomly adjust cell values. Perturbation involves small random adjustment of the statistics and is considered the most satisfactory technique for avoiding the release of identifiable statistics while maximising the range of information that can be released. These adjustments have a negligible impact on the underlying pattern of the statistics.

12 After perturbation, a given published cell value will generally be consistent across all tables. However, adding up cell values to derive a total will not necessarily give the same result as published totals.

13 The introduction of perturbation in publications ensures that these statistics are consistent with statistics released via services such as Table Builder.

Concepts and definitions

14 The concepts and definitions relating to the statistics in this publication are described in the following section of this publication. Other definitions are available from the ‘Glossary’ section of this publication.

Household

15 The household is the basic unit of analysis in this publication. A household consists of one or more persons, at least one of whom is at least 15 years of age, usually resident in the same private dwelling. The persons in a household may or may not be related. They must live wholly within one dwelling. A group of people who make common provision for food and other essentials of living but live in two separate dwellings are in two separate households.

16 The household is adopted as the basic unit of analysis because it is assumed that sharing of the use of goods and services occurs at this level. If smaller units, say persons, are adopted, then it is difficult to know how to attribute to individual household members the use of shared items such as food, accommodation and household goods. Intra-household transfers, however, are excluded. For example, if one member of the household were to pay board to another member of the same household then this is not considered as an increase in the amount of income or housing costs of the household. If such transfers were to be included there would be double counting.

Income unit

17 An income unit is a single person or a group of related persons within a household, whose command over income is assumed to be shared. Income sharing is assumed to take place within married (registered or defacto) couples, and between parents and their dependent children. The income unit is similar, but not identical, to the unit used in determining the eligibility of people for many government pensions and allowances such as Centrelink payments.

Income

18 Household income consists of all current receipts, whether monetary or in kind, that are received by the household or by individual members of the household, and which are available for, or intended to support, current consumption.

19 Income includes receipts from:

  • employee income (whether from an employer or own incorporated enterprise), including wages and salaries, salary sacrificed income, non-cash benefits, bonuses and termination payments
  • government pensions and allowances
  • profit/loss from own unincorporated business (including partnerships)
  • net investment income (interest, rent, dividends, royalties)
  • private transfers (e.g. superannuation, workers' compensation, income from annuities, child support, and financial support received from family members not living in the same household)
     

20 Receipts of Family Tax Benefit are treated as income, regardless of whether they are received fortnightly or as a lump sum. The Newborn Supplement and Newborn Upfront Payment replaced the Baby Bonus on 1 March 2014 and those eligible receive it as part of their Family Tax Benefit Part A payments for a period of 13 weeks or with their lump sum. The Paid Parental Leave payments have also been included as income.

21 The Energy Supplement is included in income from government pensions or allowances. This tax-exempt, indexed payment is paid to pensioners, other income support recipients, families receiving Family Tax Benefit payments and Commonwealth Seniors Health Card holders, provided they meet eligibility requirements.

Income measures

22 In 2007–08, the ABS revised its standards for household income statistics following the adoption of new international standards in 2004 and review of aspects of the collection and dissemination of income data. The income estimates from 2007–08 onwards apply the new income standards, and are not directly comparable with estimates for previous cycles. The change in income level in 2007–08 is partly due to the change in methods but also partly due to real change in income. To the extent possible, the estimates for 2003–04 and 2005–06 shown in the time series tables also reflect the new treatments.

23 For more information on the nature and impact of changes to income data, see Appendix 4 of Household Income and Income Distribution, Australia, 2007–08 (cat. no. 6523.0).

Gross income

24 Gross income is the sum of income from all sources before income tax and the Medicare levy have been deducted.

Disposable income

25 Disposable income better represents the economic resources available to meet the needs of households. It is derived by deducting estimates of personal income tax and the Medicare levy from gross income. Medicare levy surcharge was also calculated and deducted from gross income while calculating disposable income (as it was for the first time in 2007–08).

26 Income tax liability is estimated for all households using taxation criteria for the relevant financial year and the income and other characteristics of household members reported in the survey (such as private health insurance fund membership).

27 Prior to 2005–06 the derivation of disposable income also included the addition of Family Tax Benefit (FTB) paid through the tax system or as a lump sum by Centrelink. For practical reasons it was not included in the gross income estimates. From 2005–06 to 2013–14, FTB amounts were modelled for some households where amounts were not reported by the respondents. These amounts are not included in gross or disposable income from 2015–16. The introduction of a new model in 2015–16 for micro-editing government payments includes modelling of FTB values. These have been utilised where the reported amount was missing, significantly above the maximum eligible amount or where other payments, related to FTB, were reported by survey respondents, such as single parents with children under 8 years who receive Parenting Payment. More information about the effect of this change is available in the User Guide.

Equivalised disposable income

28 Most analyses in this publication use equivalised disposable household income rather than gross or disposable income. Using an equivalising factor for household income enables the direct comparison of the relative economic wellbeing of households of different size and composition (for example, lone person households, families and group households of unrelated individuals).

29 Equivalised disposable household income is calculated by adjusting disposable income by the application of an equivalence scale. The scale is based on the principle that larger households require a higher level of income to achieve the same standard of living as a smaller household. However, there are economies of scale, so each additional person does not equally add to the income needed to support household consumption.

30 Whereas disposable income includes negative values, these are adjusted to zero for the purpose of equivalised disposable household income.

31 After household income is adjusted according to an equivalence scale, the equivalised income can be viewed as an indicator of the economic resources available to a standardised household. For a lone person household, it is equal to income received. For a household comprising more than one person, equivalised income is an indicator of the household income that would be required by a lone person household in order to enjoy the same level of economic wellbeing as the household in question.

32 It is the number of people who belong to households with particular characteristics, rather than the number of households with those characteristics, that is of primary interest in measuring income distribution and leads to the preference for the equal representation of those persons in such analysis. For example, if the person is used as the unit of analysis rather than the household, then the representation in the income distribution of each person in a household comprising four persons is the same as that for each person in a two person household. In contrast, if the household were to be used as the unit of analysis, each person in the four person household would only have half the representation of each person in the two person household.

