Household
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A household consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and also share at meals or living accommodation, and may consist of a single family or some other grouping of people.[1] A single dwelling will be considered to contain multiple households if either meals or living space are not shared. The household is the basic unit of analysis in many social, microeconomic and government models, and is important to the fields of economics and inheritance.[2] Household models include the family, varieties of blended families, share housing, group homes, boarding houses, houses in multiple occupation (UK), and a single room occupancy (US). In feudal times, the royal Household and medieval households of the wealthy would also have included servants and other retainers.
Government
For statistical purposes in the United Kingdom, a household is defined as "one person or a group of people who have the accommodation as their only or main residence and for a group, either share at least one meal a day or share the living accommodation, that is, a living room or sitting room".[3]
The United States Census definition similarly turns on "separate living quarters", i.e. "those in which the occupants live and eat separately from any other persons in the building"[4] A householder in the U.S. census is the "person (or one of the people) in whose name the housing unit is owned or rented (maintained);" if no person qualifies, any adult resident of a housing unit is a householder. The U.S. government formerly used the terms "head of the household" and "head of the family" to describe householders; beginning in 1980, these terms were officially dropped from the census and replaced with "householder".[5]
A household is officially defined as follows:[6]
A household includes all the persons who occupy a housing unit. A housing unit is a house, an apartment, a mobile home, a group of rooms, or a single room that is occupied (or if vacant, is intended for occupancy) as separate living quarters. Separate living quarters are those in which the occupants live and eat separately from any other persons in the building and which have direct access from the outside of the building or through a common hall. The occupants may be a single family, one person living alone, two or more families living together, or any other group of related or unrelated persons who share living arrangements. (People not living in households are classified as living in group quarters.)
According to Statistics Canada, since July 15, 1998, "a household is generally defined as being composed of a person or group of persons who co-reside in, or occupy, a dwelling."[7]
Economic theories
Most economic theories assume there is only one income stream to a household[citation needed]; this a useful simplification for modeling, but does not necessarily reflect reality. Many households now include multiple income-earning members.
Most economic models do not address whether the members of a household are a family in the traditional sense. Government and policy discussions often treat the terms household and family as synonymous,[citation needed] especially in western societies where the nuclear family has become the most common family structure.[dubious – discuss] In reality, there is not always a one-to-one relationship between households and families.
Social
In social work the household is a residential grouping defined similarly to the above in which housework is divided and performed by householders. Care may be delivered by one householder to another, depending upon their respective needs, abilities, and perhaps disabilities. Different household compositions may lead to differential life and health expectations and outcomes for household members.[8][9] Eligibility for certain community services and welfare benefits may depend upon household composition.[10]
In sociology 'household work strategy', a term coined by Ray Pahl,[11][12] is the division of labour between members of a household, whether implicit or the result of explicit decision–making, with the alternatives weighed up in a simplified type of cost-benefit analysis. It is a plan for the relative deployment of household members' time between the three domains of employment: i) in the market economy, including home-based self-employment second jobs, in order to obtain money to buy goods and services in the market; ii) domestic production work, such as cultivating a vegetable patch or raising chickens, purely to supply food to the household; and iii) domestic consumption work to provide goods and services directly within the household, such as cooking meals, child–care, household repairs, or the manufacture of clothes and gifts. Household work strategies may vary over the life-cycle, as household members age, or with the economic environment; they may be imposed by one person or be decided collectively.[13]
Feminism examines the ways that gender roles affect the division of labour within households. Sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild in The Second Shift and The Time Bind presents evidence that in two-career couples, men and women, on average, spend about equal amounts of time working, but women still spend more time on housework.[14][15] Cathy Young, another feminist writer, responds to Hochschild's assertions by arguing that in some cases, women may prevent the equal participation of men in housework and parenting.[16]
Household models
Household models in anglophone culture include the family and varieties of blended families, share housing, and group homes for people with support needs. Other models of living situations which may meet definitions of a household include boarding houses, a house in multiple occupation (UK), and a single room occupancy (US).
History
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In feudal or aristocratic societies, a household may include servants or retainers, whether or not they are explicitly so named. Their roles may blur the line between a family member and an employee. In such cases, they ultimately derive their income from the household's principal income.
