on the money: misperceptions and personal finance

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Page 1: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

1

Page 2: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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The survey...

• …asks people to estimate what they think the “reality” is

on a number of personal finance and broader economic

issues…

– Builds on our joint programme of work exploring

perception gaps on social policy issues

– Purpose is to understand reasons for

misperceptions, their impact and what can do to raise

knowledge and get to better financial outcomes

• Based on 1,100 interviews conducted online, 5-9 June

2015, weighted to population profile

• Focus on results for the “average person” ie looking at

median results…

Page 3: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

3

We think

we’re

fairly

good at

this...

Page 4: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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The public are fairly confident in their own financial knowledge 2%

3%

8%

22%

28%

22%

14%

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Very low

Very high

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London

Q. On a scale from 1 to 7, where 1 means very low

and 7 means very high, how would you rate your

own financial knowledge (by which we mean your

understanding of issues affecting your own personal

finances)?

Page 5: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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And We do

mostly get

the basic

maths of

discounting

right...

Base: Split sample 547 GB adults Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London

£5 0 0

Q. Suppose you saw the same television on sale at a discount

in two different shops. The original price of the television is £500.

One shop is offering a discount of £100 off the original price, the other

is offering a discount of 10% off the original price. Which is the

cheaper price - £100 off or 10% off?

91%

1%

7% 1%

Don’t know

The Same

10% off

£100 off

Page 6: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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But more of

us struggle

as the maths

gets harder...

Base: Split sample 545 GB adults Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London

Q. Suppose you saw the same television on sale at a discount in

two different shops. The original price of the television is £500.

One shop is offering a discount of £80 off the original price, the

other is offering a discount of 15% off the original price. Which is

the cheaper price - £80 off or 15% off?

85%

5%

7% 4%

£5 0 0

Don’t know

The Same

15% off

£80 off

Page 7: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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we have a good grasp of the cost of living – on average... 5%

6%

7%

24%

20%

11%

6%

14%

3%

6%

0-19p

20-29p

30-39p

40-49p

50-59p

60-69p

70-79p

80-89p

90-99p

£1+

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and mysupermarket.co.uk as

of w/c 26th June 2015

? ?

? ?

? £

? ?

Q. How much is a pint of milk?

Actual cost: 49p

Average guess: 50p

Although many of

us are way too

high or low…

Page 8: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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...Still Better than some...

“I don’t know – about 80 pence? “I don’t know –

My wife buys most of it”

Jim paice, when

Agriculture and food minister

Boris Johnson

...I know the price of a bottle of champagne – how about that?”

Page 9: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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But we have a number of misperceptions that may prevent people from making good financial decisions... 3 big life events...

Page 10: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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10%

16%

15%

20%

13%

5%

8%

6%

7%

1...We massively underestimate the cost of raising a child

Source: Ipsos MORI /King’s College London and LV=

£

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75

Up to £19,999

£20,000-£29,999

£30,000-£49,999

£50,000-£99,999

£100,000-£149,999

£150,000-£199,999

£200,000-£249,999

£250,000-£499,999

£500,000+

…if this were true we’d

only be spending £2.60 a

day on average…

Q. On average, what do you think is the cost of

raising a child in Great Britain from birth until they

reach the age of 21 (to the nearest £1,000)?

…parents worse at estimating: average guess only £40,000

Actual cost: £229,000

Average guess: £50,000

Page 11: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Yet we overestimate the cost of childcare

Q. On average, what do you think is the total cost

per week of 25 hours of nursery care for a child

under two years old in Great Britain (to the nearest

3%

7%

18%

13%

16%

14%

10%

2%

4%

1%

12%

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75

Up to £49 p/w

£50 - £99 p/w

£100 - £149 p/w

£150 - £199 p/w

£200 - £249 p/w

£250 - £299 p/w

£300 - £349 p/w

£350 - £399 p/w

£400 - £449 p/w

£450 - £499 p/w

£500+

Actual cost: £115pw

Average guess: £200pw

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and Family and Childcare Trust

22% of Londoners think care costs over £500 a week in the UK – a reflection of the higher costs in the capital?

£)?

Page 12: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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A media effect?