33 For that reason, in this publication wherever equivalised disposable household income quintiles are presented they are calculated with respect to persons, including children. Such measures are sometimes known as person weighted estimates. They are described in more detail in the User Guide. Nevertheless, as most of the relevant characteristics of persons relate to their household circumstances, the tables of this publication are of households rather than persons. Hence, each quintile of equivalised disposable household income is not 20% of households but rather estimates the proportion of households that contains the 20% of persons in each quintile.

34 For more information on equivalised income, see the User Guide.

Lower income households

35 Lower income households are generally defined in this publication as those containing the 38% of people with equivalised disposable household income between the 3rd and 40th percentiles, and excluding the 1st and 2nd percentiles. The 1st and 2nd percentiles are excluded as some households in these percentiles exhibit high wealth and expenditure characteristics and income types other than employee income and government pensions and allowances. An exception to this definition of lower income households is in data cube 21. Rental Affordability, Lower Income Renter Households, National Housing and Homelessness Agreement basis. See the appendix: National Reporting of Rental Affordability Measures, for details of that definition.

36 This definition of lower income households differs from that used in the Household Income and Wealth publication (6523.0) in which low income households are defined as households in the lowest income quintile excluding the 1st and 2nd percentiles. For more information on the definition employed in that publication see that publication's Explanatory Notes especially paragraphs 29–35, 'Lowest income decile'.

37 Equivalised income generally provides a useful indicator of economic wellbeing. However, some households report extremely low and even negative income in the survey. Households may under report their incomes in the survey at all income levels, including low income households. Households may also correctly report low levels of income if they have incurred losses in their unincorporated business or have negative returns from other investments.

38 Some of the households included in the lowest two income percentiles are unlikely to be suffering extremely low levels of economic wellbeing. Income distribution analysis may lead to inappropriate conclusions if such households are used as the basis for assessing low levels of economic wellbeing.

Housing costs

39 Housing costs are regular outlays made by household members in providing shelter for themselves. The data collected on housing outlays in the SIH are limited to major outlays on housing, such as mortgage repayments, repayments of unsecured loans for housing purposes, rent, property and water rates, and body corporate fees. Only payments that relate to the dwelling occupied by the household at time of interview, that is, a respondent's usual place of residence, are included.

40 This publication presents a measure of housing costs defined simply as the sum of rent payments; rate payments (water and general); and mortgage or unsecured loan payments (if the initial purpose of the loan was primarily to buy, add, or alter the occupied dwelling). Housing costs are shown as weekly equivalents.

41 There are a number of limitations with the housing costs information obtained in the SIH, due to practical data collection considerations. These limitations should be especially borne in mind when comparing the housing costs of different tenure and landlord types, i.e. when comparing the costs of owner occupiers with the costs of renting households, and when comparing the costs of households renting from state and territory housing authorities with the costs of other renters.

  • Some households are reimbursed some or all of their housing costs. Rent Assistance (RA), paid by the Australian Government to qualifying recipients of income support payments is an important type of reimbursement of relevance to these statistics.
  • Mortgage repayments made by owners with a mortgage include both the interest component and the principal component. For some purposes it may be more appropriate to consider repayments of principal as a form of saving rather than as a recurrent housing cost, as it reflects the purchase of a housing asset by increasing the equity in the property held by the household and is an addition to the wealth of the occupants.
  • A fuller measure of housing costs would include a range of outlays, some of which are not collected in the SIH but which are necessary to ensure that the dwelling can continue to provide an appropriate level of housing services. These include body corporate fees, repairs, maintenance and dwelling insurance, and are costs that tend to be incurred by owner occupier households but not by renting households.
  • For further information see the Appendix 'Housing cost measures', available from this publication.
     

Housing costs and household income

42 As housing costs are usually a major component of total living costs they are often analysed in relation to income, and referred to as a housing affordability ratio. In data cube 4, Housing Costs as a Proportion of Income (available in the Data downloads section of this product), we calculate this in two ways. In table 4.1 the housing costs of a group (cell in the table) are summed, and divided by the summed gross weekly household income of that group of households. This is called housing costs as a proportion of gross household income. Table 4.2 presents the median ratio of all of the households' ratios of housing costs to gross weekly household income for that group of households (or cell in the table). These ratios are expressed as percentages.

43 However, comparisons using these measures are subject to the limitations of housing cost estimates obtained in the SIH as described in the 'Housing Costs' section of these Explanatory Notes. Housing affordability ratios derived from SIH data are further impacted by the inclusion of Rent Assistance (RA) in the value of income collected. RA is estimated, on average, to represent about 5% of the reported income of households receiving RA, in 2017–18. To illustrate, consider two couples that are renting their dwellings. Both receive government pensions of $400 per week. One rents from a public housing authority and pays rent of $100 per week. The other pays $135 rent per week to a private landlord and receives RA of $35 per week. In Housing Occupancy and Costs, the housing costs of the latter household would be recorded as $135 and their income would be recorded as $435. The couple renting from the public housing authority has a housing costs to income ratio of 25%. The housing costs to income ratio for the latter household would be derived as 31%. However, if RA receipts are excluded from both housing costs and income the housing costs to income affordability ratio for the latter couple is also 25%, highlighting that there is no effective difference between the housing costs or income situation of the two couples. The treatment of RA is of particular importance when considering changes in housing affordability ratios over time, since there has been a shift from providing public housing to providing RA as a means of supplying affordable housing to lower income households.

44 While housing costs can be a major component of total living costs, the difference between the housing costs of a larger household and a smaller household would not be expected to be as great as the difference in many other costs, such as food or clothing. In other words, larger households can be expected to benefit from economies of scale in the supply of housing. This means that if a larger household and smaller household both have the same standard of living, it could be expected that on average the larger household will have a lower housing costs to income ratio. Therefore, relatively high housing costs to income ratios are of greater concern with respect to larger households than smaller households. This should be kept in mind when comparing such ratios across different household sizes.

45 In comparing households' housing costs with their income, it should be noted that households have a variety of housing preferences. Some people may choose to live in an area with high property values because it is close to their place of employment and therefore they have lower transport costs. Some people choose to incur relatively high housing costs because they prefer a relatively high standard of housing compared with other consumption possibilities. High mortgage repayments might reflect a choice to purchase a relatively expensive home, or pay off a mortgage relatively rapidly, as a form of savings.

46 It is commonly assumed that higher income households have more capacity both to choose the proportion of their income spent on housing, as well as to bear a higher proportion without this negatively affecting their ability to pay for other costs of living, unlike lower income households, who are assumed to have less choice and capacity in this regard. Consequently, housing affordability ratios expressed in ranges are most commonly presented for lower income households only.