Historical statistics on housing
This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Formatting, non-use of wikitable(s), laundry list appearance. (May 2015) |
Percentage of dwellings with a bathroom in various European countries[17]
1960:
Belgium: 23.6%
Denmark: 39.4%
France: 28.0%
Germany: 51.9%
Greece: 10.4%
Ireland: 33.0%
Italy: 10.7%
Luxembourg: 45.7%
Netherlands: 30.3%
Portugal: 18.6%
Spain: 24.0%
United Kingdom: 78.3%
1970:
Belgium: 49.1%
Denmark: 73.1%
France: 48.9%
Germany: 71.5%
Ireland: 55.3%
Italy: 64.5%
Luxembourg: 69.4%
Netherlands: 75.5%
Spain: 77.8%
United Kingdom: 90.9%
1980:
Belgium: 73.9%
Denmark: 85.4%
France: 85.2%
Germany: 92.3%
Greece: 69.3%
Ireland: 82.0%
Italy: 86.4%
Luxembourg: 86.2%
Netherlands: 95.9%
Portugal: 58%
Spain: 85.3%
United Kingdom: 98.0%
According to statistics from Eurostat, the percentage of households in various European countries with access to an indoor WC, bath/ shower, and hot running water on the premises in 1988 were as follows:[18]
Country | Indoor WC | Bath/shower | Hot running water |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium | 94% | 92% | 87% |
Denmark | 97% | 94% | N/A |
France | 94% | 93% | 95% |
Germany | 99% | 97% | 98% |
Greece | 85% | 85% | 84% |
Ireland | 94% | 92% | 91% |
Italy | 99% | 95% | 93% |
Luxembourg | 99% | 97% | 97% |
Netherlands | N/A | 99% | 100% |
Portugal | 80% | N/A | N/A |
Spain | 97% | 96% | N/A |
UK | 99% | 100% | N/A |
Percentage of dwellings in various European countries with certain amenities, according to 1981-82 censuses[17]
Bathroom or shower on the premises:
Belgium: 73.9%
Denmark: 85.1%
Germany: 92.3%
Greece: 69.3%
Spain: 85.3%
France: 85.2%
Ireland: 82.0%
Italy: 86.4%
Luxembourg: 86.2%
Netherlands: 95.9%
Portugal: 58.0%
United Kingdom: 98.0%
Internal WC:
Belgium: 79.0%
Denmark: 95.8%
Germany: 96.0%
Greece: 70.9%
France: 85.4%
Ireland: 84.5%
Italy: 87.7%
Luxembourg: 97.3%
Portugal: 58.7%
United Kingdom: 97.3%
Central heating on the premises:
Denmark: 54.6%
Germany: 70.0%
Spain: 22.5%
France: 67.6%
Ireland: 39.2%
Italy: 56.5%
Luxembourg: 73.9%
Netherlands: 66.1%
According to statistics from the World Bank and the Economic Commission for Europe (UN), the average usable floorspace of dwellings in existence in 1976 in various countries were as follows:[19]
Country | m2 |
---|---|
Austria | 86 |
Belgium | 97 |
Bulgaria | 63 |
Canada | 89 |
Czechoslovakia | 69 |
Denmark | 122 |
Finland | 71 |
France | 82 |
East Germany | 60 |
West Germany | 95 |
Greece | 80 |
Hungary | 65 |
Ireland | 88 |
Luxembourg | 107 |
Netherlands | 71 |
Norway | 89 |
Poland | 58 |
Portugal | 104 |
Romania | 54 |
Soviet Union | 49 |
Spain | 82 |
Sweden | 109 |
Switzerland | 98 |
United Kingdom | 70 |
United States | 120 |
Yugoslavia | 65 |
Average useful floor space (m2) per dwelling in selected European countries (Source: European Commission, 1994):[20]
Country | m2 |
---|---|
Austria | 85.3 |
Belgium | 86.3 |
Denmark | 107.0 |
Finland | 74.8 |
France | 85.4 |
East Germany | 64.4 |
West Germany | 86.7 |
Greece | 79.6 |
Ireland | 88.0 |
Italy | 92.3 |
Luxembourg | 107.0 |
Netherlands | 98.6 |
Spain | 86.6 |
Sweden | 92.0 |
United Kingdom | 79.7 |
Percentage of households without modern amenities (Source: Living Conditions in OECD Countries, 1986)[21]
Note: The Japanese and European data is from a 1980 census.
