NIESR General Election Briefing: 'Regional Inequality in Household Incomes In The UK: A Closer Look’

1 Jun 2017 02:05 PM

While there has been some increase in regional income inequality since 2010, this has been a result of income property rentals and imputed incomes from holdings of housing assets, new research by the National Institute has found.

The latest of a series of briefings in the run-up to the General Election outlines that:

Co-authors Andrew Aitken, Monique Ebell and Lea Samek wrote: "Regional inequality in employee compensation has been relatively stable between 2005 and 2015.  In contrast there is increasing regional inequality dispersion across the country in the operating surplus (rent and imputed rent received from dwellings), largely reflecting increasing inequality in home values and rents between London and the rest of the country”

Notes for editors:

The full briefing, “Regional Inequality in Household Incomes In The UK: A Closer Look ” is available on NIESR’s special General Election page.

It was authored by Andrew Aitken, Monique Ebell and Lea Samek as part of our General Election Briefing series. The series was made possible thanks to funding by the Nuffield Foundation to ensure public debate in the run-up to the General Election is informed by independent and rigorous evidence.

For more information or to arrange an interview with the authors of this briefing please contact NIESR Press Office: Paola Buonadonna on 020 7654 1923 / p.buonadonna@niesr.ac.uk  / press@niesr.ac.uk 

NIESR aims to promote, through quantitative and qualitative research, a deeper understanding of the interaction of economic and social forces that affect people's lives, and the ways in which policies can improve them.

Further details of NIESR’s activities can be seen on http://www.niesr.ac.uk  or by contacting enquiries@niesr.ac.uk . Switchboard Telephone Number: +44 (0) 207 222 7665