Housing stress

47 Households with relatively low income and housing costs greater than a certain percentage of income, commonly 30%, are sometimes said to be in "housing stress". However, such a conclusion cannot always be reliably drawn from such an indicator, which should be interpreted with care, for the reasons described in the previous paragraphs.

48 With the above caution in mind, data cube 5, table 5.2, does present estimated proportions of lower income households in a number of ranged categories of housing costs as a proportion of income, cross-tabulated with selected household classifications, as follows:

  • 25% or less
  • 25% to 30%
  • more than 30% to 50%
  • more than 50%
  • more than 30%
     

49 For comparison purposes, a similar table presenting proportions of all households (except those with nil or negative income) in the above housing costs as a proportion of income ranges appears in table 5.1.

50 In this issue, households with nil or negative income have generally been excluded from calculations of housing costs as a proportion of gross income. In the 2017–18 SIH, these households made up 0.4% of all households.

Housing utilisation

51 The concept of housing utilisation in this publication is based upon a comparison of the number of bedrooms in a dwelling with a series of household demographics such as the number of usual residents, their relationship to one another, age and sex. There is no single standard or measure for housing utilisation. However, the measure presented in this publication is based on the Canadian National Occupancy Standard (CNOS).

52 The CNOS is sensitive to both household size and composition in determining housing requirements. The measure assesses the bedroom requirements of a household by specifying that:

  • there should be no more than two persons per bedroom
  • a household of one unattached individual may reasonably occupy a bed-sit (i.e. have no bedroom)
  • couples and parents should have a separate bedroom
  • children less than five years of age, of different sexes, may reasonably share a room
  • children five years of age or over, of different sexes, should not share a bedroom
  • children less than 18 years of age and of the same sex may reasonably share a bedroom
  • single household members aged 18 years or over should have a separate bedroom
     

53 Households living in dwellings where this standard cannot be met are considered to be overcrowded. The CNOS can also be used to derive an estimate of spare bedrooms based on household composition and number of bedrooms.

Tenure type and landlord type

54 The concept of housing tenure is based on the type of legal right of the occupant/s to occupy the dwelling. Tenure is determined according to whether the unit (household, income unit or person) owns the dwelling outright, owns the dwelling with a mortgage or a loan secured against it, is paying rent to live in the dwelling or has some other arrangement to occupy the dwelling.

55 In this publication, tenure information is provided at the household level. Person level and income unit level tenure were also enumerated in 2017–18 SIH and are available on the confidentialised unit record file (CURF). Tenure information at household, income unit and person levels enables users to analyse within household tenure arrangements, such as subletting and boarding.

56 Owners are divided into two categories - owners with mortgages and owners without mortgages. A household's tenure type is owner with a mortgage if there is any outstanding mortgage or loan secured against the dwelling. This mortgage or loan may have been initially obtained primarily for either the purchase or the building of the dwelling, or for undertaking alterations or additions, or for some other purpose such as the purchase of a vehicle or an investment property. However, mortgage payments where the initial purpose of the loan was not primarily for housing are not treated as housing costs. A household's tenure type is owner without a mortgage if there are no loans or mortgages secured against the dwelling.

57 Renters are occupants who pay money as rent to another person or organisation, referred to as the landlord, in return for being allowed to occupy the dwelling. Renters can be further classified according to type of landlord. The landlord may be a relative or an unrelated person in another dwelling, or can be a real estate agency, a state or territory housing authority, a community organisation, a trust, or an employer.

Survey methodology

Scope

58 The survey collects information by personal interview from usual residents of private dwellings in urban and rural areas of Australia (excluding very remote areas), covering about 97% of the people living in Australia. Private dwellings are houses, flats, home units, caravans, garages, tents and other structures that were used as places of residence at the time of interview. Long-stay caravan parks are also included. These are distinct from non-private dwellings which include hotels, boarding schools, boarding houses and institutions. Residents of non-private dwellings are excluded.

59 'Usual residents' excludes:

  • households which contain members of non-Australian defence forces stationed in Australia
  • households which contain diplomatic personnel of overseas governments
  • households in areas defined as very remote - this has only a minor impact on aggregate estimates, except in the Northern Territory where such households account for about 23% of the population
     

Data collection

60 Information for each household was collected using:

  • a household level computer assisted interview questionnaire which collected information on household characteristics
  • an individual level computer assisted interview questionnaire which collected information on income, wealth, child care costs and other personal characteristics from each usual resident aged 15 years and over
     

61 Sample copies of the above collection tools are included in the User Guide.

Sample design

62 The sample was designed to produce reliable estimates for broad aggregates for households resident in private dwellings aggregated for Australia, for each state and for the capital cities in each state and territory. More detailed estimates should be used with caution, especially for Tasmania, the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory.

63 For the 2017–18 SIH, dwellings were selected through a stratified, multistage cluster design from the private dwelling framework of the ABS Population Survey Master Sample. Selections were distributed across a twelve month enumeration period so that the survey results are representative of income patterns across the year.

Non-responding households

64 Of the selected dwellings there were 23,049 households in the scope of the survey. Of this initial sample, 3,967 dwellings (17%) were excluded as no contact was able to be made (e.g, vacant dwelling, holiday homes). A further 5,022 (22%) did not respond at all to the questionnaire, or did not respond adequately. Most of these were not able to take part in the survey during the collection period. Other reasons included:

  • households affected by death or illness of a household member
  • households which did not respond due to communication barriers or because they refused to participate
     

65 357 households were excluded because the main income earners in the household did not adequately respond to questions about income sources and amounts.

Partial response and imputation

66 Partial imputation is completed for all households with missing data items. Donor records are selected by finding fully responding persons with matching information on various characteristics (such as state, sex, age, labour force status and income) as the person with missing information. As far as possible, the imputed information is an appropriate proxy for the information that is missing. Depending on which values are to be imputed, donors are randomly chosen from the pool of individual records with complete information for the block of questions where the missing information occurs.

67 The final SIH sample includes 3,745 households (27% of households) and 9,946 person records (30% of persons aged 15 years or over) which had at least one imputed value. Of all the relevant items (continuous variables), 4.1% of values were imputed. This is slightly higher than SIH 2015–16 where HES was jointly collected (3.5%) and similar to the last SIH only cycle 2013–14 (3.9%).