Page 13: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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2... and We’re not much better at estimating the costs of university education

Q. On average, with how much debt do you think

today’s student will leave university, including tuition

fee loans (to the nearest £1,000)?

11%

21%

23%

19%

12%

6%

2%

6%

Up to £9,999

£10,000 - £19,999

£20,000 - £29,000

£30,000 - £39,000

£40,000 - £49,000

£50,000 - £59,000

£60,000 - £69,000

£70,000+

Base: All in England (948) Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and the Institute of Fiscal Studies / the Sutton

Trust

Actual debt: £44,000

Average guess: £21,000

Young people slightly more realistic, but still underestimate: £30K

Page 14: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Q. On average, how long do you think that people

turning 65 in the UK can expect to live in retirement

before they die?

Actual figure: 23 yrs

Ave guess: 19 yrs

Good news!

We live

longer than

we expect

to... 5%

14%

24%

38%

10%

9%

Up to 5 years

6-10 years

11-15 years

16-20 years

21-25 years

26 years+

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS

Page 15: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Q. Assuming they were claiming a full state

pension, how much do you think that someone

would need to have in a private pension savings pot to

get a total income of around £25,000 a year after they

stopped work (to the nearest £1000)?

3... But we

massively

underestimate

what we need

to save for

retirement

12%

10%

7%

10%

11%

11%

12%

6%

20%

Up to £14,999

£15,000-£24,999

£25,000-£49,999

£50,000-£99,999

£100,000-£149,999

£150,000-£249,999

£250,000-£349,999

£350,000-£449,999

£450,000+

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and This is Money pensions calculator Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75

Actual figure: £315,000

Average guess: £124,000

Steep learning curve… 65+ year olds = £250k 50-64 year olds = £150k

Page 16: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Q. Government research shows that a number of

people are not saving enough for retirement. What

percentage of working age people do you think are

saving too little?

Actual figure: 43%

Average guess: 65%

Despite this

underestimate,

we think

undersaving is

the ‘norm’... 3%

3%

6%

10%

13%

13%

16%

23%

9%

4%

0-10%

11-20%

21-30%

31- 40%

41-50%

51-60%

61-70%

71-80%

81-90%

91-100%

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and DWP Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75

Page 17: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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This matters... we know how much social norms can influence behaviour... “pluralistic ignorance”

Page 18: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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We do get some things right...

Page 19: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Q. To the best of your knowledge, how much do you think

the average UK household owes in debt (to the nearest £1000)? That

is, the total money owed per UK household – including mortgages.

15%

13%

17%

17%

14%

8%

17%

Up to £9,999

£10,000 - £19,999

£20,000 - £49,000

£50,000 - £99,000

£100,000 - £149,000

£150,000 - £199,000

£200,000 +

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and The Money Charity

household

debt...

Actual figure: £55,000

Average guess: £50,000

Although some extreme

guesses…

Page 20: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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House prices... Q. To the nearest £1000, what do you think is the

average house price in the UK?

£

3%

5%

13%

34%

20%

16%

6%

3%

Up to £49,999

£50,000- £99,999

£100,000 - £149,999

£150,000 - £199,999

£200,000 - £249,999

£250,000 - £299,999

£300,000 - £499,999

£500,000+

Actual cost: £195k

Average guess: £190k

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and Nationwide

29% of Londoners think the

average UK house price is

over £300,000

Page 21: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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Perhaps in part because of this...

Page 22: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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...But we’re very wrong on the SCALE OF deposits OR EQUITY

Q. To the best of your knowledge, how much do you

think is the average deposit to buy a house in Great Britain (to the

nearest £1000)? That is, the up-front payment that the buyer puts

down at the time of the purchase.

13%

33%

28%

12%

4%

5%

2%

4%

Up to £9,999

£10,000 - £19,999

£20,000 - £29,000

£30,000 - £39,000

£40,000 - £49,000

£50,000 - £59,000

£60,000- £99,999

£100,000+

Actual figure: £72,000

Average guess: £20,000

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and the Mortgage Advice Bureau Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75

One in five young people

think deposits are less

than £10K

Page 23: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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And we

underestimate

renting costs

both

outside

london...