Percentage of households lacking an indoor flush toilet:
Country | No indoor flush toilet |
---|---|
Belgium | 19% |
France | 17% |
West Germany | 7% |
Greece | 29% |
Ireland | 22% |
Italy | 11% |
Japan | 54% |
Norway | 17% |
Portugal | 43% |
Spain | 12% |
United Kingdom | 6% |
Percentage of households lacking a fixed shower or bath:
Country | No fixed shower or bath |
---|---|
Belgium | 24% |
France | 17% |
West Germany | 11% |
Italy | 11% |
Japan | 17% |
Norway | 18% |
Spain | 39% |
United Kingdom | 4% |
Floor space in selected countries (1992–1993)[22]
Country | Year | m2 |
---|---|---|
Australia | 1993 | 191.0 |
United States | 1992 | 153.2 |
South Korea | 1993 | 119.3 |
United Kingdom | 1992 | 95.0 |
Germany | 1993 | 90.8 |
Japan | 1993 | 88.6 |
Basic amenities in British and German housing:[23]
Households with an exclusive use of an inside WC:
Britain:
(1961) 87%
(1971) 88%
(1979) 95%
Germany:
(1960) 64%
(1970) 85%
(1978) 92.5%
Households with a bath or shower:
Britain:
(1961) 72%
(1971) 91%
(1979) 94.3%
Germany:
(1960) 51%
(1970) 82%
(1978) 89.1%
Percentage of principle residences in France lacking certain amenities:[19]
1962:
No running water in dwelling: 21.6%
No W.C. in dwelling: 59.5%
No bath or shower in dwelling: 71.1%
No central heating: 80.7%
1968:
No running water in dwelling: 9.2%
No W.C. in dwelling: 45.2%
No bath or shower in dwelling: 52.5%
No central heating: 65.1%
1975:
No running water in dwelling: 2.8%
No W.C. in dwelling: 26.2%
No bath or shower in dwelling: 29.8%
No central heating: 46.9%
1978:
No running water in dwelling: 1.3%
No W.C. in dwelling: 20.9%
No bath or shower in dwelling: 22.9%
No central heating: 39.7%
Percentage of households with central heating:
Country | 1970 | 1978 |
---|---|---|
Great Britain | 34% | 53% |
Germany | 44% | 64% |
Percentage of dwellings in the United States with selected amenities (1970):[24]
Household | Percentage |
---|---|
Bath or shower | 95% |
Flush toilet | 96% |
Basic amenities in the housing stock of East Germany:[19]
1961
Running water: 66.0%
Interior WC: 33.0%
Bath or shower: 22.4%
Central heating: 2.5%
1971:
Running water: 82.2%
Interior WC: 41.8%
Bath or shower: 38.7%
Central heating: 10.6%
1979:
Running water: 89.0%
Interior WC: 50.0%
Bath or shower: 50.0%
Central heating: 22.0%
Percentage of dwellings in various European countries equipped with basic facilities (1970–71):[25]
Austria:
Piped water: 84.2%
Lavatory: 69.8%
Fixed bath or shower: 52.9%
Belgium:
Piped water: 88.0%
Lavatory: 50.4%
Fixed bath or shower: 47.8%
Czechoslovakia:
Piped water: 75.3%
Lavatory: 49.0%
Fixed bath or shower: 58.6%
Denmark:
Piped water: 98.7%
Lavatory: 90.3%
Fixed bath or shower: 76.5%
Finland:
Piped water: 72.0%
Lavatory: 61.4%
Greece:
Piped water: 64.9%
Lavatory: 41.2%
Fixed bath or shower: 35.6%
Hungary:
Piped water: 36.1%
Lavatory: 27.2%
Fixed bath or shower: 31.7%
Ireland:
Piped water: 78.2%
Lavatory: 69.2%
Fixed bath or shower: 55.4%
Italy:
Piped water: 86.1%
Lavatory: 79.0%
Fixed bath or shower: 64.5%
Netherlands:
Lavatory: 80.8%
Fixed bath or shower: 81.4%
Norway:
Piped water: 97.5%
Lavatory: 69.0%
Fixed bath or shower: 66.1%
Portugal:
Piped water: 47.8%
Lavatory: 33.7%
Fixed bath or shower: 32.6%
Spain:
Piped water: 70.9%
Lavatory: 70.9%
Fixed bath or shower: 46.4%
Sweden:
Piped water: 97.4%
Lavatory: 90.1%
Fixed bath or shower: 78.3%
Switzerland:
Lavatory: 93.3%
Fixed bath or shower: 80.9%
United Kingdom:
Lavatory: 86.3%
Fixed bath or shower: 90.7%
Yugoslavia:
Piped water: 33.6%
Lavatory: 26.2%
Fixed bath or shower: 24.6%
Housing Conditions in Great Britain: percentage of all households possessing and lacking certain amenities:[26]
Percentage of all households entirely without certain amenities:
1951:
Fixed bath: 37.6%
Internal or external WC: 7.7%
1961:
Fixed bath: 22.4%
Internal or external WC: 6.5%
Hot water tap: 21.8%
1966:
Fixed bath: 15.4%
Internal or external WC: 1.7%