Final sample

68 Of the selected dwellings (19,082) that were contacted and in scope of the survey, 14,060 (74%) households were included as part of the final estimates.

 GREATER CAPITAL CITYREST OF STATETOTAL
 HouseholdsPersons(a)HouseholdsPersons(a)HouseholdsPersons(a)
 no.nonononono
NSW1 3212 8181 0301 9292 3514 747
Vic.1 3332 7121 1132 0642 4464 776
Qld9651 8561 0301 8781 9953 734
SA1 1212 1501 0451 8302 1663 980
WA1 0192 0311 1492 1472 1684 178
Tas.5891 0581 0311 9021 6202 960
NT4288211132035411 024
ACT(b)7731 522. .. .7731 522
Aust.7 54914 9686 51111 95314 06026 921

. . not applicable
a. Number of persons aged 15 years and over
b. Greater Capital City counts for the ACT relate to total ACT
 

Weighting

69 Weighting is the process of adjusting results from a sample survey to infer results for the total in scope population whether that be persons or households. To do this, a weight is allocated to each sample unit (e.g. a person or a household). The weight is a value which indicates how many population units are represented by the sample unit. The first step in calculating weights for each unit is to assign an initial weight, which is the inverse of the probability of being selected in the survey. For example, if the probability of a household being selected in the survey was 1 in 600, then the household would have an initial weight of 600 (that is, it represents 600 households). The initial weights are then calibrated to align with independent estimates of the population of interest, referred to as benchmarks. Weights calibrated against population benchmarks ensure that the survey estimates conform to the independently estimated distribution of the population rather than to the distribution within the sample itself.

70 Most of the independent person and household benchmarks are based on demography estimates of numbers of persons and households in Australia. The benchmarks are adjusted to include persons and households residing in private dwellings only and to exclude persons living in very remote areas, and therefore do not, and are not intended to, match estimates of the Australian resident population published in other ABS publications. The demography estimates of persons (estimated resident population - ERP) and households used in SIH 2017–18 are built up from the 2016 Census.

71 In the 2017–18 SIH, as in 2007–08, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2013–14 and 2015–16, all persons in each household were assigned a weight. This differs from the 2005–06 SIH where children aged 0–14 years were not given separate weights, but household counts of the number of children were benchmarked to population totals.

72 The benchmarks used in the calibration of the final weights for the 2017–18 SIH were:

  • number of persons
    • by state or territory by age by sex
      • in five year age groups up to 80+ years for all states and territories (excluding NT)
      • in five year age groups up to 70+ years for the NT
         
    • by state or territory by labour force status ('Employed', 'Unemployed' and 'Not in the labour force') (except NT which does not use labour force status)
       
  • numbers of households
    • by state, by indexation quarter by capital city/balance of state (except NT and ACT which only use state)
    • by state, by household composition (number of adults (1, 2 or 3+) and whether or not the household contains children) (except NT which only uses whether or not the household contains children)
      ​​​​​​​

Estimation

73 Estimates produced from the survey are usually in the form of averages (e.g. average weekly income of couple households with dependent children), or counts (e.g. total number of households that own their dwelling or total number of persons living in households that own their own dwelling). For counts of households, the estimate was obtained by summing the weights for the responding households in the required group (e.g. those owning their own dwelling). For counts of persons, the household weights were multiplied by the number of persons in the household before summing. The SIH collects data on the number of people, including children, in each household but separate records with income and most detailed data were only collected for people 15 years and older.

74 Average income values are obtained in two different ways, depending on whether mean gross household income or mean equivalised disposable household income is being derived. Estimates of mean gross household income are calculated on a household weighted basis. They are obtained by multiplying the gross income of each household by the weight of the household, summing across all households and then dividing by the estimated number of households. For example, the mean gross household income of couple households with dependent children is the weighted sum of the gross income of each such household divided by the estimated number of those households.

75 Estimates of mean equivalised disposable household income are calculated on a person weighted basis. They are obtained by multiplying the equivalised disposable income of each household by the number of people in the household (including children) and by the weight of the household, summing across all households and then dividing by the estimated number of people in the population group. The User Guide illustrates the differences between mean gross household income calculated on a household weighted basis and mean equivalised disposable household income calculated on a person weighted basis.

Reliability of estimates

76 The estimates provided in this publication are subject to two types of error, non-sampling and sampling error.

Non-sampling error

77 Non-sampling error can occur in any collection, whether the estimates are derived from a sample or from a complete collection such as a census. Sources of non-sampling error include non-response, errors in reporting by respondents or recording of answers by interviewers and errors in coding and processing the data.

78 Non-sampling errors are difficult to quantify in any collection. However, every effort is made to reduce non-sampling error to a minimum by careful design and testing of the questionnaire, training of interviewers and data entry staff and editing and quality control procedures during data processing.

79 One of the main sources of non-sampling error is non-response by persons selected in the survey. Non-response occurs when people cannot or will not cooperate or cannot be contacted. Non-response can affect the reliability of results and can introduce a bias. The magnitude of any bias depends upon the level of non-response and the extent of the difference between the characteristics of those people who responded to the survey and those who did not.

80 The following methods were adopted to reduce the level and impact of non-response:

  • Primary Approach Letters (PALs) were posted to selected SIH households prior to enumeration
  • document cards were provided to respondents to suggest having financial statements and similar documents handy at the time of interview to assist with accurate responses
  • face-to-face interviews with respondents
  • the use of interviewers who could speak languages other than English, where necessary
  • proxy Interviews conducted when consent is given, with a responsible person answering on behalf of a respondent incapable of doing so themselves
  • follow-up of respondents if there was initially no response
  • imputation of missing values
  • ensuring that the weighted data is representative of the population (in terms of demographic characteristics) by aligning the estimates with population benchmarks
     

Sampling error

81 The estimates are based on a sample of possible observations and are subject to sampling variability. The estimates may therefore differ from the figures that would have been produced if information had been collected for all households. A measure of the sampling error for a given estimate is provided by the standard error, which may be expressed as a percentage of the estimate (relative standard error). In this publication, estimates with an RSE of 25% to 50% are annotated with a cell comment to indicate that the estimate has a high level of sampling error relative to the size of the estimate, and should be used with caution. Estimates with an RSE over 50% are annotated with a cell comment to indicate they are generally considered too unreliable for most purposes.

