Milijarda podatkov v podatkovni bazi SiStat

To the Top
You are currently atChoose variable

Disposable household income by most frequent activity status, age and gender (EUR), Slovenia, annually

Choose variables

Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia, T: +386 1 241 64 04, E: gp.surs@gov.si
19/03/2025
EUR
Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia
Now you have come to the page, Choose variable. This page give you the oportunity to select which variables and values you want to display in your result of the table. A variable is a property of a statistical unit. The page is divided into several boxes, one for each variable, where you can select values by click to highlight one or more values. It always starts with the statistics variable which is the main value counted in the table.
Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 4

Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 5

Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 8

Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 3

Mandatory
Field for searching for a specific value in the list box. This is examples of values you can search for.2008 , 2009 , 2010 ,

Selected 1 of total 17

Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 3

Number of selected data cells are:
Maximum number allowed is 1,000,000.

Presentation on screen is limited to 1,000 rows and 50 columns

Number of selected cells exceeds the maximum allowed 1,000,000. To download all data from the table, click the "About table" button at the top of the page and export the entire file in Px format.

Notes


(SILC).
INCOME AFTER SOCIAL TRANSFERS is (net) disposable household income. It is calculated as the sum of net incomes (in cash) of all household members (employee cash or near cash income, including supplement for meals and transport to work, cash benefits or loses from self-employment, pensions, unemployment benefits, sickness benefits, education-related allowances, family allowances and social benefits, interests, dividends, regular inter-household cash transfers received) less regular inter-household cash transfers paid and regular taxes on wealth, including compensation for the use of building land. To income in cash calculated in this way part of income in kind (benefit for the use of company car for private purposes and the value of withdrawals from a business by a self-employed person) is added.
INCOME BEFORE SOCIAL TRANSFERS is (net) disposable household income less social transfers (e.g. unemployment insurance, paid sick leave compensation, scholarship, child allowance, maternity leave compensation, adoptive parents' compensation, allowance for nursing a child, assistance for goods for a new-born child, large family allowance, fathers' compensation, parental allowance, financial social assistance, allowance for help and care, housing subsidies, disability benefits, old-age benefits, survivors' benefits). It is calculated using two definitions of income, depending on whether pensions are considered as social transfers or not: only » family benefits, disability pensions and other social transfers« or »social transfers including all pensions (old-age and survivors’ benefits)« are subtracted from total income.
In calculating the mean and the median, for income before social transfers the same number of persons is taken into account as for income after social transfers in an individual breakdown, so in some breakdowns for income before social transfers the value of the median inome can be very low or even negative.

MEASURES

The OECD modified scale is used for the calculation of the EQUIVALISED INCOME (income per equivalent adult household member). The scale gives to the first adult in the household weight 1, to every other person aged 14 or more weight 0.5 and to children under 14 weight 0.3.

MOST FREQUENT ACTIVITY STATUS

MOST FREQUENT ACTIVITY STATUS is calculated according to the prevailing activity status in the whole year, for persons aged 16 or more. People under the age of 16 are not taken into account in calculating this indicator. The prevailing activity status of a person is the status which a person had for at least seven months in the income reference year. Persons whose most frequent activity status was not determined for at least seven months in the year are excluded from the calculation of this indicator. Employed are those who were employees or self-employed for at least seven months in the year. Not employed are those who were unemployed, retired or other inactive for at least seven months in the year. Other inactive persons are homemakers, pupils, students, persons who are unable to work and other inactive persons.

YEAR

Income, poverty and social exclusion indicators are published for the SILC (Statistics on Income and Living Conditions) survey year. The data on income for calculating these indicators are from a year earlier, i.e. the year before the survey is conducted.
With the 2022 EU-SILC survey, the methodology for calculating income before social transfers has changed slightly, so the data for income before social transfers from 2022 on are not completely comparable with the data for previous years.
Linked content:
- Methodological explanations