Regional accounts; transactions of the sector households 1995-2011
| Regions | Periods | Transactions in mln euro Primary distribution of income account Uses Property income (mln euro) | Transactions in mln euro Primary distribution of income account Uses Primary income (net) (mln euro) | Transactions in mln euro Secondary distribution of income account Uses Current taxes on income and wealth (mln euro) | Transactions in mln euro Secondary distribution of income account Uses Social contributions (mln euro) | Transactions in mln euro Secondary distribution of income account Uses Other current transfers (mln euro) | Transactions in mln euro Secondary distribution of income account Uses Disposable income (net) (mln euro) | Transactions per capita Primary distribution of income account Uses Property income (euro) | Transactions per capita Primary distribution of income account Uses Primary income (net) (euro) | Transactions per capita Secondary distribution of income account Uses Current taxes on income and wealth (euro) | Transactions per capita Secondary distribution of income account Uses Social contributions (euro) | Transactions per capita Secondary distribution of income account Uses Other current transfers (euro) | Transactions per capita Secondary distribution of income account Uses Disposable income (net) (euro) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands | 2011** | 19,885 | 363,345 | 55,218 | 149,100 | 24,806 | 264,296 | 1,194 | 21,816 | 3,315 | 8,952 | 1,489 | 15,869 |
| Extra-region | 2011** | 0 | 579 | 55 | 197 | 0 | 326 | . | . | . | . | . | . |
| North-Netherlands | 2011** | 1,769 | 31,942 | 4,224 | 13,335 | 2,531 | 23,542 | 1,030 | 18,595 | 2,459 | 7,763 | 1,473 | 13,705 |
| East-Netherlands | 2011** | 4,130 | 72,298 | 9,953 | 30,025 | 4,972 | 53,000 | 1,170 | 20,475 | 2,819 | 8,503 | 1,408 | 15,010 |
| West-Netherlands | 2011** | 9,707 | 184,836 | 30,354 | 76,956 | 12,069 | 130,674 | 1,240 | 23,607 | 3,877 | 9,829 | 1,541 | 16,690 |
| South-Netherlands | 2011** | 4,280 | 73,690 | 10,632 | 28,587 | 5,234 | 56,754 | 1,197 | 20,604 | 2,973 | 7,993 | 1,463 | 15,869 |
| Groningen | 2011** | 560 | 10,456 | 1,350 | 4,796 | 896 | 7,572 | 966 | 18,058 | 2,332 | 8,283 | 1,548 | 13,077 |
| Friesland | 2011** | 667 | 12,064 | 1,543 | 4,721 | 935 | 9,102 | 1,031 | 18,638 | 2,383 | 7,294 | 1,445 | 14,062 |
| Drenthe | 2011** | 542 | 9,421 | 1,331 | 3,817 | 700 | 6,867 | 1,103 | 19,172 | 2,708 | 7,768 | 1,423 | 13,975 |
| Overijssel | 2011** | 1,231 | 21,807 | 2,856 | 9,043 | 1,559 | 16,209 | 1,085 | 19,222 | 2,518 | 7,971 | 1,374 | 14,288 |
| Flevoland | 2011** | 524 | 8,357 | 1,125 | 3,862 | 547 | 5,957 | 1,337 | 21,321 | 2,871 | 9,854 | 1,396 | 15,197 |
| Gelderland | 2011** | 2,375 | 42,134 | 5,972 | 17,119 | 2,866 | 30,834 | 1,185 | 21,018 | 2,979 | 8,540 | 1,430 | 15,381 |
| Utrecht | 2011** | 1,720 | 31,227 | 5,187 | 12,513 | 1,838 | 21,837 | 1,400 | 25,413 | 4,221 | 10,184 | 1,496 | 17,771 |
| Noord-Holland | 2011** | 3,450 | 64,683 | 11,029 | 26,016 | 4,272 | 45,470 | 1,282 | 24,035 | 4,098 | 9,667 | 1,587 | 16,896 |
| Zuid-Holland | 2011** | 4,109 | 81,371 | 13,010 | 35,686 | 5,392 | 57,605 | 1,165 | 23,064 | 3,687 | 10,115 | 1,528 | 16,327 |
| Zeeland | 2011** | 427 | 7,555 | 1,128 | 2,741 | 567 | 5,762 | 1,120 | 19,802 | 2,956 | 7,185 | 1,486 | 15,101 |
| Noord-Brabant | 2011** | 3,058 | 52,748 | 7,725 | 20,062 | 3,555 | 38,910 | 1,246 | 21,496 | 3,148 | 8,176 | 1,449 | 15,857 |
| Limburg | 2011** | 1,222 | 20,942 | 2,907 | 8,525 | 1,679 | 17,845 | 1,088 | 18,654 | 2,589 | 7,594 | 1,495 | 15,896 |
| Source: CBS. | |||||||||||||
Table explanation
This table the Regional accounts; transactions of the sector households, describes the primary and secondary income distribution of the section households. The transactions within the primary and secondary income distribution are breakdown by resources and uses (earnings and expenses).
Data available from: 1995 to 2011.
Status of the figures:
The data from 1995 onwards are final. The figures for the last year are revised provisional. Because this table is discontinued, figures will not be updated anymore.
Changes as of February 13th 2015:
None, this table is discontinued.
When will new figures be published?
Not applicable anymore.
This table is replaced by table Regional accounts; Transactions of the sector households, region. See paragraph 3.