82 Another measure is the Margin of Error (MoE), which are provided for proportions to assist users in assessing the reliability of these data. Estimates of proportions with an MoE more than 10% are annotated to indicate they are subject to high sample variability and particular consideration should be given to the MoE when using these estimates. Depending on how the estimate is to be used, an MoE greater than 10% may be considered too large to inform decisions. In addition, estimates with a corresponding standard 95% confidence interval that includes 0% or 100% are annotated with a cell comment to indicate that they are usually considered unreliable for most purposes.

Acknowledgement

83 ABS publications draw extensively on information provided freely by individuals, businesses, governments and other organisations. Their continued cooperation is very much appreciated: without it, the wide range of statistics published by the ABS would not be available. Information received by the ABS is treated in strict confidence as required by the Census and Statistics Act 1905.

Products and services

84 Summary results from the SIH are available in spreadsheet form from the Data downloads section in this release.

85 For users who wish to undertake more detailed analysis you can access SIH microdata products. These include:

  • TableBuilder (available July 2019) – an online tool for creating tables from ABS survey data, where variables can be selected for cross-tabulation
  • Detailed file available via the DataLab (available July 2019) – approved users can access a remote desktop environment for in-depth analysis using a range of statistical software packages
  • Basic confidentialised unit record file (CURF) (available August 2019) – allows approved users interactive access in the user’s own computing environment
     

Further information about ABS microdata, including conditions of use, and access is available via the Microdata Entry page on the ABS website.

86 The ABS offers specialist consultancy services to assist clients with more complex statistical information needs. Clients may wish to have the unit record data analysed according to their own needs, or require tailored tables incorporating data items and populations as requested by them. Tables and other analytical outputs can be made available electronically or in printed form. However, as the level of detail or disaggregation increases with detailed requests, the number of contributors to data cells decreases. This may result in some requested information not being able to be released due to confidentiality or sampling variability constraints. All specialist consultancy services attract a service charge, and clients will be provided with a quote before information is supplied.

87 If the information you require is not available from the publication or the data cubes, please contact the Information Centre on 1300 135 070, (international callers +61 2 9268 4909) or via email client.services@abs.gov.au. The Information Centre can be contacted from anywhere in Australia between 8:30am and 5:00pm (AEST) Monday to Friday. The ABS Privacy Policy outlines how the ABS will handle any personal information that you provide to us.

User guide

88 The Survey of Income and Housing, User Guide, Australia, 2017–18 (cat. no. 6553.0) includes information about the purpose of the survey, the concepts and contents, and the methods and procedures used to collect the data and derive the estimates. It also outlines the differences between the 2017–18 survey and earlier SIH surveys. Its purpose is to help users of the data understand the nature of the survey, and its potential to meet user needs. 

Appendix - housing cost measures

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Introduction

Housing costs are often the largest regular expense to be met out of a household's income. Housing cost measures are of key policy and research interest in assessing the affordability of different forms of housing and changes in affordability over time. The amount of a household spending on housing costs directly influences the amount of income available to meet other requirements, for both consumption and saving.

The measures of housing costs included in this publication are outlays made by household members to provide for their own shelter. There are limitations when comparing housing costs across different tenure types, particularly between owner occupier households and renter households. Rent payments represent the consumption of a shelter service. Mortgage repayments, on the other hand, comprise both the consumption of a shelter service (represented by the interest component) and a saving element through the acquisition of an asset over time (represented by the repayment of principal).

The housing cost measure used in this publication includes rent payments, rate payments (general and water) and mortgage or unsecured loan payments (if the initial purpose of the loan was primarily to purchase, build, add to, or alter the dwelling). It does not include body corporate fees, repair and maintenance costs, nor take into account refunds from a business or person outside of the household.

Owners

Interest and principal components

Since 2003, the ABS SIH has collected information on the interest and principal components of loan repayments. For many purposes it is more appropriate to consider repayments of principal as a form of saving rather than as a recurrent housing cost. It reflects the purchase of a housing asset by increasing the equity in the property held by the household and is an addition to the wealth of the occupants. Because of this, some analysts may prefer to exclude the principal component of loan repayments from mortgage costs and affordability analysis.

The interest component of a loan is the ongoing cost for owners with a mortgage. In 2017–18 interest accounted for 53% of total mortgage repayments for owners with a mortgage. For first home buyers and recent changeover buyers with a mortgage (households that had purchased their home in the three years prior to interview), interest on the loan accounted for 61% of total mortgage repayments. This is because a greater proportion of the repayment is typically applied to interest at the beginning of a loan amortisation schedule, while a greater proportion is applied to principal at the end.

Proportion of loan used for housing purposes

The housing costs reported in this publication include mortgage repayments if the main purpose of the loan was to buy, build, add to or alter the occupied dwelling. For example, if a loan was taken out primarily to buy the dwelling, but part of it was used to purchase a car, the entire repayment amount is included in housing costs. Similarly, if a loan is taken out primarily for other purposes, but is partly used for housing purposes, the repayments are not included in housing costs. From the 2003–04 SIH, where a loan has multiple purposes, details of all purposes have been collected, so repayments can be allocated to each purpose, in accordance with the percentage split of the original loan amount by purpose, in a process referred to as pro-rating.

Body corporate fees, dwelling insurance, and repairs and maintenance

Measures of housing costs could also include other outlays which are necessary to ensure that the dwelling can continue to provide an appropriate level of housing services. These include expenditure on body corporate fees, dwelling insurance, and repairs and maintenance. These costs tend to be incurred by owner occupier households, but not directly by renting households.

Data from the 2017–18 SIH show that if these housing costs were included in housing costs measures, the estimates of average housing costs would increase by $68 per week for owners without a mortgage, and $69 per week for owners with a mortgage.

From the 2013–14 SIH and for subsequent surveys, steps were taken to improve the estimates of dwelling insurance and repairs and maintenance costs through modelling. Prior to 2013–14 SIH these estimates were directly collected from households.

Refunds from businesses or persons outside the household

The housing costs reported in this publication are not adjusted for amounts refunded by a business or someone outside the household. The ABS commenced collecting the amount of these types of refunds in the SIH from 2003–04. This includes refunds on: rent payments, mortgage payments, rates payments, and body corporate payments.

Renters

The ABS has taken a number of steps to improve the coverage, quality and usefulness of data for analyses of the housing costs of renter households.

Housing costs for renter households in this publication comprise rent payments plus any rates payments that were paid by the household (general and water). The measure does not take into account any refunds from a business or person outside of the household, or any Rent Assistance (RA) payments received.

In 2003–04 the ABS commenced collecting extra information on the housing costs of renters, including payments for water consumption and amounts refunded by a business or person outside the household.

Rent Assistance (RA)

Some households renting in the private rental market are reimbursed some or all of their housing costs in the form of RA. RA is a non-taxable income supplement paid through Centrelink to qualifying recipients of income support payments and family tax benefit, and is paid in conjunction with the other benefits.

In this publication RA payments are neither offset from the housing costs nor deducted from income of the principal tenant, that is RA is treated as household income, much like other government pensions and benefits. As such, comparisons of housing costs and affordability between private renters receiving RA and households receiving a direct form of housing subsidy, such as those renting from state and territory housing landlords, must be done with care.

In 2007–08, the ABS commenced collecting information on whether persons and income units are in receipt of RA and the amount that they receive. In 2012, the ABS took steps to improve the quality of this data through modelling, based on eligibility criteria. If rent assistance receipts were subtracted from gross housing costs, it has been estimated in the 2017–18 SIH, that the housing costs of households receiving rent assistance would be 8% lower on average.

Towards a more comprehensive measure

A more comprehensive measure of housing costs could take into account the issues discussed above. Housing costs could then be more meaningfully compared across all tenure and landlord types.

Table A1 presents an alternative measure of housing costs to that generally included in this publication, which takes into account the issues discussed above. While these alternative housing cost measures cannot be comprehensively derived for all previous cycles of the SIH due to the availability of all the relevant items, these items are expected to be available for future cycles of the SIH.

The alternative measure shows housing costs after adding body corporate payments, repairs, maintenance and dwelling insurance. It also includes housing related mortgage repayments on a pro-rata basis of interest only (that is, excluding principal). Amounts refunded by a business or someone outside of the household and RA payments are deducted. If this alternative measure was used the estimate of average weekly housing costs included in this publication would:

  • increase by $68 to $121 for owners without a mortgage
  • decrease by $128 to $356 for owners with a mortgage
  • decrease by $25 to $374 for private renters
  • increase by $1 to $159 for state & territory housing tenants
  • decrease by $33 to $278 for all households
     

A1 - An alternative measure of mean housing costs, 2017-18

  Owner without a mortgageOwner with a mortgageRenter - Private landlordRenter - State/territory housing authorityAll households
Housing cost measure used throughout this publication     
 Rent payments--394154116
 Mortgage payments-425--156
 Rates payments (general and water)52595439
Total mean weekly housing costs53484399158311
Alternative housing costs measure     
 Rent payments with refunds and RA deducted--367153108
 Mortgage payments (interest only, with refunds deducted, pro-rated)-227--84
 Rates payments (general and water) with refunds deducted51585438
 Body corporate payments with refunds deducted66--4
 Repairs and maintenance47473333
 Dwelling insurance1516--10

Total mean weekly housing costs using alternative measure

121356374159278

 - nil or rounded to zero (including null cells)

 

A2 - All households, housing costs measures, mean weekly housing costs and housing costs as a proportion of gross household income

 Mean housing costs per week ($)Housing costs as a proportion of gross household income(a) (%)
Measure used in publication(b)Alternative measure(c)Measure used in publication(b)Alternative measure(c)(d)
Tenure and landlord type    
 Owner without a mortgage5312137
 Owner with a mortgage4843561612
 Renter    
  Renter - Private landlord3993742019
  Renter - State/territory housing authority1581592322
  Total renters(e)3663442019
 Total(f)3112781412

a. Excludes households with nil or negative income
b. For more information see 'Housing costs' in the 'Glossary' section of this publication
c. See table A1 above, for includes and excludes of the alternative housing costs measure
d. Excludes households with nil or negative income after RA is subtracted
e. Includes other landlord type
f. Includes other tenure type

Appendix - national reporting of rental affordability measures

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This publication presents data from the Survey of Income and Housing informing reporting on the National Housing and Homelessness Agreement (NHHA) indicator 'the proportion of low income rental households paying more than 30% of their income on rent'. Reporting on this indicator commences with the 2017–18 survey results and includes a ten year time series of data for comparison.

These data tables replace those previously presented in earlier editions of this publication to inform the National Affordable Housing Agreement (NAHA) indicator 'proportion of low income renter households in rental stress'. Reporting against this measure commenced with 2007–08 results and concluded with 2015–16 reporting.

The basis for the 2017–18 NHHA measure was discussed and agreed upon by a working group comprising officials with a mix of data and policy expertise from Commonwealth and State Departments with responsibility for housing and homelessness, assisted by expert advisors from Commonwealth data collection agencies.

For 2017–18 NHHA reporting, see data cube 21, available to download from the Data downloads section of this product.

Differences compared to other measures of rental affordability

There are a small number of differences between the 2017–18 NHHA indicator measure and the 2007–08 to 2015–16 NAHA indicator reporting, as well as the other data cubes presented in this publication. These are associated with the definitions and calculation of lower income households or those households considered to be paying more than 30% of their income on housing costs, as well as the calculation of housing costs or income.

Table A1 presents a comparison of the various measures and where they differ.

Table A1 - Comparison of measures of rental affordability presented in this, or previous editions of this publication

 2017–18 NHHA basis2007–08 to 2015–16 NAHA basisOther data cubes in this publication
Treatment of Rent Assistance (RA)RA is subtracted from both the value of housing costs and income used to calculate housing costs as a proportion of income, as well as from the measure of equivalised disposable household income used to calculate lower income households.No difference (as per current NHHA basis).RA is included in all housing costs and income measures throughout the rest of the publication.
 .  
Definition of lower income householdsLower income households are defined as those containing the 40% of people at or below the 40th percentile of equivalised disposable household income (excluding RA).No difference (as per current NHHA basis).Lower income households are defined as those containing the 38% of people with equivalised disposable household income between the 3rd and 40th percentiles.
 .  
Households with nil or negative incomeThose households with nil or negative income but with housing costs exceeding their income, have been included in estimates of households paying more than 30% of their income on housing costs (as well as in estimates of lower income households).These households were included in estimates of lower income households but were excluded from calculations of housing costs as a proportion of income.These households are both excluded from estimates of lower income households (along with those other households in the bottom 2 percentiles of equivalised disposable household income) and from calculations of housing costs as a proportion of income.
 .  
Geographic basis for lower income householdsCalculated as the 40% of people at or below the 40th percentile of equivalised disposable household income (excluding RA) at the Australia all households level.Lower income households were calculated for capital city and balance of state, on a state-by-state basis, and then aggregated to produce state and national totals.Calculated at the Australia all households level, for the 38% of people as described above.

