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Improving the Quality of Public Services A Multinational Conference on Public Management June 28-29, 2011, Moscow The study of income and living conditions of the Slovakia’s households and its macroeconomic aspects Ladislav Kabat professor Faculty of Economics and Business The Pan European university Bratislava, Slovakia The study of income and living conditions of the Slovakia’s households and its macroeconomic aspects • This paper follows two key goals – To present the core results of the EU SILC project 2005-2009 with orientation on the socially vulnerable groups of population – To show the core macroeconomic indicators (GDP pc, GDP annual growth) within V4 countries in relation to level and size of the at-risk-of-poverty population Some frequently presented data (in 1996) • 800 million • 1 852 kcal pc per day • 1,2 billion • 1$ pc a day GOALS for 2015 50% less Some frequently presented data (in 2010) Where the undernourished people live? Ranking Country 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Congo Dem Rep Eritrea Burundi Haiti Sierra Leone Zambia Angola Ethiopia Central African Rep 10 Rwanda % of population undernourished 75 66 63 58 46 45 44 44 41 40 Poverty and social exclusion is not only the developing countries phenomena Poverty across EU27 in 2007 Data for Romania and Bulgaria estimated according EU SILC methodology The alarming data on EU poverty and social exclusion continue with economic recession • 2008 - 17 % citizens were at-risk-of-poverty – Over 80 million – 2% more than in 2007 – Problematic situation in Latvia, Romania, Lithuania – low income + high income inequality • 2010 – expected results even worse Terminology, data, indicators of the EU SILC project • • • • Household as a unit of study Household income – sum of partial incomes Household size – all members of household EU SILC methodology approach – Equivalized size of household – Equivalized income per member of household – New indicators on the at-risk-of-poverty – List of mandatory compiled data (variables) • Also material deprivation is studied Calculation of the equivalized income per person /family member/ Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Number of all members of household Calculation of the equivalized size of household (ESH) Disposable household income (DHI) Calculation of the equivalized household income EI per person A=number of adults B=number of children ESH=1+(A-1)*0,5 +B*0,3 DHI=Sum of all incomes EI=DHI/ESH Example for family of 2 adults and 3 children with total income of 1200 euro A=2 B=3 Income pp 240 euro ESH=1 + 0,5 + 3*0,3 DHI=1200 = 2,4 EI=1200/2,4 = 500 Cumulative growth in GDP over 2005-2009 Economic growth in EU and V4 GDP growth - cumul 35 30 25 20 15 EU 10 Czech r. 5 Hungary Poland 0 2005 2006 2007 Year 2008 2009 Slovakia Slovenia Estimation of the at-risk-of-poverty population The core parameters are studied: Median and 0,6*Median at-risk-of poverty population To analyze the role of social net Three subgroups of the surveyed households for Slovakia studied: 1. At-risk-of-poverty population before all social transfers 2. At-risk-of-poverty population before social transfers except the pension payments (survivors and old-age benefits) 3. At-risk-of-poverty population, when the disposable income of households is considered EU SILC project results for 2005-2009 with regional breakdown EU SILC project results for 2005-2009 Bratislava vs regions The core statistical findings on income • Permanent growth in average income for Slovakia • Permanent growth in income differentiation between capital city and rest of Slovakia – Median value 30% higher than country's level – Median value 45% higher than some regional levels • Growing inequality between top and bottom income deciles Results with social consequences • 11% of Slovak citizens - more than 595,000 people, were in 2009 at-risk-of-poverty after social transfers • In terms of gender - women are relatively more at-riskof poverty status (11.8%) than men (10.1%) • The most vulnerable groups are children and youngsters till 17 years of age with 16,8 % of them atrisk-of-poverty, followed by women over 65 • The long term unemployment The unemployed population is highly vulnerable Material deprivation rate Is proportion of population with enforced lack of at least three (or four) out of following items, which the household cannot afford: to face unexpected expenses, to go on one week annual holiday away from home, to pay for arrears (mortgage or rent, utility bills or hire purchase installments), to eat meal with meat, chicken or fish every second day, to keep home adequately warm, or could not afford (even if household wanted to): a washing machine, a color TV, a telephone and a personal car. Material deprivation data Table 4 Material deprivation rate Number of missing items 3 4 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Proportion of households in % 43.2 35.7 30.2 27.8 24.5 22.5 18.3 13.7 11.8 11.1 The special findings on social situation • Mostly disadvantaged social groups are influenced • Gypsy population • Low education labor force • Handicapped citizens • The material deprivation is felt much stronger, than the income poverty indicators show. To solve the trap of poverty • requires the long-term successful economic progress • active involvement and support from government and regional authorities, • solution of the long lasting unemployment, • attention to the low educated labor force Support to social net over period of economic boom % of GDP used fo social net GDP and social net allocations in EU and V4 countries 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 EU(27) Czech Republic Hungary Poland Slovenia Slovakia 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Year 2006 2007 2008 Slovakia achieved the highest economic growth among the EU27 over 2005 and 2009 Graph 4 GDP dynamics and selected social indicators 40 % change 35 GDP Grow th cumul 30 Under PL - w ith all transfers 25 Under PL(excl pensions) 20 Under PL BST (of all) 15 10 2005 2006 2007 2008 Year 2009 2010 At-risk-of population in Visegrad countries over 2005-2009 Table 7 At risk of poverty population in Visegrad countries 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 EU 16,4 16,5 16,4 16,4 16,3 Czech rep 10,4 9,9 9,6 9 8,6 Hungary 13,5 15,9 12,2 12,4 12,4 Poland 20,5 19,1 17,3 16,9 17,1 Slovakia 13,3 11,6 10,5 10,9 11 Slovenia 12,2 11,6 11,5 12,3 11,3 Statistics does not solve the problem The calculation of the social income deficit is needed The presented statistical findings are not the final solution To improve: • definition of poverty should be formulated as a multidimensional – income and material deprivation should be covered comprehensively • methodology of estimation the share of the under poverty line population should be checked against the other information sources • Calculation of the minimum social deficit needed to upgrade the socially excluded citizens should be presented to public (government, NGOs, universities) Final conclusions The high share of socially vulnerable population has not changed significantly during the period of strong economic growth in Slovakia Similar development has been found also in other Visegrad countries We did not prove the expected significant impact of economic growth on social position of population in these countries as declared by government and leading political parties These findings should be studied in more details, taking into account longer time series on relevant statistical data as well as the broader set of explanatory variables.