Database for Economic or Social Studieson Family Level

In view of the strong demand for cross-national indicators on the state of affairs of families and children, the OECD Family unit Database was developed to provide cross-national indicators on family outcomes and family policies across the OECD countries, its enhanced appointment partners and EU member states.

The database brings together information from various national and international databases, both within the OECD (come across related OECD databases) and external organisations. The database currently includes lxx indicators under 4 main dimensions: (i) structure of families, (2) labour marketplace position of families, (three) public policies for families and children and (iv) child outcomes.

Each indicator typically presents the data on a detail consequence too every bit relevant definitions and methodology, comparability and data issues, information on sources and, where relevant, includes the raw data or descriptive information across countries.

Interactive Tools and Data

‌‌‌

cover of DBfC 2009

Selected indicators from the OECD Family Database are now available inOECD.Stat, the OECD's data warehouse, by indicator or by land

TheOECD Family Support Calculator is an interactive tool that allows users to analyse how wages, taxes and social benefits affect the income of different family types

The OECD Kid Well-Existence Data Portal (CWBDP) provides cross-national information on child well-being and the settings in which children grow upwardly.

i. The structure of families (SF)
  • Families and Children
    • SF1.1 Family size and limerick (.pdf) (.xls)
    • SF1.two Children in families (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF1.3 Further information on living arrangements of children (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF1.four Population past age of children and youth dependency ratio (.pdf) (.xls)
    • SF1.5 Living weather of children (.pdf) (.xls)
  • Fertility indicators
    • SF2.1 Fertility rates (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF2.2 Ideal and actual number of children (.pdf) (.xls)
    • SF2.three Age of mothers at childbirth and historic period-specific fertility (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF2.4 Share of births exterior of marriage (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF2.5 Childlessness (.pdf)  (.xls)
  • Marital and partnership status
    • SF3.1 Marriage and divorce rate (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF3.2 Family dissolution and children (.pdf) (.xls)
    • SF3.iii Cohabitation charge per unit and prevalence of other forms of partnership (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • SF3.4 Intimate partner violence (.pdf) (.xls)

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2. The labour market position of families (LMF)
  • Families, children and employment status

    • LMF1.1 Children in households by employment status (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF1.3 Maternal employment past partnership status (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF1.4 Employment profiles over the life-form  (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF1.5 Gender pay gaps for full-fourth dimension workers and earnings past educational attainment (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF1.6 Gender differences in employment outcomes (.pdf)  (.xls)
  • Workplace hours and time for caring

    • LMF2.1 Usual weekly working hours among men and women past broad hours groups  (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • LMF2.2 Patterns of employment and the distribution of working hours for couples with children (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • LMF2.3 Patterns of employment and the distribution of working hours for unmarried parents (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF2.iv Family-friendly workplace practices (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF2.5 Time used for work, care and daily household chores (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF2.6 Time spent travelling to and from work (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • LMF2.7 Subjective well-beingness and satisfaction with piece of work-life balance (.pdf)  (.xls)

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iii. Public policies for families and children (PF)

  • General policies for families with children

    • PF1.1 Public spending on family benefits (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • PF1.4 Neutrality of tax-benefit systems (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF1.5 Kid back up (maintenance) systems (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF1.6 Public spending by age of children (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF1.7 Intergenerational solidarity (.pdf) (.xls)
    • PF1.8 Legal historic period threshold regarding transition from childhood to adulthood (.pdf)
    • PF1.9 Aspects of child protection (.pdf) (.xls)
  • Child-related leave

    • PF2.1 Primal characteristics of parental leave systems (.pdf) (.xls)
    • PF2.2 Use of childbirth-related leave benefits (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF2.iii Additional leave entitlements of working parents (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF2.4 Parental exit replacement rates (.pdf) (.xls)

    • PF2.5 Trends in leave entitlements around childbirth (.pdf) (.xls) (Annex)
  • Formal care and education for very immature children

    • PF3.1 Public spending on childcare and early pedagogy (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • PF3.two Enrolment in childcare and pre-school (.pdf) (.xls)
    • PF3.3 Informal childcare arrangements (.pdf) (.xls)

  • Typology of childcare systems

    • PF4.i Typology of childcare and early education services (.pdf)

    • PF4.2 Quality of childcare and early education services (.pdf) (.xls)