Q. Outside of London, what do you think is the

monthly cost of renting a home in England and

Wales (to the nearest £50)?

5%

2%

3%

12%

24%

19%

14%

10%

2%

9%

Up to £199

£200 - £299

£300 - £399

£400 - £499

£500 - £599

£600 - £699

£700 - £799

£800 - £899

£900 - £999

£1,000+

Actual cost: £774

Average guess: £600

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and LSL Property Services

Plc

Base: All those in England and Wales (1002).

Page 24: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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And in the

capital...

Q. And what do you think is the monthly cost of

renting a home in London (to the nearest £50)?

18%

18%

22%

15%

16%

11%

Up to £799

£800 - £999

£1,000 - £1,199

£1,200 - £1,499

£1,500 - £1,999

£2,000+

Actual cost: £1,204

Average guess: £1,000

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and LSL Property Services plc

Londoners themselves

are almost spot on – average guess = £1,200

Page 25: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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We’re very accurate on the average full time salary before tax...

Q. To the best of your knowledge and to the

nearest £1000, what do you think is the average full-

time annual salary before tax, in the UK today?

3%

5%

16%

25%

31%

8%

4%

3%

6%

Up to £9,999

£10,000 - £14,999

£15,000 - £19,999

£20,000 - £24,999

£25,000 - £29,999

£30,000 - £34,999

£35,000 - £39,999

£40,000 - £44,999

£50,000+

Actual cost: £27,000

Average guess: £25,000

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London ONS

Page 26: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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...But we overestimate how many of us are very highly paid

Q. What percentage of the UK population do you

think are liable to pay the top rate of income tax?

That is, people who earn £150,000 or more each

year?

Actual figure: 1%

Average guess: 10%

10%

6%

16%

23%

10%

11%

6%

18%

Up to 2%

3-4%

5-6%

7-10%

11-15%

16-20%

21-25%

26%+

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS

Page 27: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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...And THEN

also wrong

on what this

group

contributes...

Q. And what percentage of all the income tax

paid by the total population do you think this

group that earns £150,000 or more each year

contributes?

11%

16%

16%

17%

13%

12%

7%

8%

0-2%

3-5%

6-10%

11-20%

21-30%

31-40%

41-50%

51%+

Actual figure: 28%

Average guess: 20%

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS Base: Split sample - all those in half sample B (550).

Page 28: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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...And when told it’s only 1%...

Q. Around 1% of the UK population earn £150,000

or more each year. What percentage of all income

tax paid by the total population do you think this group

that earns more than £150,000 per year contribute?

18%

23%

18%

12%

9%

8%

6%

7%

0-2%

3-5%

6-10%

11-20%

21-30%

31-40%

41-50%

51%+

Base: Split sample - All those in half sample A (550). Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS

Actual figure: 28%

Average guess: 10%

Page 29: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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we also overstate how many of us claim out of work benefits...

Q. At present out of every 100 people of working age, how

many do you think are claiming out of work benefits? By out

of work benefits we mean benefits for people who are not in work

because they are unemployed, disabled, carers or single parents.

31%

21%

15%

12%

7%

13%

Up to 9

10 - 19

20 - 29

30 - 39

40 - 49

50 +

Actual figure: 10 / 100

Average guess: 15 / 100

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS

Page 30: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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And think it’s very similar to 2000 – when actually it has declined

Q. Fifteen years ago (the year 2000), out of every

100 people of working age, how many do you think were

claiming out of work benefits then?

33%

26%

16%

9%

6%

9%

Up to 9

10 - 19

20 - 29

30 - 39

40 - 49

50 +

Actual figure: 13 / 100

Average guess: 15 / 100

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and ONS

Page 31: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

31

Q. Which of the following do you think is the current

base interest rate of the Bank of England? Half of us

know the

current base

interest

rate... 13%

49%

8%

8%

4%

1%

16%

0%

0.1%

0.5%

1%

2%

5%

10%

Don’t know

Prefer not to say

Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and Bank of England Base: Split sample - all those in half sample B (550).

