Producer price indices volume 2002, Supplement 2
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- Inclusions Specific inclusions/exclusions Non-private households/Institutional population
Socio-economic coverage
In almost all OECD Member countries the CPI is designed to be relevant to as many households as possible, and not to a specific socio-economic group. However, in some countries extremely wealthy households are excluded as their expenditure data are unreliable 26 and because it may be too costly to collect prices for some of the consumer goods and services purchased exclusively by the wealthy. For example, the United Kingdom excludes the top 4% of households by income and, at the other end of the scale, households mainly dependent on state pensions (with the net result that roughly 15% of households and 15% of expenditure is excluded). Japan and Korea exclude households mainly engaged in agriculture, forestry and fishing, and all one-person households. For CPI purposes, the definition of a household is essentially the same as in the System of National Accounts 1993 (SNA), which includes both private households, including those consisting of only one person, and institutional households such as religious orders, residential hospitals, prisons, etc. 27 . For many OECD Member countries, however, the institutional population and those living in non-private households are excluded from the scope of the CPI, often due to difficulty obtaining data on their consumption patterns. In these countries the indices are restricted to the private household population or a subset of the private household population. On the other hand, the HICP coverage of households includes institutional households. Table 5: Consumer prices: Socio-economic coverage Inclusions Specific inclusions/exclusions Non-private households/Institutional population Canada Families and individuals living in private households. Excludes persons living on Indian reserves, officials representing foreign countries and residents of the Yukon and Northwest Territories outside Whitehorse and Yellowknife. Excludes persons living in collective households. Mexico All types of households in cities of more than 20 000 inhabitants. Excludes those households in areas of less than 20 000 inhabitants. .. United States Includes wage earners and clerical workers, professional, managerial, and technical workers, short-term workers, self-employed, unemployed, retirees, and others not in the labour force. Excludes about 13% of total population: those living in urban areas of less than 2 500 inhabitants, farm families. Excludes military personnel and those living in prisons and mental hospitals. Australia All metropolitan private households including the self-employed, old age pensioners, and social welfare beneficiaries. Target population is about 64% of total population. Excludes about 36% of the population of Australia living outside of the metropolitan areas. .. 26 Household budget survey response rates are often lower for these households. 27 Institutional households do not include convalescent homes, schools and colleges, the military, etc. whose members are treated as belonging to their family households. For a more comprehensive description of households see System of National Accounts 1993 – Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, World Bank (1993), Paragraphs 4.132-4.138. MEI Methodological Analysis - Supplement 2 © 2002 32 Table 5: Consumer prices: Socio-economic coverage (continued) Download 465.51 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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