 

 

Dimensions of rental affordability measures

Further explanation of the various dimensions of the rental affordability measures, and some of the considerations informing the different treatments and calculations, are briefly outlined below.

Treatment of Rent Assistance (RA)

Some households renting in the private rental market are reimbursed some or all of their housing costs in the form of RA. RA is a non-taxable income supplement paid through Centrelink to qualifying recipients of income support payments and family tax benefit, and is paid in conjunction with these other benefits.

If rent assistance receipts were subtracted from gross housing costs, it has been estimated in the 2017–18 SIH, that the housing costs of households receiving rent assistance would be 8% lower on average, and on average it represents about 5% of the reported income of households receiving it.

In the main tables of this publication RA payments are neither offset from the housing costs nor deducted from income of the principal tenant. RA is treated as household income, much like other government pensions and benefits. As such, comparisons of housing costs and affordability between private renters receiving RA and households receiving a direct form of housing subsidy, such as those renting from state and territory housing landlords, must be done with care.

To illustrate the impacts of its treatment, consider two couples that are renting their dwellings. Both receive government pensions of $400 per week. One rents from a public housing authority and pays rent of $100 per week. The other pays $135 rent per week to a private landlord and receives RA of $35 per week. In SIH, the housing costs of the latter household would be recorded as $135 and their income would be recorded as $435. The couple renting from the public housing authority has a housing costs to income ratio of 25%. The housing costs to income ratio for the latter household would be derived as 31%. However, if RA receipts are excluded from both housing costs and income the housing costs to income ratio for the latter couple is also 25%, highlighting that there is no substantive difference between the housing costs or income situation of the two couples. The treatment of RA is of particular importance when considering changes in housing affordability ratios over time, since there has been a shift from providing public housing to providing RA as a means of supplying affordable housing to low income households.

For the measure of rental affordability on the 2017–18 NHHA basis, it was decided that the most appropriate treatment was to exclude RA from the calculations of all housing costs and income measures used to produce the estimates.

Definition of lower income households

Equivalised income generally provides a useful indicator of economic wellbeing. However, some households report extremely low and even negative income in the survey. Households may under report their incomes in the survey at all income levels, including lower income households. Households may also correctly report low levels of income if they have incurred losses in their unincorporated business or have negative returns from other investments.

Further investigation of the characteristics of people in the lowest income percentiles using data from the 2011–12 SIH, found that Government pensions and allowances were the main source of income for 60% of households in the 3rd EDHI percentile, compared with 18% and 43% of the 1st and 2nd percentiles, respectively. Mean net worth of households in the 1st and 2nd EDHI percentiles was also substantially higher than the average for each of the percentiles from 3rd to 40th. Similar characteristics can be observed in 2017–18 data.

Lower income households are defined in the main tables of this publication as those containing the 38% of people with equivalised disposable household income between the 3rd and 40th percentiles, and excluding the 1st and 2nd percentiles. The 1st and 2nd percentiles are excluded as some households in these percentiles exhibit high wealth and expenditure characteristics and income types other than employee income and government pensions and allowances.

However, the issues described above are not as prevalent when considering renters only, as they generally have less access to sources of wealth when compared to home owners, in particular the value of their own home. As such, a simpler and broader definition of lower income when considering renters only, has been adopted for the NHHA measure.

Households with nil or negative income

When considering the true economic situation of households reporting nil or negative income, the issues described above for households on very low incomes also apply.

In the main tables of this publication, for these same reasons and also due to the difficulties in calculating a meaningful housing costs to income ratio based on a negative or zero value for income, households with nil or negative income have been excluded from calculations of housing costs as a proportion of gross income. In the 2017–18 SIH, these households made up 0.4% of all households.

For the NHHA measure, it was decided to adopt a simpler and consistent approach to the treatment of these households. As they are not excluded from the definitions of lower income households used for the measure, it was determined that where their rent exceeds their income they are included in the calculations of households paying more than 30% of their gross weekly income on housing costs.

Geographic basis for lower income households

Average incomes and income distribution differ between the states and territories across Australia and as compared to national levels. Calculating an income threshold at the 40th percentile for equivalised disposable household income at the national level is likely to provide a different result as compared to calculating the threshold at the 40th percentile at a state or sub-state area (such as Greater Capital City or Rest of State). Applying these different thresholds to the sub-state area would then result in more or fewer households being considered as lower income, dependent on whether household income in that area was comparatively higher or lower than the national average.

Many nationally applied definitions of low income, such as eligibility for Centrelink payments are determined on a national basis.

For consistency when comparing state and sub-state results and for national reporting, it was decided that calculating lower income households using a national definition of lower income households would be adopted for the NHHA measure.

Comparison of 2015-16 results from NHHA measure and 2015-16 NAHA reporting

Table A2 presents 2015–16 estimates for lower income households paying more than 30% of their income on housing costs using both the 2017–18 NHHA measure and the previously published 2015–16 NAHA results.