Internal WC: 18.3%
Hot water tap: 12.5%
1971:
Fixed bath: 9.1%
Internal or external WC: 1.1%
Internal WC: 11.5%
Hot water tap: 6.5%
Percentage of all households sharing certain amenities:
1951:
Fixed bath: 7.5%
Internal or external WC: 14.9%
1961:
Fixed bath: 4.4%
Internal or external WC: 6.7%
Hot water tap: 1.8%
1966:
Fixed bath: 4.1%
Internal or external WC: 6.4%
Internal WC: 4.4%
Hot water tap: 2.0%
1971:
Fixed bath: 3.2%
Internal or external WC: 4.1%
Internal WC: 3.1%
Hot water tap: 1.9%
Proportion of households in the United States of America possessing certain durable goods:[27]
Washing machine (1965): 87.4%
Washing machine (1970): 92.1%
Refrigerator (1965): 99.5%
Refrigerator (1970): 99.8%
Television (1965): 97.1%
Television (1970): 98.7%
Telephone (1965): 85.0%
Telephone (1970): 92.0%
Proportion of households in the United Kingdom possessing certain durable goods:[27]
Washing machine (1964): 53.0%
Washing machine (1971): 64.3%
Refrigerator (1964): 34.0%
Refrigerator (1971): 68.8%
Television (1964): 80.0%
Television (1971): 91.4%
Telephone (1964): 2.20%
Telephone (1971): 37.8%
Proportion of households in Scotland possessing certain durable goods:[28]
Washing machine (1971): 65.0%
Refrigerator (1971): 53.2%
Television (1971): 92.1%
Telephone (1971): 36.1%
Proportion of households in Northern Ireland possessing certain durable goods:[29]
Washing machine (1971): 45.4%
Refrigerator (1971): 40.1%
Television (1971): 87.5%
Telephone (1971): 27.0%
Proportion of households in the EEC possessing certain durable goods (1963–1964):[27]
Manual workers (1963–64)
West Germany
Washing machine: 66.2%
Refrigerator: 62.1%
Television: 51.3%
Telephone: 1.8%
France
Washing machine: 39.6%
Refrigerator: 47.0%
Television: 34.4%
Telephone: 1.4%
Italy
Washing machine: 13.6%
Refrigerator: 50.2%
Television: 47.9%
Telephone: 20.0%
Netherlands
Washing machine: 80.4%
Refrigerator: 25.5%
Television: 58.0%
Telephone: 9.4%
Belgium
Washing machine: 74.7%
Refrigerator: 24.9%
Television: 47.6%
Telephone: 8.2%
Luxembourg
Washing machine: 82.3%
Refrigerator: 64.7%
Television: 27.9%
Telephone: 23.0%
White collar workers (1963–64)
West Germany
Washing machine: 62.2%
Refrigerator: 79.1%
Television: 51.8%
Telephone: 19.6%
France
Washing machine: 48.2%
Refrigerator: 71.3%
Television: 43.3%
Telephone: 15.2%
Italy
Washing machine: 38.3%
Refrigerator: 81.9%
Television: 79.3%
Telephone: 57.9%
Netherlands
Washing machine: 73.9%
Refrigerator: 51.6%
Television: 56.2%
Telephone: 57.4%
Belgium
Washing machine: 68.5%
Refrigerator: 57.3%
Television: 48.3%
Telephone: 40.0%
Luxembourg
Washing machine: 82.3%
Refrigerator: 79.2%
Television: 25.2%
Telephone: 67.3%
Proportion of dwellings in selected countries with certain amenities (1960–71):[27]
West Germany
Inside piped water supply: 98.2% (1965)
Flush toilet: 83.3% (1965)
Fixed bath or shower: 64.3% (1965)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 99.0% (1968)
Flush toilet: 86.5% (1968)
Fixed bath or shower: 66.8% (1968)
France
Inside piped water supply: 77.5% (1962)
Toilet of any type: 43.1% (1962)
Flush toilet: 39.3% (1962)
Fixed bath or shower: 28.0% (1962)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 92.8% (1968)
Inside piped water supply: 91.5% (1968)
Toilet of any type: 56.2% (1968)
Flush toilet: 53.2% (1968)
Fixed bath or shower: 48.9% (1968)
Italy
Inside or outside piped water supply: 71.6% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 62.3% (1961)
Toilet of any type: 89.5% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 28.9% (1961)
Netherlands
Inside or outside piped water supply: 89.6% (1956)
Toilet of any type: 99.9% (1956)
Flush toilet: 67.5% (1956)
Fixed bath or shower: 26.8% (1956)
Belgium
Inside or outside piped water supply: 76.9% (1961)
Toilet of any type: 99.9% (1961)
Flush toilet: 47.6% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 24.3% (1961)
Luxembourg
