Understanding Wales: Opportunities for Secondary Data Analysis Living in Wales / National Survey for Wales Dr Scott Orford WISERD Cardiff University

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Understanding Wales: Opportunities for Secondary Data Analysis Living in Wales / National Survey for Wales Dr Scott Orford WISERD Cardiff University

Main source of general statistical information about households in Wales outside of the census Undertaken in 2004 until 2008 About 12,000 households samples with an average annual response of around 7,500 households (60%) Different households surveyed each year In 2004 and 2008 a property survey (HCS) also undertaken by qualified surveyor (2,500 properties) What is the Living in Wales Survey?

Questions Themes and questions varied each year (some core) Examples of themes: Current accommodation Disability and caring responsibilities Equalities Financial Home / neighbourhood Household composition Housing history Internet usage Quality of life Tenure and housing costs The environment Transport Values and opinions Volunteering Welsh language use

Geographical breakdowns One year: national breakdown Two consecutive years: regional breakdown Three consecutive years: LA-level breakdown Four or more consecutive years: lower-level geographies? (special license) Weights so data can be nationally representative

Identifying ‘localities’ for WISERD research Analysis of secondary data to identify possible localities for in-depth research – empirically informed Several metrics considered (e.g. housing markets / labour market areas / areas differentiated by socio-economic characteristics eg. cultural and identity signifiers) People’s attitudes to neighbours and neighbourhoods in which they live Living in Wales survey

Values and opinions Eight attitudinal questions have been asked with a likert (1-5) scale response 1.The degree to which the respondents trust the people in their neighbourhood 2.How they rate their neighbourhood as a place to bring up children 3.How often they talk to their neighbours 4.Whether they feel that they belong to their neighbourhood 5.Whether friendships with people in their neighbourhood means a lot to them 6.Whether they can get advice from their neighbours, borrow things and ask favours of their neighbours 7.Whether they can work together to improve their neighbourhood 8.Whether they see themselves as similar to their neighbours

Pooling data from all the surveys creates a large enough sample size for analysis at the Middle Layer Super Output Area (MSOA) level (c. 35,000 records) They have a minimum of 5,000 residents and 2,000 households with a mean population of around 7,200. Wales has 413 MSOAs and these will be used in this analysis to represent neighbourhoods. Average 74 households (sd 36) per MSOA in the pooled survey ( ) Min 21 hhs per MSOA to max of 225 hhs 10th - 90th percentile range is 36 to 118 households per MSOA, the distribution is not heavily skewed. MSOA unit of analysis

A statistical technique which classifies cases into groups based on similarity of each case with respect to selected variables (8 attitudinal questions) – data driven classification Cases in a group are more similar than cases in different groups Z-scores were calculated for each attitudinal variable and these were aggregated to a population weighted average z-score for each of the 413 MSOAs Neighbourhood level z-scores were used in a k-means cluster analysis based on Euclidean distance (as a measure of similarity) Five clusters emerged as being optimal in terms of maximising difference between clusters and parsimony Cluster Analysis

Cluster ID Distances between cluster centres No. of MSOAs Cluster 5 is the most distinctive and has the fewest members Cluster 3 has the most similarity to the other clusters and has the largest membership

Cluster IDMap Label Geographical description Conventional Map Area (km- sq) Cartogram Map Area (km-sq) Proportional Difference in Map Area Population Rural Rural mid- west- and north-west Wales Valleys Valleys and former mining areas Semi-rural hinterland Suburban and semi-rural areas Deprived Deprived – non- former mining areas Urban Mobile Inner-city neighbourhoods

What is the National Survey For Wales? Successor of LiW Survey pilot survey face-to-face interviews in a randomly chosen sample of 4,600 households across Wales. The survey covers the head of household and a randomly selected adult. Short self-completion questionnaire for every adult in the household aged 16 or over. Main themes of the survey are public services and wellbeing

First Wave NSW Begin January 2012 and fieldwork will run continuously all year around Two specialist research companies: TNS-BMRB and Beaufort Research Ltd Aim –random sample of 25,000 households across wales with successful response of c.14,500 (660 per LA). The target response rate across Wales 70%

Three sets of questions Public services - local authority services, the education system, health services, and the transport system Wellbeing - five wellbeing questions by ONS respondents’ proximity to green and blue spaces community cohesion questions about local area perception of quality of local neighbourhood people are keeping up with bills, credit and debt Core demographic / household questions

Dates of Statistical Releases September 2012: headline Wales-level results Late summer 2013: detailed Wales-level results Wales-level results broken down by age, gender, etc. LA-level headline results Annually from summer 2014: detailed results at Wales and local authority level Wales-level results based on interviews in the previous financial year LA-level results based on interviews in the previous 2 financial years

Data Access Micro-data at UKDA (including pilot survey data) End-user license Special License Individual data records linked to SAIL through The Health Information Research Unit (HIRU) based at Swansea University

Further Resources ESDS WG LiW WG NSW WG Surveys tel: