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1 Developments to the Family Resources Survey Family Resources Survey (FRS) and the EU-Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) Valerie Christian – Department for Work & Pensions Tom Howe – Office for National Statistics FRS USER MEETING - Friday June 10 th 2011
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2 Overview What are the proposed changes and why? Background – FRS / EU-SILC What would these proposals mean ? For FRS users For the UK - DWP / ONS For Eurostat What are the challenges / discrepancies? Questions / designs / scopes Piloting the changes to FRS Objectives / design / fieldwork Discussion
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3 What are the proposed changes and why? What are they? To collect cross-sectional European Union Statistics on Income & Living Conditions (EU-SILC) using the Family Resources Survey (FRS) The FRS will also be used to provide the sample for the longitudinal element of the EU-SILC – ONS will continue to run this Cross-sectional implementation from April 2012 Why? These changes will allow UK poverty estimates from one source for both national and EU monitoring. Removing the duplication of data collection High degree of overlap already exists (FRS vs EU-SILC)
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4 EU-SILC longitudinal sample design
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5 Background - FRS / EU-SILC FRS – started by DWP in early 1990s; provides underlying data for UK poverty estimates models fiscal policy across Government also widely used by academics and charities EU-SILC – started by ONS in mid 2000s; provides harmonised measure of ILC across Member States monitors progression towards EU2020 provides policy guidance across Europe EU-SILC one of two statistical pillars – the other being the LFS
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6 What would these proposals mean? For FRS users: No changes intended for FRS data – pilot helps ensure this Possible to use an FRS-derived longitudinal dataset in due course For the UK - DWP / ONS: Sharing responsibilities Joined-up working to provide a UK delivery to Eurostat Opportunity for efficiencies while meeting both UK and EU requirements A pure cross-sectional dataset for Eurostat which is free from attrition bias For Eurostat: SILC objective achieved to use one instrument for both purposes Potential for up to a 10% larger cross-sectional sample
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7 What are the challenges / discrepancies? Questions on the surveys: 67 per cent of EU-SILC questions already captured by FRS 10 per cent of EU-SILC questions partially captured by FRS 23 per cent of EU-SILC questions need introducing to FRS Designs / Scopes: Cross-sectional / longitudinal Ad-hoc modules which change annually Small methodological differences
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8 Piloting the changes to FRS Objectives Ensure FRS and EU-SILC are comparable to respective earlier estimates Establish EU-SILC questions on new FRS vehicle and assess question flow To provide indicative interview length To assess response rates Design Random sample within pre-selected PSUs Achieved sample size of 500 households FRS/EU-SILC CAPI questionnaire Interviewer de-brief for feedback Fieldwork Summer 2011 Analysis of results Autumn 2011
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9 For more on merging the surveys & contacts: Link to FRS communication note http://www.ons.gov.uk/about/consultations/open-consultations/eusilc- integration-into-frs/eusilc-integration-into-frs--communication-note.pdf ….. to ONS consultation on GLF changes. (Closed May 2011) http://www.ons.gov.uk/about/consultations/open-consultations/the- future-of-the-glf-survey/index.html FRS team contact at DWP team.frs@dwp.gsi.gov.uk Merging project oversight contact at ONS socialsurveys@ons.gov.uk
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10 Developments to the Family Resources Survey Discussion / Questions
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