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Poverty and household spending in Britain. Mike Brewer Alissa Goodman Andrew Leicester Institute for Fiscal Studies 17 th May 2006. Income and Expenditure Poverty. Andrew Leicester. Motivation.
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Poverty and household spending in Britain Mike Brewer Alissa Goodman Andrew Leicester Institute for Fiscal Studies 17th May 2006
Income and Expenditure Poverty Andrew Leicester
Motivation • “… if we don’t raise the standard of living of the poorest people in Britain we will have failed as a government.” Tony Blair, 1997 • Poverty debate has focused on income as financial measure of living standards • Expenditure provides alternative / complementary measure
Measuring living standards • Typical focus on income • Correlation with welfare indicators • Government targets • Government policy • Expenditure may have advantages • Well-being depends on what we consume, not what money we bring in • Saving and borrowing (smoothing)
Smoothing out living standards • Short-term variability of incomes • Unemployment / Illness • Bonuses / Windfalls • Self-employed have more volatile incomes • Variability across life-cycle • Student loans • Pensioners run down accumulated assets • Maybe spending reflects longer-term inequalities
Measuring living standards • Typical focus on income • Correlation with welfare indicators • Government targets • Government policy • Expenditure may have advantages • Well-being depends on what we consume, not potential consumption • Saving and borrowing (smoothing) • Incomes for poorest households badly measured? • But also disadvantages • Measurement problems • Expenditure versus consumption (e.g. durables)
Key questions • What would poverty story of recent years be had focus been on expenditure? • Why might the two tell us different things? • Does giving poor people more money translate into higher expenditure, and on what?
Measuring poverty • Measure expenditure poverty in same way as income poverty in annual Households Below Average Income publication • Define household as ‘poor’ if its income or spending below 60% of contemporary median (“relative poverty”)
Data • Wish to obtain best available data on household incomes and expenditures • Construct measures which are as conceptually similar as possible • Expenditure • Family Expenditure Survey / Expenditure and Food Survey 1974 – 2002/3 • Weekly household spending, equivalised, real terms • No housing (rent, mortgage, local tax) • Income • Households Below Average Income 1961 – 2004/5 (net income after housing costs) • All reported at weekly household level, equivalised and in real terms
Poverty trends • Rose sharply in later 1980s, particularly for income • Income poverty rates stablised in early 1990s and fell in latter 1990s as policy measures enacted • Expenditure poverty risen continually • Recent falls in child income poverty not matched by falls in child expenditure poverty • Pensioner income poverty pro-cyclical except recently • pensioners now less likely to be income poor than non-pensioners • Pensioner spending poverty much more stable, higher and not falling • Other groups have seen rises on both measures
Why do trends differ? • Some possibilities: • Low income and low spenders are different people • Only half of those income poor are also spending poor • Increased means-tested benefits are targeted at low income households, not low spending households • Suggests spending rises due to benefit increases may be reflected higher up the income distribution • Changes in savings behaviour • Low income households may not be spending all their new income • Would happen if uncertainty over how permanent income changes are likely to be • Middle income households maybe reducing savings or increasing borrowing by more than poorer households
Conclusions • Living standards have risen whether measured by income or spending • Income growth particularly strong for poorer people • Expenditure growth strongest for higher spenders • Relative position of poor improved if measured on incomes, worsened if measured on spending • Shows up in increased expenditure poverty rate even as income poverty declined • Reasons for different trends not yet clear • Expenditure poverty ought to be monitored alongside other indicators
The effect of increased benefit entitlements on pensioners’ spending Mike Brewer
Motivation • State benefits for 60+ risen under Labour, yet spending poverty of pensioners little changed • Have extra benefits improved pensioners’ living standards? • Related work • Meyer and Sullivan (2004) [US data, lone parents] • Gregg, Waldfogel and Washbrook (2004, 2006) [UK data, families with children] • Blow, Walker and Zhu (2005), [UK data, families with children] • Munro, Walker and Zhu (ongoing) [UK data, winter fuel allowance]
Outline • Policy changes affecting pensioners • Method and data • Results • Conclusions
Main benefit changes affecting pensioners since 1997 • Rise in basic state pension (April 2001 & 2002) • Increases in means-tested benefits (from April 1999) and introduction of pension credit (from 2003) • Equalisation of pensioner premia in means-tested benefits (by 2001) • Winter fuel allowance (from 1999)
Changes to benefit entitlement for single pensioners (1996=1) Graph shows maximum entitlement to IS or BSP for single pensioner
Overview of method • Compare (changes in) spending of pensioners affected by rise in benefits to pensioners not affected • Attribute difference to policy. • Called “conditional difference-in-differences”.
Difference-in-differences: data • FES/EFS from 1996/7 to 2002/3 • Single adults born before April 1936 • Aged 60+ in 1996, 66+ in 2002 (pseudo-panel) • 3,056 “poor” pensioners (entitled to a means-tested benefit under 1996/7 system) • 1,281 “young” & 1,775 “old” • 1,778 “rich” pensioners (not entitled to a means-tested benefit under 2002/3 system) • Some pensioners omitted entirely (neither “poor” nor “rich”)
Changes in benefit entitlements, income and spending, 1996/7-2002/3
Difference-in-differences: overview • Compare spending before and after rise in means-tested benefits (April 1999) • Rich pensioners tell us about general trends affecting pensioners: B-A • Poor pensioners tell us about general trends and impact of policy: D-C. • Difference tells us about impact of policy: (D-C) – (B-A) • Assumes “common trends” • Control for various factors (regression-adjusted DiD) • Also compare “young” and “old” “poor” pensioners
Impact of benefit changes on pensioners * = significant @ 10% *** significant @ 1%
Impact of benefit changes on pensioners * = significant @ 10% *** significant @ 1%
Impact of benefit changes on pensioners * = significant @ 10% *** significant @ 1%
Conclusions • Pensioners look poorer when assessed using spending than income • Recent rises in means-tested benefit for pensioners were translated into higher spending • Results rely on untested “common trends” assumption: evidence stronger for introduction of MIG than equalisation of age-related premia
Summing up • Living standards have risen whether measured by income or spending • Increased expenditure poverty rate since 1997 even as income poverty declined • Reasons for different trends not yet clear • Recent rises in means-tested benefit for pensioners were translated into higher spending