Abstract:

Using the data from the `European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions' (EU-SILC), this book reflects the results of almost 5 years of research involving data producers and data users. It aims to improve our understanding of substantive challenges facing `Social Europe' and to contribute to the development of methods that provide new insights into the determinants and dynamics of income and living conditions. Through in-depth analyses, it enhances our knowledge of a wide range of topics: inequalities, role of social transfers, mortality risk due to poverty and social exclusion, intra-household variation in deprivation, between-country differences in housing conditions, unmet medical need, child deprivation, migrants' living conditions, as well as the dynamics of in-work monetary poverty and deprivation and of multidimensional poverty. The book also puts forward robust policy-relevant indicators in these fields, including longitudinal indicators. This volume is intended both for policy-makers and statisticians and for all those concerned about the impact of economic and social policies on people's lives and the ways in which the social dimension of Europe and its monitoring can be reinforced.

Citation:

Goedemé, T., Paskov, M. and Nolan, B. (2021), 'The measurement of social class in EU-SILC: Comparability between countries and consistency over time', in A.-C. Guio, E. Marlier and B. Nolan (eds.), Improving the understanding of poverty and social exclusion in Europe, Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. http://doi.org/10.2785/70596 (Chapter 18).
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