1. Main points
Buckinghamshire Thames Valley Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) had the highest gross disposable household income (GDHI) per head at £23,342 in 2013. The LEPs with the highest GDHI per head were based around London and the South East. The average GDHI per head for England in 2013 was £17,842.
The majority of LEPs had GDHI per head below the average for England in 2013. The LEPs with the lowest GDHI per head were generally based in the Midlands and the North of England. Black Country LEP had the lowest GDHI per head in 2013 at £13,219.
Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire LEP had the highest annual growth rate in GDHI in 2013 at 4.4%. Over a longer period (since 2003), London LEP had the highest average annual growth rate.
The lowest growth rates in GDHI in 2013 occurred in the Lancashire and Greater Manchester LEPs. Over a longer period, the lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI since 2003 has been in the Black Country LEP. The rate of growth in GDHI for the majority of LEPs was weaker in the period 2012 to 2013 than it was in 2011 to 2012.
2. Introduction
Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) are partnerships in England between local authorities and businesses. They were created in 2011 and their role is to help shape local economic priorities and undertake activities to drive local economic growth and the creation of jobs. There are 39 LEPs. Every local authority in England belongs to at least one LEP. However, some local authorities belong to more than one LEP (see Background Notes).
This release provides data on gross disposable household income (GDHI) for each LEP. A time series with data back to 1997 is included while the latest data available are for the calendar year 2013. The data have been produced to be consistent with the existing ONS regional GDHI data that are published annually for the NUTS geographies. As such, these LEP GDHI data carry the National Statistics badge.
GDHI is the amount of money that all of the individuals in the household sector have available for spending or saving after income distribution measures (for example, taxes, social contributions and benefits) have taken effect. It should be noted that these estimates relate to totals for all individuals within the household sector for a region rather than to an average household or family unit. GDHI per head are estimates of values for each person, not each household.
Notes for Introduction
- Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS)
3. Total GDHI
Table 1 presents the Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) areas with the highest and lowest annual growth rate in gross disposable household income (GDHI) in 2013. Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire LEP had the highest annual growth rate at 4.4%. Indeed, 4 of the 5 LEPs with the highest annual growth rate in GDHI were located in the West Midlands. However, another neighbouring LEP, Black Country, had one of the lowest annual growth rates in GDHI in 2013.
Lancashire and Greater Manchester were the only 2 LEPs which saw a decrease in GDHI between 2012 and 2013. The average growth rate for England in this period was 1.6%.
The rate of growth in GDHI for the majority of LEPs was weaker in the period 2012 to 2013 than it was for the period 2011 to 2012. The only LEPs which had higher growth in 2012 to 2013 were the top 5 LEPs listed in Table 1.
Table 1: LEPs with highest and lowest annual growth rate in GDHI, 2013
Local Enterprise Partnership | % |
Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire | 4.4 |
The Marches | 4.0 |
Greater Lincolnshire | 3.8 |
Worcestershire | 3.6 |
Greater Birmingham and Solihull | 3.4 |
Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire | 0.2 |
Black Country | 0.1 |
Leicester and Leicestershire | 0.0 |
Lancashire | -0.5 |
Greater Manchester | -1.1 |
Source: Office for National Statistics |
Download this table Table 1: LEPs with highest and lowest annual growth rate in GDHI, 2013
.xls (26.6 kB)Table 2 shows the LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI between 2008 and 2013. This gives an indication of how GDHI has changed in the LEPs since the start of the economic downturn. This shows that the LEPs with the highest average annual growth rate over this period are spread across England, with The Marches LEP having the highest average annual growth rate at 4.0%.
The 3 LEPs with the lowest average annual growth rates in GDHI over the 5 year period from 2008 to 2013 – Cheshire and Warrington, Greater Manchester, and Lancashire – are all based in the North West.
Table 2: LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI, 2008 to 2013
Local Enterprise Partnership | % |
The Marches | 4.0 |
Cornwall and Isles of Scilly | 3.8 |
London | 3.7 |
Greater Lincolnshire | 3.7 |
Tees Valley | 3.6 |
Thames Valley Berkshire | 2.7 |
Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire | 2.7 |
Lancashire | 2.6 |
Greater Manchester | 2.6 |
Cheshire and Warrington | 2.5 |
Source: Office for National Statistics |
Download this table Table 2: LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI, 2008 to 2013
.xls (26.6 kB)Table 3 shows the LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI between 2003 and 2013. This therefore includes the period prior to the economic downturn as well as the subsequent economic recovery. London LEP had the highest average annual growth rate over this 10 year period of 4.6%. Black Country LEP had the lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI between 2003 and 2013 (2.8%), while the relatively low average annual growth rate in GDHI for Lancashire and Greater Manchester LEPs seen in the last year and over the last 5 years, extends to the last 10 years.
Table 3: LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI, 2003 to 2013
Local Enterprise Partnership | % |
London | 4.6 |
The Marches | 4.1 |
Northamptonshire | 4.1 |
Cornwall and Isles of Scilly | 3.9 |
Greater Lincolnshire | 3.9 |
Leicester and Leicestershire | 3.2 |
Sheffield City Region | 3.1 |
Lancashire | 3.1 |
Greater Manchester | 3.0 |
Black Country | 2.8 |
Source: Office for National Statistics |
Download this table Table 3: LEPs with the highest and lowest average annual growth rate in GDHI, 2003 to 2013
.xls (26.6 kB)4. GDHI per head
In terms of total GDHI, London LEP had the highest value in 2013 at £189,499 million while Cumbria LEP had the lowest value at £8,556 million. Total GDHI is affected by the population size of the area. GDHI per head data is a useful way of comparing areas of different sizes. It allows us to examine growth in incomes within the household sector over time relative to changes in the size of the population.