Actual figure: 0.5%

Page 32: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

32

Q22. Over the past forty years – going back to

1975 – what do you think the average Bank of England

base interest rate has been over this time (to the nearest

percent)?

But we have

got used to

historically

low rates... 16%

18%

13%

9%

17%

6%

5%

5%

11%

Up to 1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

8%

9%+

Actual figure: 7%

Average guess: 4 %

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London and Bank of England 40 YEARS

Page 33: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

33

0

5

10

15

20

25

197

5

197

6

197

7

197

8

197

9

198

0

198

1

198

2

198

3

198

4

198

5

198

6

198

7

198

8

198

9

199

0

199

1

199

2

199

3

199

4

199

5

199

6

199

7

199

8

199

9

200

0

200

1

200

2

200

3

200

4

200

5

200

6

200

7

200

8

200

9

201

0

201

1

201

2

201

3

201

4

low interest rates area relatively recent

trend over the last 40 years

Source: Bank of England

Actual figure: 7%

Average guess: 4 %

Page 34: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

34

Q. For the following statements please decide

whether you think they are true or false: Despite being a

key political

issue – there is

confusion

about what has

happened to

the debt and

deficit...

Base: 1100 GB adults 16-75 Source: Ipsos MORI/King's College London

False True 42%

28%

32%

47%

26%

25%

False True Don’t

know

= Correct answer

Only 1 in 5 get both questions right…

Since the coalition government

came to power in 2010,

government debt has gone

down

Since the coalition government

came to power in 2010, the

deficit has decreased

Page 35: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

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“We are paying down britain’s debts...”

January 2013

But We are not the only ones...

Page 36: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

36

“The national debt is lower in each of the next few years...”

July 2015

And it’s only getting harder to understand...

Page 37: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

37

overall... Financial

Knowledge or

Literacy - Knowledge in the abstract

- e.g. knowing how inflation

works

Money

management

skills - Practical and cognitive

- E.g. budgeting skills

Opportunity - Contextual factors

- e.g. having enough

time/ “cognitive

bandwith”

Only really covered

elements of literacy –

capability also requires

skills and opportunity…

Page 38: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

38

... And capability matters...

• …ISER study shows that for men the impact of low financial capability

on life satisfaction is equivalent to being unemployed, for women the

impact is closer to being divorced

• This is a global issue – seen in other countries, over long-term…

• …and becoming more important as more responsibility for financial

decisions falls to individuals rather than employers/the state

• Two approaches: i) raise knowledge through education/literacy training

or ii) adapt interactions in a way that works with behavioural biases –

need both

• But also “Political Ignorance” implications: informing people sufficiently

to hold government/others to account – a real challenge, but can learn

from what we get right/wrong…

Page 39: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

39

Notes on the data

• Where an amount is asked, respondents were asked

to write in an exact value (unless specified)

– The banding has been added at the analysis stage

for ease of interpretation

• Where responses do not sum to 100, this is due to

rounding

• Where specified, averages refer to the median value

(that is, the response from the respondent in the

middle of a ranked distribution). As the data includes

some outliers, the median value was chosen over the

mean as a representative of the centre of the data.

Median values, unlike the mean, are unaffected by

outlying measurements.

Page 40: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

40

Data sources

• Mysupermarket.co.uk put the price of a pint of milk at 49p in Morrisons,

Waitrose, Asda and Tesco as of 26th June 2015

Education and childcare • The average cost to raise a child to the age of 21 in Great Britain is

£229,215 according to LV= Insurance company’s ‘Cost of a Child’

report. The data are compiled on its behalf by the Centre for Business

and Economic Research: http://www.lv.com/upload/IFA-Rebrand-

2009/pdf/2015/jan/coac-report-final.pdf

• The average cost for 25 hours of nursery care for a child under the age

of two is £115.45 per week according to the 2015 Childcare Costs

Survey conducted by the Family and Parenting Trust http://www.fct.bigmallet.co.uk/sites/default/files/files/Childcare_cost_survey_2015_