Inside or outside piped water supply: 98.8% (1960)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1960)
Flush toilet: 81.6% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 45.7% (1960)
Denmark
Inside piped water supply: 92.9% (1960)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1960)
Flush toilet: 83.6% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 48.3% (1960)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 96.7% (1965)
Inside piped water supply: 96.7% (1965)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1965)
Flush toilet: 90.9% (1965)
Fixed bath or shower: 63.4% (1965)
Sweden
Inside piped water supply: 90.0% (1960)
Flush toilet: 76.2% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 61.0% (1960)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 95.2% (1965)
Inside piped water supply: 94.3% (1965)
Toilet of any type: 99.7% (1965)
Flush toilet: 85.3% (1965)
Fixed bath or shower: 72.9% (1965)
Norway
Inside or outside piped water supply: 94.0% (1960)
Inside piped water supply: 92.8% (1960)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1960)
Flush toilet: 57.9% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 45.2% (1960)
Finland
Inside or outside piped water supply: 47.1% (1960)
Inside piped water supply: 47.1% (1960)
Flush toilet: 35.4% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 14.6% (1960)
Poland
Inside or outside piped water supply: 39.1% (1960)
Inside piped water supply: 29.9%% (1960)
Toilet of any type: 26.9% (1960)
Flush toilet: 18.9% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 13.9% (1960)
Inside piped water supply: 46.8% (1966)
Flush toilet: 33.3% (1966)
Bulgaria
Inside or outside piped water supply: 28.5% (1965)
Inside piped water supply: 28.2% (1965)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1965)
Flush toilet: 11.8% (1965)
Fixed bath or shower: 8.7% (1965)
Yugoslavia (urban)
Inside piped water supply: 42.4% (1961)
Toilet of any type: 34.5% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 22.5% (1961)
Czechoslovakia
Inside or outside piped water supply: 60.5% (1961)
Inside water supply: 49.1% (1961)
Flush toilet: 39.5% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 33.3% (1961)
East Germany
Inside piped water supply: 65.7% (1961)
Toilet of any type: 33.7% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 22.1% (1961)
Hungary
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1960)
Flush toilet: 22.5% (1960)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 32.5% (1963)
Inside piped water supply: 25.9% (1963)
Fixed bath or shower: 18.5% (1963)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 58.6% (1970)
Inside piped water supply: 36.4% (1970)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1970)
Flush toilet: 32.7% (1970)
Fixed bath or shower: 32.2% (1970)
Romania
Inside or outside piped water supply: 48.4% (1966)
Inside piped water supply: 12.3% (1966)
Toilet of any type: 100.0% (1966)
Flush toilet: 12.2% (1966)
Fixed bath or shower: 9.6% (1966)
Switzerland
Inside piped water supply: 96.1% (1960)
Toilet of any type: 99.7% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 68.8% (1960)
Austria
Inside or outside piped water supply: 100.0% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 63.6% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 29.6% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 85.3% (1970)
Toilet of any type: 69.7% (1970)
Fixed bath or shower: 54.5% (1970)
England and Wales
Inside piped water supply: 98.7% (1961)
Flush toilet: 93.4% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 78.7% (1961)
Flush toilet: 98.2% (1966)
Fixed bath or shower: 85.1% (1966)
Scotland
Inside or outside piped water supply: 94.0% (1961)
Flush toilet: 92.8% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 69.9% (1961)
Flush toilet: 95.7% (1966)
Fixed bath or shower: 77.4% (1966)
Ireland