Table 4 shows the LEPs which had the highest and lowest GDHI per head in 2013. Buckinghamshire Thames Valley LEP had the highest GDHI per head in 2013 at £23,342, with the other LEPs in the top 5 also based around London and the South East.
The Black Country LEP had the lowest GDHI per head at £13,219. The England average GDHI per head in 2013 was £17,842.
Table 4: LEPs with the highest and lowest GDHI per head, 2013
Local Enterprise Partnership | GDHI per head (£) | Total GDHI (£ millions) |
Buckinghamshire Thames Valley | 23,342 | 12,047 |
London | 22,515 | 189,499 |
Enterprise M3 | 22,150 | 36,648 |
Hertfordshire | 21,886 | 24,968 |
Coast to Capital | 20,746 | 40,681 |
North Eastern | 14,939 | 29,062 |
Tees Valley | 14,891 | 9,904 |
Sheffield City Region | 14,793 | 26,970 |
Greater Manchester | 14,516 | 39,409 |
Black Country | 13,219 | 15,235 |
Source: Office for National Statistics |
Download this table Table 4: LEPs with the highest and lowest GDHI per head, 2013
.xls (26.6 kB)Figure 1 shows the distribution of GDHI per head in 2013 across the 39 LEPs in England. The majority of the LEPs were below the average for England. The LEPs with the highest GDHI per head were based around London and the South East. The LEPs with the lowest GDHI per head were generally located in urban areas of the Midlands and the North of England.
Figure 1: GDHI per head for Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs), 2013
Source: Office for National Statistics
Notes for GDHI per head
- For data on economic output by LEPs, ONS has published LEP data for GVA and labour productivity.
5. Analysis of the key components of GDHI
The components of gross disposable household income (GDHI) trace the resources (incomings) and uses (outgoings) of the household and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISH) economic sector. This component analysis will look at the different incomings to this sector.
Household and NPISH sector resources
Resources, or incomings, of the household and NPISH sector can be split into primary resources and secondary resources. The former relates to items such as wages and salaries, rental income and interest on savings. The latter relates to social benefits received and other current transfers, such as monetary gifts and insurance payouts.
Primary resources
Primary resources comprise operating surplus, mixed income, compensation of employees and property income and relate to the income earned by the household and NPISH sector as a result of productive activity or the ownership of productive assets. They include wages and salaries, rental income from buildings, income from self-employment and income from the ownership of financial assets, such as interest on savings.
Analysis of the components of GDHI over time shows that between 2007 and 2012, the amount of primary resources earned as a proportion of total household incomings fell for all LEPs. This is likely to be as a result of the economic downturn which hit the UK in 2008. For the majority of LEPs, primary resources as a proportion of total household incomings increased between 2012 and 2013.
Figure 2 shows the 10 LEPs with the highest and lowest proportions of primary resources as a percentage of household incomings in 2013, with the England average shown for comparison.
Figure 2: Top 10 and bottom 10 primary resources as a percentage of total resources, LEPs
2013
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 2: Top 10 and bottom 10 primary resources as a percentage of total resources, LEPs
Image .csv .xlsCornwall and the Isles of Scilly LEP had the smallest share of primary resources as a proportion of total household incomings in 2013, at 70.4%. This was followed by Tees Valley LEP at 70.6%. London LEP had the largest proportion at 83.9%, followed by Thames Valley Berkshire LEP at 81.2%.
The following section looks at the other incomes earned by the household sector, which are described as ‘secondary resources’.
Social benefits and imputed social contributions
Social benefits and imputed social contributions are the main source of secondary resources, the amount received by the household sector in the redistribution of income. They include national insurance fund benefits, such as state pensions and unemployment allowance, and non-contributory benefits such as Child Benefit and tax credits. Imputed social contributions are those paid directly by employers to current and former employees without involving an insurance enterprise or autonomous pension fund, and without creating a special fund or segregated reserve for the purpose; the imputed contributions are equal in value to the amount of social contributions that would be needed to secure the de facto entitlements to the social benefits they accumulate.
Figure 3 shows the 10 LEPs where social benefits as a percentage of total household incomings was highest and the 10 LEPs where this proportion was lowest, for 2013, with the England average shown for comparison.
Figure 3: Top 10 and bottom 10 social benefits as a percentage of total resources, LEPs
2013
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 3: Top 10 and bottom 10 social benefits as a percentage of total resources, LEPs
Image .csv .xlsThe same set of LEPs appears in Figure 3 as appeared in Figure 2 showing the proportion of primary resources to total resources. The LEPs with the lowest proportion of social benefits to total resources are once again mainly located in the South or East of England, with London LEP the lowest at 13.3%. The LEPs with the highest proportion of social benefits to total resources are more geographically spread out across England, with Liverpool City Region LEP the highest at 25.0%.
For all of the LEPs the proportion of social benefits to total resources was higher in 2012 and 2013 compared to 2007, prior to the economic downturn.
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