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The BHPS is an annual survey tracking changes in a nationally representative sample of households to study various socioeconomic factors. It includes additional samples in Wales and Scotland for country-level analysis and post-devolution comparisons with England.
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The British Household Panel Survey Rhys Davies
Introduction • The BHPS is an annual survey consisting of a nationally representative sample of about 5,500 households (10,000 interviewed individuals) recruited in 1991. • Respondents are re-interviewed each successive year • Those who leave the originally sampled household to form new households are followed up – all adult members in the new household are interviewed • New members joining sample households become eligible for interview • Children aged 11-15 complete a short interview (since 1994), full as they reach the age of 16 • Spare time, computer use, family relationships, health behaviour, perceptions of self, attitudes, paid work
Welsh Boost • A major development at Wave 9 (1999) was the recruitment of two additional samples to the BHPS in Scotland and Wales • Increase in Welsh sample size from 572 in 1998 to 3000+ in 1999. • Welsh sample remains 2,500 in 2008 • Welsh Youth Panel correspondingly increased from 58 in 1999 to 288 in 2000. • Welsh sample remains at 240 in 2008 • Facilitates: • Independent country level analysis • Comparisons with England post devolution
Questionnaire Content • The core questionnaire covers a broad range of social science and policy interests including: • household composition • housing conditions • residential mobility • education and training • health and the usage of health services • labour market behaviour • socio-economic values • income from employment, benefits and pensions • Variable component has included questions on wealth and assets, additional health measures, ageing, retirement and quality of life, children and parenting, neighbourhood and social networks.
Job Satisfaction in Wales Regional Differences in Job Satisfaction: Why are the Welsh so Happy at Work? Jones and Sloane (2004), WELMERC Discussion Paper
Poverty Persistence An Anatomy of Economic Inequality in Wales (2011), Chapter 5 Report prepared on behalf of the Equality and Human Rights Commission
Young People and Housing • Research on behalf of Joseph RowntreeFoundation • Construct 'housing pathways' of young people aged 18-30 between 1999 and 2009 using 10 Waves of BHPS • Sequences of tenure, household type, marital status and economic activity were created for those aged 16-21 in 1999 • Individuals assigned to statistically similar pathways • Draft typology • Saving while at home • Renting professionals • Dual income, no kids, owners • Couples with children • Waiting for social housing • Lone parents • Settling down early • Families in social housing • Unsettled pathways
Data Availability • The data from each wave is available within a year of the completion of fieldwork. • Available at UK Data Archive • Standard Access (SN: 5151) • Countries, Government Office Regions • Conditional Access – Medium Geographies (SN: 6027-6033) • LA , LEAs, PCT, TTWA, Rural/Urban, PC • Special Licence – Detail Geographies • CAS Wards (SN: 6135) • Lower Super Output Areas in Wales (SN: 6136) • Secure Data Service (SN: 6340) • National Grid Reference (Northings/Eastings)
BHPS and Understanding Society • Understanding Society is the new UK Household Longitudinal Study. • Sample of around 40,000 households followed since 2009 • The study both replaces and incorporates the popular BHPS – join Wave 2 • Wave 1 data collected January 2009-January 2011 • EUL (SN 6614) and SL (6931) Versions Available at Data Archive • Secure Data Service for Northings/Eastings (SN 6676) • Main innovations • General population sample (28,000 - 29,000 households) • Innovation Panel sample (1,500 households) • Ethnic minority boost sample (1,000 adult individuals in each of five main ethnic minority groups) • British Household Panel Study sample (8,400 households) • Consent to link administrative data on health, education, economic circumstances