A2 - Proportion of lower income renter households paying more than 30% of income on housing costs, state and territory, 2015-16(a)

   NSWVic.QldSAWATas.NTACTAust.
2017–18 NHHA basis          
 Proportion of Lower income renter households paying more than 30% of income on housing costs%51.847.035.836.949.023.440.6(b)35.6(b)44.3
 Number of Lower income renter households paying more than 30% of income on housing costsno.227,436151,840111,16450,83462,5779,1092,9506,513622,182
 Number of Lower income renter householdsno.438,858323,197310,922137,918127,77938,8497,26118,2981,405,804
2007–08 to 2015–16 NAHA basis          
 Proportion of Lower income renter households paying more than 30% of income on housing costs%50.846.736.639.448.026.324.333.844.2
 Number of Lower income renter households paying more than 30% of income on housing costsno.221,644142,685107,69347,64863,3768,3382,8848,672599,049
 Number of Lower income renter householdsno.436,603305,489293,886121,006131,91431,65711,87125,6201,355,361

a. Cells in this table have been randomly adjusted (by perturbation) to avoid the release of confidential data. Discrepancies may occur between sums of the component items and totals. Lower income households are defined as those households containing the 40% of people at or below the 40th percentile of equivalised disposable household income (excluding RA) calculated at the total Australia households level. See Explanatory Notes for more information
b. Estimate has a high margin of error and should be used with caution


More information on the concepts referenced in this appendix is available in the 'Explanatory Notes' of this publication and also in the Appendix on housing costs measures

Glossary

A glossary is located in the Survey of Income and Housing User Guide (cat. no. 6553.0).

Quality declaration

Institutional environment

For information on the institutional environment of the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), including the legislative obligations of the ABS, financing and governance arrangements, and mechanisms for scrutiny of ABS operations, please see ABS Institutional Environment.

Relevance

The Survey of Income and Housing (SIH) collects detailed information on income, wealth, housing, characteristics of individuals, income units and households from a sample of private dwellings throughout Australia.

The survey collects information by personal interview from usual residents of private dwellings in urban and rural areas of not Very Remote Australia, covering approximately 97% of the people living in private dwellings in Australia.

The survey facilitates the analysis and monitoring of the social and economic welfare of Australians in private dwellings. The main users are government and other social and economic analysts involved in the development, implementation and evaluation of social and economic policies.

Income and wealth data are used by economic and social analysts and policy makers to:

  • understand the distribution of economic resources among private households in Australia
  • identify households most at risk of experiencing economic hardship
  • understand the effects of taxation and welfare payments on people and families.
     

Housing data are used for:

  • housing affordability studies
  • analysis of housing conditions and occupancy, including levels of home ownership and housing utilisation
  • tracking changes in housing costs by tenure type over time.

Timeliness

The SIH is conducted every two years. The 2017–18 SIH collected information over the period early July 2017 to late June 2018.

The first results from the 2017–18 survey were released on 12th July 2019, just over one year from the end of data collection. Subsequent outputs, including other publications, microdata products and Confidentialised Unit Record Files (CURF) will be released in July/August 2019.

Accuracy

Final sample

In 2017–18, the SIH sample size was 14,060 households. The expansion of the sample (beginning in 2009–10 SIH) to include an extra 4,200 households located outside capital cities to better support COAG performance reporting was maintained.

See the User Guide and Explanatory Notes for more information about sampling and weighting.

To address partial non-response, data were imputed for missing fields. The final SIH sample includes 3,745 households which had at least one imputed value (27% of households). Of the total person sample (aged 15 years and over), 9,946 person records had at least one imputed value (30% of persons aged 15 years and over). Imputation flags are provided at the module level in the CURF to allow users to identify and remove records with imputed data.

Reliability of the estimates

Estimates produced from the SIH are subject to two types of error: non-sampling error; and sampling error.

Non-sampling error

Non-sampling error can occur in any collection, whether the estimates are derived from a sample or from a complete collection such as a census. Sources of non-sampling error include non-response, errors in reporting by respondents or recording of answers by interviewers and errors in coding and processing the data.

Sampling error

The estimates are based on a sample of possible observations and are subject to sampling variability. The estimates may therefore differ from the figures that would have been produced if information had been collected for all households. A measure of the sampling error for a given estimate is provided by the standard error, which may be expressed as a percentage of the estimate (relative standard error). In addition, for proportions Margins of Error (MoE) are presented. The MoEs in this publication are calculated at the 95% confidence level (1.96 multiplied by the standard error).

The sample was designed to facilitate analysis at the part of state level with a high level of accuracy for key indicators from the SIH, including: Equivalised Disposable Household Income; Net Worth; and housing indicators.

Coherence

The SIH provides baseline income and wealth information which provides a comparison point for the Census, and other ABS and external surveys. Selected comparisons with other ABS sources and a comparison between items collected in the SIH and the Australian System of National Accounts will be provided on the Data downloads section of the User Guide. There are some differences between the SIH and these other sources for various reasons, including scope, coverage, period and definitional differences (standardised where possible), non-response, and potential under- and over-estimates of some items in the SIH.

Each cycle of the SIH collects comparable information to allow for analysis of changes over time.

Various statistics can be utilised to make comparisons between 2017–18 SIH data and data from previous SIH cycles. These include the Gini coefficient (a summary measure of income and wealth distribution and inequality), proportions (e.g. proportional share of income and wealth), means and medians. Wherever comparisons of prior cycles are made in the data cubes, CPI adjusted data has been provided to allow for analysis of real change after inflation is taken into account.

The ABS seeks to maximise consistency and comparability over time by minimising changes to the survey. Sound survey practice, however, requires ongoing development and maintenance to maintain the integrity of the data and the efficiency of the collection. Current income and wealth standards are available on the ABS website and more information is available in the Explanatory Notes of this publication and the User Guide publication.

Interpretability

Detailed information on the terminology, classifications and other technical aspects associated with the SIH can be found in the Explanatory Notes, Glossary included with this publication and the Survey of Income and Housing, User Guide, Australia, 2017–18 (cat. no. 6553.0).

Accessibility

Tabulated data and associated relative standard errors are freely available in Excel spreadsheets which can be accessed from the Data downloads section. 

A Basic CURF product will be produced from the SIH, subject to the approval of the Australian Statistician. For further details, refer to the Microdata Entry Page on the ABS website. It is expected that the Basic CURF will be available in August 2019. A Survey TableBuilder product is also planned to be released in July 2019 as well as a detailed file available from the DataLab.

Customised data are also available on request. Note that detailed data can be subject to high relative standard errors which in some cases may result in data being regarded as unfit for release. A data item list is available from the Data downloads section of the Survey of Income and Housing, User Guide, Australia, 2017–18 (cat. no. 6553.0).

For further information about these or related statistics, contact the National Information and Referral Service on 1300 135 070, or email client.services@abs.gov.au. The ABS Privacy Policy outlines how the ABS will handle any personal information that you provide to us.

Abbreviations

A list of abbreviations is located in the Survey of Income and Housing User Guide (cat. no. 6553.0).

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