Inside or outside piped water supply: 57.2% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 51.0% (1961)
Toilet of any type: 64.9% (1961)
Flush toilet: 53.5% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 33.2% (1961)
Canada
Inside or outside piped water supply: 89.1% (1961)
Flush toilet: 85.2% (1961)
Fixed bath or shower: 80.3% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 95.2% (1967)
Toilet of any type: 93.5% (1967)
Flush toilet: 92.5% (1967)
Fixed bath or shower: 89.8% (1967)
Flush toilet: 95.4% (1971)
Fixed bath or shower: 93.4% (1971)
United States of America
Inside or outside piped water supply: 94.0% (1960)
Inside piped water supply: 92.9% (1960)
Flush toilet: 89.7% (1960)
Fixed bath or shower: 88.1% (1960)
New Zealand
Inside piped water supply: 90.0% (1960)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 99.6% (1961)
Inside piped water supply: 87.8% (1961)
Flush toilet: 88.5% (1961)
Inside or outside piped water supply: 99.7% (1966)
Inside piped water supply: 90.3% (1966)
Flush toilet: 94.0% (1966)
Fixed bath or shower: 98.1% (1966)
Distributions of the three main kinds of housing tenure in various societies:[30]
Social rented:
Australia (1988): 5% Denmark (1990): 21% France (1990): 17% Germany (1990): 25% Ireland (1990): 14% United Kingdom (1990): 27% Belgium (1986): 6% Italy (1990): 5% Netherlands (1988): 43% Spain (1989): 1% United States (1980): 2%
Private rented:
Australia (1988): 25% Denmark (1990): 21% France (1990): 30% Germany (1990): 38% Ireland (1990): 9% United Kingdom (1990): 7% Belgium (1986): 30% Italy (1990): 24% Netherlands (1988): 13% Spain (1989): 11% United States (1980): 32%
Owner-occupied:
Australia (1988): 70% Denmark (1990): 58% France (1990): 53% Germany (1990): 37% Ireland (1990): 78% United Kingdom (1990): 66% Belgium (1986): 62% Italy (1990): 64% Netherlands (1988): 44% Spain (1989): 88% United States (1980): 66%
Percentage of wage-earners’ households in various European Common Market countries owning a garden (1963–64):[31]
France: 47%
Netherlands: 21%
Belgium: 58%
Italy: 17%
Luxembourg: 81%
Germany: 45%
Percentage of households owning certain durable goods in 1962:[32]
France
Television: 25% Vacuum cleaner: 32% Washing machine: 31% Refrigerator: 37% Car: 33%
Great Britain
Television: 78% Vacuum cleaner: 71% Washing machine: 43% Refrigerator: 22% Car: 30%
United States
Television: 87% Vacuum cleaner: 75% Washing machine: 95% Refrigerator: 98% Car: 75%
Historical housing conditions in Belgium:
A survey carried out by the National Housing Institute in 1961/62 estimated that out of all the dwellings in Belgium 13.8% were unfit and incapable of improvement, 19.5%, although unfit, showed potential for improvement, and 54% were considered to be suitable (without alteration or improvement) for modern living standards. 74% lacked a shower or bath, 19% had inadequate arrangements for sewage disposal, 3.6% lacked a proper supply of drinking water, and only 36.8% had an internal W.C.[33]
Postwar housing conditions in France:
Between 1954 and 1973, the proportion of homes with shower or bath increased from 10% to 65,% while during that same period the percentage of homes without flushing lavatories fell from 73% to 30% and those without running water from 42% to 3.4%. A 1948 law permitted gradual long-term rent rises for existing flats, on condition that part of the money was spent on repairs. According to John Ardagh, the law, “vigorously applied, was partly successful in its twofold aim: to encourage both repairs and new building.”[34]
Postwar housing conditions in the United Kingdom:
