Private Household’ as a Socio-demographic Background Variable in International Comparative Social Surveys

le Lundi 02 Février 2009 à l’Ined, salle Sauvy

Discutante : Eva Lelièvre (Ined)

Different cultures and states use their national definition of ‘private household’. In the EU nearly each country has an own definition of household. These definitions correspond to the cultural and national structures of social life. The differences result in diverse household compositions and unequal sizes across European nations. Comparing household measures over countries survey analysts face several inconveniences. The composition of the surveyed household has direct impact on the respondents answer about the household size. With regard to the sociological variables "total household income" and "socio economic status" of the individual household members, the composition of the household and, therefore, the definition by means of which this composition is determined, is of central importance. In a first step we summarize definitions of household used in national surveys across Europe. Same dwelling, sharing economic resources, common housekeeping and family ties are the main and mostly used criteria. In a second step we discuss the possible combinations of these elements and the strategies of operationalization in social surveys. The third part illustrates the findings. We use ESS, ECHP and administrative micro data from official statistics. The country differences become obvious. Our conclusion is a revised fieldwork instrument measuring household in social surveys that increases data comparability across cultures and countries