Final.pdf#overlay-context=annual-childcare-costs-surveys

• On average, a student will leave University with £44,035 debt. Data are

compiled and analysed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies on behalf of

the Sutton Trust: http://www.suttontrust.com/researcharchive/payback-time/

Page 41: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

41

Data sources

Retirement and pensions • The average cohort life expectancy is 22.55 years. Figures based on ONS

historic and projected mortality rate figures http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/lifetables/historic-and-projected-data-from-the-period-

and-cohort-life-tables/2012-based/stb-2012-based.html

• Average pensioner income is £25,281. Data are sourced from the

Pensioners Income Series (2012/13) published by DWP https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/pensioners-incomes-series-2012-to-2013

• An individual would need £314,879 in their private pension pot. This

calculation assumes that the individual will buy an annuity with their

pension funds and that the rate for this is £6,000 for every £100,000

saved. It also assumes an individual claims the full state pension paid at

the current rate (£6,145.35 a year). This would mean that their private

pension fund would need to provide them with an income of £18,854 a

year. Annuity rate of £6,000 per £100,00 sourced from the This is Money

pensions calculator http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/pensions/article-

1633402/Pension-pot-calculator-How-need-save-retirement.html

Page 42: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

42

Data sources

Retirement and pensions • An estimated 43% of working age people are facing inadequate retirement

incomes according to DWP (August 2014 report): https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/223015/i

nadequate_retirement_incomes_july2012.pdf

• This is the latest estimate from DWP on the proportion undersaving. The

analysis excludes certain groups in the working age population, including

people aged under 22 and those with no earnings from 50 to State

pension.

• “Inadequate retirement income” is defined in terms of replacement rates.

Replacement rates are defined as income in retirement expressed as a

proportion of income before retirement. The UK Pensions Commission set

out target replacement rates per income band in their 2004 report.

Individuals who are estimated to have incomes in retirement below the

Pensions Commission target replacement rates are said to have an

“inadequate retirement income” or be “under savers”.

Page 43: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

43

Data sources

Housing, debt and interest rates • The average house price in the UK is £195,166 (latest figure for may

2015). Data are drawn from Nationwide’s House Price Index

• http://www.nationwide.co.uk/~/media/MainSite/documents/about/house-price-

index/May_2015.pdf

• Average deposit to buy a house is £72,302. Data are taken from the

National Mortgage Index released by the Mortgage Advice Bureau: https://www.mortgageadvicebureau.com/news/Depositsreachpost-recessionhigh/1039/

• Average debt per UK household is £55,083. Data are sourced from The

Money Charity’s The Money Statistics report (April 2015) http://themoneycharity.org.uk/media/April-2015-Money-Statistics.pdf

• Average cost of renting a home in England and Wales (outside of London)

is £774 and cost of renting a home in London is £1204. Data are taken

from The Buy to Let Index from Your Move and Reed Rains (latest figures

for April 2015) http://www.lslps.co.uk/documents/buy_to_let_index_apr15.pdf

• Current and historic Bank of England base interest rates can be found on

their website: http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/boeapps/iadb/repo.asp

Page 44: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

44

Data sources

Income, taxation and benefits • Average full-time salary before tax in the UK is £27,200. Data are from the

latest provisional ONS statistics on hours and earnings http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/ashe/annual-survey-of-hours-and-earnings/2014-

provisional-results/stb-ashe-statistical-bulletin-2014.html

• Expected share of total income tax paid by the top 1% is estimated as

27.5% for the year 2014-15 by HMRC https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/shares-of-total-income-before-and-after-tax-

and-income-tax-for-percentile-groups

• At present, 9 .8 in every 100 people of working age claim out of work

benefits. In the year 2000, 13.1 in every 100 were claiming out of work

benefits. Data are sourced from ONS Labour Market Statistics (table

BEN01). http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/publications/re-reference-

tables.html?edition=tcm%3A77-363535

• Current and historic Bank of England base interest rates can be found on

their website: http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/boeapps/iadb/repo.asp

Page 45: On the Money: Misperceptions and Personal Finance

45

Contacts: Name: Bobby Duffy

Email: [email protected]

Telephone: 0207 347 3267

Name: Suzanne Hall

Email: [email protected]

Telephone: 0207 347 3166

Name: Hannah Shrimpton

Email: [email protected]

Telephone: 0207 347 3006