During the postwar period, a very high proportion of British housing came in the form of single-family housing. In 1961, 78% of all British housing consisted of single-family homes, compared with 56% in the Netherlands, 49% in West Germany, and 32% in France.[35] In terms of housing conditions, in 1964 in England and Wales 6.6% of accommodation units consisted of 2 rooms or less, 5.8% had 7 rooms or more, 15.2% had 6 rooms, 35.1% had 5 rooms, 26.3% had 4 rooms, and 11.1% had 3 rooms. These figures included kitchens only where they were used for eating meals. In terms of the number of bedrooms available in accommodation units in 1964 some 50% had 3 bedrooms, 1.9% had 5 or more bedrooms, 6.2% had 4 bedrooms, 10.5% had 1 or no bedrooms, and 31.3% had 2 bedrooms. A 1960 Social Survey estimated that 0.6% of households in England and Wales fell below the statutory overcrowding standard, and 0.5% in 1964. In 1964 the number of persons per room where households contained at least one person per room stood at 6.9% of all households, while in 1960 some 11% of all households fell below the bedroom standard, with 1.75% having 2 or more bedrooms less than the standard and 9.25% having one bedroom less than the standard. By 1964, however, this had declined slightly to 9.4% of households falling below this standard, with 8.1% having one bedroom less than the standard and 1.3% having 2 bedrooms or more less than the standard. According to local authority returns in 1965, 5% of the total housing stock in England and Wales was unfit.[36]
Housing conditions in Canada and the United States of America:
Various improvements took place in housing condition in both Canada and the USA in the years following the end of the Second World War. In the USA, 35.4% of all dwellings in 1950 did not have complete plumbing facilities, a proportion that fell to 16.8% in 1960 and to 8.4% in 1968. In Canada, from 1951 to 1971, the proportion of dwellings with a bath or shower went up from 60.8% to 93.4% and those with piped hot and cold water from 56.9% to 93.5%.[27] In the United States, from 1950 to 1974, the percentage of housing without full plumbing fell from 34% to 3%, while during that same period the percentage of the total housing stock estimated to be dilapidated fell from 9% to less than 4%.[37]
See also
Other sources
- The Economist Book Of Vital World Statistics: A Complete Guide To The World In Figures, Introduction by Sir Claus Moser KCB CBE, The Economist Books Ltd., Fourth reprint, paperback edition, October 1992 (contains a section entitled “Consumer Durables,” with estimates of household ownership of a wide range of consumer durables in OECD countries and various Eastern European countries)
References
- ^ Haviland, W. A. (2003). Anthropology. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
- ^ O'Sullivan, Arthur; Steven M. Sheffrin (2003). Economics: Principles in action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458: Pearson Prentice-Hall. p. 29. ISBN 0-13-063085-3.
{{cite book}}
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- ^ "Households". Quickfacts.census.gov. 2015-03-24. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
- ^ "U.S. Census: Current Population Survey - Definitions and Explanations". Census.gov. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
- ^ [1] Archived 2011-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Statistical unit - Household". Statcan.gc.ca. 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
- ^ Muriuki, Andrew Mburu (2007). "The role of household environment on health outcomes for female adolescents in Kenya". University of Missouri-Columbia. Retrieved 13 October 2015. OCLC 183405613 Pdf.
- ^ Dhungel, Basundhara (14 May 2001). "A study of Nepalese families' paid and unpaid work after migration to Australia". University of Sydney. Retrieved 25 September 2014. OCLC 271516251 Pdf.
- ^ Pierson, John; Thomas, Martin (2002). Collins dictionary of social work. Glasgow, UK: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007143962.
- ^ "Tributes paid to Professor Ray Pahl". University of Essex. 8 June 2011.
- ^ Pahl, Ray (1984). Divisions of labour. Oxford New York: Blackwell. ISBN 9780631132745.