Description topics
- Transactions in mln euro
- Change in the components of property (assets and liabilities) of the Dutch households. Amounts in million euro.
- Primary distribution of income account
- The allocation of primary income account describes the distribution of
value added over all participants (i.e. the suppliers of the production
factors labour and capital) in the production process.- Uses
- Transactions paid.
- Property income
- Interest + Withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations + Income from land and subsoil assets.
- Primary income (net)
- All income a resident sector receives for participating directly in the production process and due to ownership of assets. Or for making the material non-produced asset available to another institutional unit.
+Mixed income (net)
+Compensation of employees
+Property income
- Secondary distribution of income account
- The distribution of secondary income account shows the redistribution of
income.- Uses
- Transactions paid.
- Current taxes on income and wealth
- Current taxes on income and wealth of households include all taxes,
which are periodically imposed on income and wealth, such as the
income tax, the wage tax, and the tax on net wealth of individuals.
Non-periodical levies, such as inheritance tax are defined as capital
transfers.
- Social contributions
- Social contributions include social security contributions, private social
contributions (o.w. contributions to pension schemes) and imputed social
contributions. Employers, employees, self-employed persons and inactive
persons pay these contributions.
Actually, the employers' part is paid directly to the insurers.
However, in the national accounts, the employers' contributions are
supposed to be part of primary income of households (i.e. the income
from direct participation in the production process). Therefore, in first
instance these contributions are treated as payments by employers to
households as compensation of employees, who are deemed to pay
them to the insurers in the income account.
- Other current transfers
- Other current transfers (uses) consist of:
Unfunded employee social benefits, Non-life insurance premiums and
Other current transfers n.e.c.
Unfunded employee social benefits.
These social benefits are directly paid by employers (self-employed)
to their (former) employees, without involving any social security fund. This includes payment during illness.
Non-life insurance premiums.
Non-life insurance premiums provide cover against damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinking's, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc. These are paid for by residential and non-residential insurance companies to residential and non-residential policyholders. As the compensation of insurance services of non-life insurance enterprises is calculated by subtracting the claims from the premiums(actual premiums and premium supplements), it follows that the total non-life insurance premiums must equal the total non-life insurance claims of the insurance enterprises.
Other current transfers n.e.c.
This transaction includes all transactions not mentioned before, that are
not capital transfer. This concerns particularly the current transfers
within the household.
- Disposable income (net)
- Disposable income is the income which remains after the redistribution of primary income by compulsory or non-compulsory current transfers, such as taxes on income and property, social contributions and social benefits. Net in this case means excluding consumption of fixed capital. In practice this mainly influences the income of the self-employed.
Households could use disposable income for consumption and savings
Secondary income\ Disposable income
+Primary income
+Social benefits
+Other current transfers (net)
-Taxes on income and property
-Social contributions
- Transactions per capita
- The compilations of the per capita data is based on the total value per
region divided by the number of persons in that region.- Primary distribution of income account
- The allocation of primary income account describes the distribution of
value added over all participants (i.e. the suppliers of the production
factors labour and capital) in the production process.- Uses
- Transactions paid.
- Property income
- Interest + Withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations + Income from land and subsoil assets.
- Primary income (net)
- All income a resident sector receives for participating directly in the production process and due to ownership of assets. Or for making the material non-produced asset available to another institutional unit.
+Mixed income (net)
+Compensation of employees
+Property income
- Secondary distribution of income account
- The distribution of secondary income account shows the redistribution of
income.- Uses
- Transactions paid.
- Current taxes on income and wealth
- Current taxes on income and wealth of households include all taxes,
which are periodically imposed on income and wealth, such as the
income tax, the wage tax, and the tax on net wealth of individuals.
Non-periodical levies, such as inheritance tax are defined as capital
transfers.
- Social contributions
- Social contributions include social security contributions, private social
contributions (o.w. contributions to pension schemes) and imputed social
contributions. Employers, employees, self-employed persons and inactive
persons pay these contributions.
Actually, the employers' part is paid directly to the insurers.
However, in the national accounts, the employers' contributions are
supposed to be part of primary income of households (i.e. the income
from direct participation in the production process). Therefore, in first
instance these contributions are treated as payments by employers to
households as compensation of employees, who are deemed to pay them to the insurers in the income account.
- Other current transfers
- Other current transfers (uses) consist of:
Unfunded employee social benefits, Non-life insurance premiums and
Other current transfers n.e.c.
Unfunded employee social benefits.
These social benefits are directly paid by employers (self-employed)
to their (former) employees, without involving any social security fund.
Non-life insurance premiums.
Non-life insurance premiums provide cover against damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinking's, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc. These are paid for by residential and non-residential insurance companies to residential and non-residential policyholders. As the compensation of insurance services of non-life insurance enterprises is calculated by subtracting the claims from the premiums(actual premiums and premium supplements), it follows that the total non-life insurance premiums must equal the total non-life insurance claims of the insurance enterprises.
Other current transfers n.e.c.
This transaction includes all transactions not mentioned before, that are
not capital transfer. This concerns particularly the current transfers
within the household.
- Disposable income (net)
- Disposable income is the income which remains after the redistribution of primary income by compulsory or non-compulsory current transfers, such as taxes on income and property, social contributions and social benefits. Net in this case means excluding consumption of fixed capital. In practice this mainly influences the income of the self-employed.
Households could use disposable income for consumption and savings.
Secondary income\ Disposable income
+Primary income
+Social benefits
+Other current transfers (net)
-Taxes on income and property
-Social contributions