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4. Kid outcomes (CO)‌

(Come across likewise the OECD Child Well-Being Data Portal (CWBDP))

  • Child health

    • CO1.ii Life expectancy at nascence (.pdf) (.xls)
    • CO1.3 Low birth weight (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • CO1.4 Vaccination rates (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • CO1.6 Disease-based indicators: Prevalence of diabetes and asthma among children (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO1.7 Overweight and obesity at ages 11, 13 and 15, by gender (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO1.8 Regular smokers at ages 11, 13 and xv, past gender (.pdf)  (.xls)

  • Kid poverty

    • CO2.1 Income inequality and the income position of dissimilar household types (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO2.2 Child poverty (.pdf)  (.xls)
    • CO2.3 Material deprivation among households with children (.pdf) (.xls)

  • Didactics/literacy

    • CO3.1 Educational attainment by gender and expected years in full-time education (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO3.ii Gender differences in university graduates by fields of study (.pdf) (.xls)

    • CO3.3 Literacy scores by gender at age 10 (.pdf) (.xls)

    • CO3.four Literacy scores past gender at age 15 (.pdf) (.xls)

    • CO3.v Immature people not in teaching or employment  (.pdf)  .xls

    • CO3.6 Proportion of immigrant students and their educational outcomes (.pdf) (.xls)

  • Societal participation

    • CO4.1 Participation in voluntary work and membership of NGOs for young adults, 15-29  (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO4.2 Participation rates of showtime-time voters  (.pdf)  (.xls)

    • CO4.3 Alcohol and cannabis consumption by young people, by gender (.pdf) (.xls)

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Related databases

  • OECD Benefits and Wages database: This database includes indicators that evidence how social and fiscal policies affect working and unemployed individuals and their families.
  • OECD Education database: This database includes almanac information that cover outputs of educational institutions, the policy levers that shape educational outputs, the homo and financial resource invested in pedagogy, structural characteristics of teaching systems, and the economic and social outcomes of didactics.
  • OECD Employment database: This database offers a large range up-to-date employment statistics for international comparisons and trends over fourth dimension.
  • OECD Wellness Statistics: This database provides information on the health status of the population including obesity (overweight, obese), suicide and life expectancy, wellness intendance financing, health care resources, social protection, wellness care utilisation, the pharmaceutical market place, long-term care resources and utilisation, non-medical determinants of wellness, and expenditure on wellness.
  • OECD Income Distribution database: This database provides comparable information on income, income inequality and poverty across OECD countries.
  • OECD Social Expenditure database: This database includes reliable and internationally comparable statistics on public and (mandatory and voluntary) private social expenditure at the programme level.
  • Family unit Database in the Asia-Pacific Region: This database, produced and hosted by the OECD KOREA Policy Middle, is based effectually the OECD Family Database framework and offers a range of data on families, family policies and children for 9 Asia-Pacific countries and economies (Australia, China, Hong Kong (China), Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, and Viet Nam).

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RELATED Pages

  • OECD Child Well-existence Portal: This folio provides a platform for conducting policy-oriented research on children, enhancing child well-being and promoting equal opportunities amongst children.

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Contact

For further information or to receive notifications when the database is updated, delight contact social.contact@oecd.org.

Follow united states of america on Twitter @OECD_Social

Notes

The structure of the Family unit database does non include indicators that cover issues related to the position (and care needs) of elderly family members (meet pension, health or long-term care webpages).

EU flag This database has been produced with the financial assistance of the European Union. The views expressed herein can in no way exist taken to reverberate the official opinion of the Eu.

† The statistical data for Israel are supplied by and nether the responsibility of the relevant Israeli authorities. The utilise of such data past the OECD is without prejudice to the status of the Golan Heights, East Jerusalem and Israeli settlements in the Due west Banking company nether the terms of international law.

†† Footnote by Turkey:  The information in this certificate with reference to « Republic of cyprus » relates to the southern part of the Island. There is no single authority representing both Turkish and Greek Cypriot people on the Isle. Turkey recognizes the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Until a lasting and equitable solution is found within the context of United nations, Turkey shall preserve its position apropos the "Cyprus issue".

†† Footnote past all the European Union Member States of the OECD and the European Union: The Republic of cyprus is recognized by all members of the Un with the exception of Turkey. The information in this certificate relates to the area nether the effective control of the Government of the Republic of Cyprus.

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Source: https://www.oecd.org/els/family/database.htm

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