- ^ "household work strategy â€" Dictionary definition of household work strategy | Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
- ^ Russell Hochschild, Arlie; Machung, Anne (2003). The second shift: working families and the revolution at home. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780142002926
- ^ Russell Hochschild, Arlie (2001). The time bind: when work becomes home and home becomes work. New York: Henry Holt & Co. ISBN 9780805066432
- ^ Young, Cathy (12 June 2000). "The Mama Lion at the Gate". Salon.com. Salon. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
- ^ a b "A social portrait of Europe - Population and social conditions - EU Bookshop". bookshop.europa.eu. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ^ "Report on Housing". Coe.int. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
- ^ a b c Housing in Europe edited by Martin Wynn
- ^ Housing policy and rented housing in Europe - Michael Oxley, Jacqueline Smith - Google Books. Books.google.co.nz. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
- ^ The State of Humanity - Julian Lincoln Simon - Google Books. Books.google.co.nz. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
- ^ The End of the Nation State: The Rise of Regional Economies by Kenichi Ohmae
- ^ Housing conditions in Britain and Germany by Chris Crouch
- ^ Lansley, Stewart (1979). Housing and Public Policy. London: Crook Helm.
- ^ Howenstine, E.J. (1985). Housing Vouchers: A Comparative International Analysis. Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. p. 46. ISBN 9781412850490.
- ^ The Economics of Housing Policy; by D. C. Stafford
- ^ a b c d e Housing Standards and Costs: A Comparison of British Standards and Costs with Those in the U.S.A., Canada, and Europe; by Valerie A. Karn
- ^ Housing Standards and Costs: A Comparison of British Standards and Costs with Those in the U.S.A., Canada, and Europe; by Valerie A. Karn
- ^ Housing Standards and Costs: A Comparison of British Standards and Costs with Those in the U.S.A., Canada, and Europe by Valerie A. Karn
- ^ Social Policy: A comparative analysis by Michael Hill
- ^ The New Europeans: A guide to the workings, institutions and character of contemporary Western Europe by Anthony Sampson
- ^ https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Fd_FAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA194&dq=Europe+percentage+of+households+with+refrigerators+1965&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CDAQ6AEwA2oVChMI9uDXg8CNxgIVcErbCh3PjAD9#v=onepage&q=Europe%20percentage%20of%20households%20with%20refrigerators%201965&f=false
- ^ Social Housing Policy in Belgium; by C. J. Watson
- ^ The New France: A Society in Transition 1945-1977 (Third Edition) by John Ardagh
- ^ https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wPNWAAAAYAAJ&q=France+single-family+homes+percentage&dq=France+single-family+homes+percentage&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjWqYPNw97LAhUGYA8KHSwZDwM4ChDoAQgvMAI
- ^ Socially Deprived Families in Britain edited by Robert Holman, reprinted edition 1971, first published in 1970
- ^ https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExTFM-jr0NEC&pg=PA298&dq=American+Standards+of+Living:+1918-1988+housing+quality&hl=en&sa=X&ei=p_FqVa2CMsatsgHV44PoCQ&ved=0CCEQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=American%20Standards%20of%20Living%3A%201918-1988%20housing%20quality&f=false
External links
- Contains statistics on housing conditions and housing policies in various countries
- Contains historical statistics on housing conditions in the United Kingdom
- Contains historical statistics on housing conditions in Australia
- Contains historical statistics on housing in the United Kingdom
- Contains historical statistics on housing in Italy
- Contains historical statistics on housing in Europe
- Contains statistics on housing in various developing and developed countries
- Contains information on housing conditions in Europe from 1980 onwards
- Contains information on European housing from 2010
- Contains historical statistics on housing in Ireland
- Contains historical statistics on housing in Europe
- Contains statistics on housing and material conditions in Europe
- Contains information on housing conditions in various countries
- Contains information on European housing from 2010
- Contains information on housing standards in various European countries from 1950 to 1990
- Contains information on the percentage of nonfarming households in Japan earning certain consumer durable goods from 1957 to 1975
- Contains information on the percentage of homes in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Switzerland, and Sweden owning certain household appliances from 1970 to 1975
- Contains information on the percentage of households in Great Britain and the EEC owning certain durable goods in 1963
- Contains information on housing standards in various European countries from 1950 to 1990