Did you know we have a dedicated powers and duties tool?
Available to LG Inform Plus subscribers, it provides information on what current legislation gives English and Welsh councils the power to do and what it requires them to do in law. Advanced searching and filtering options make it easy to find specific powers and duties based on legislation, business function and keyword, and results are easily exported in commonly used formats.
|
Percentage of people whose parents were homeowners also owned their own home (22265) Metric type
- Help text
- This is the percentage of people aged 25 to 64 whose parents were homeowners who also owned their own home.
The Social Mobility Commission (SMC) publishes an annual report on the State of the Nation. Mobility outcomes look at where people end up, typically in their 40s or 50s. They look at people’s socio-economic class, income, education and housing. An individual experiences intergenerational social mobility when their life outcomes, such as their type of occupation, differ from their parents’. Change across generations, and the link between parents and children, are the core of social mobility. Change can be upwards or downwards.
Absolute housing mobility are sourced from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and uses Wealth and Assets Survey (WAS) individual weights.
This data is published at Region and United Kingdom level. Data analysed by area uses the area where respondents live now, not where they grew up.
- Modified
- 15 Jan 2024
- Data last updated
- 12 Jan 2024
- Short label
- % whose parents were homeowners also owned their own home
- Status
- Live
- Output precision
- 1
- Polarity
- a high value is good
- Measure
- Percentage
- Dataset
- Housing mobility
- Collection
- State of the Nation
- Source
- Social Mobility Commission
- is found in the following lists
-