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Ability to Make Ends Meet and Maintain the Same Standard of Living

Ability to Make Ends Meet and Maintain the Same Standard of Living

Half of households have at least some difficulties in making ends meet

CSO statistical publication, , 11am

Ability to make ends meet

Households were asked to rate their self-perceived level of difficulty in making ends meet, with the answer options being: ‘with great difficulty’; ‘with difficulty’; ‘with some difficulty’; ‘fairly easily’; ‘easily’; ‘very easily’.

6.4%
of households
had great difficulty in making ends meet in 2023
compared with 5.5% in 2022
Source: CSO Ireland, Survey on Income and Living Conditions (SILC): Enforced Deprivation 2023

One in two households (47.8%) said they had at least some difficulty in making ends meet in 2023, compared with 50.4% of households in 2022 and 41.8% in 2021. The percentage of households reporting great difficulty in making ends meet rose from 5.5% in 2022 to 6.4% in 2023. See figure 4.1 and table 4.1a.

X-axis labelVery easilyEasilyFairly easilyWith some difficultyWith difficultyWith great difficulty
20237.51331.73110.46.4
20227.31230.332.812.15.5
20219.414.534.327.28.95.7
Table 4.1a Household ability to make ends meet by levels of difficulty, demographic characteristics and year (% of households)

Table 4.1b Household ability to make ends meet by levels of ease, demographic characteristics and year (% of households)

Seven in ten single-adult households with children have at least some level of difficulty in making ends meet

Analysis by household composition shows that single-adult households with children under 18 years were the most likely to experience at least some level of difficulty (72.1%) in making ends meet, while 17.9% have great difficulty. See figure 4.2 and table 4.1a.

X-axis labelWith some difficultyWith difficultyWith great difficulty
1 adult aged 65 years and over26.6145.8
1 adult aged less than 65 years30.613.211.9
2 adults, at least 1 aged 65 years and over24.96.52.1
2 adults, both aged less than 65 years22.19.33.9
3 or more adults289.84.1
1 adult, with children under 18 years40.114.117.9
2 adults, with 1-3 children under 18 years37.78.25.8
Other households with children under 18 years43.313.99.5

One in ten rented households have great difficulty in making ends meet

By tenure, two in three (66.0%) rented or rent-free households had at least some level of difficulty in making ends meet, compared with four in ten (39.4%) owner-occupied households. In 2022, one in ten (9.6%) rented or rent-free households had great difficulty in making ends meet. This rate went up to 14.2% in 2023. The percentage of owner-occupied households that experienced great difficulty in making ends meet was 2.8% in 2023 down slightly on the 2022 rate of 3.6%. See figure 4.3 and table 4.1a.

X-axis labelVery easilyEasilyFairly easilyWith some difficultyWith difficultyWith great difficulty
Rented or rent free3.67.922.536.115.714.2
Owner-occupied9.315.33628.682.8

Nine in ten households living in enforced deprivation have at least some level of difficulty making ends meet

Of households experiencing enforced deprivation, more than nine in ten (92.0%) had at least some difficulty in making ends meet, with 28.6% having great difficulty. Four in ten (38.6%) households not experiencing enforced deprivation had at least some difficulty in making ends meet, with 1.8% having great difficulty. See figure 4.4 and table 4.1a.

X-axis labelVery easilyEasilyFairly easilyWith some difficultyWith difficultyWith great difficulty
Experiencing deprivation0.31.95.934.129.328.6
Not experiencing deprivation915.337.130.36.51.8

Ability to maintain the same standard of living from savings

In the SILC survey households were asked if they were not to receive any income (such as wages, pension or social welfare payments), how long they would be able to maintain the same standard of living using savings. The answer options to this question were ‘less than three months’; ‘three months or more but less than six’; ‘six months or more but less than 12 months;' and ‘12 months or more’.

The results are relatively unchanged from 2022. Half of households (49.0%) could maintain the same standard of living for less than three months and 15.2% could maintain the same standard of living for 12 months or more. See figure 4.5.

X-axis label12 months or more6 months or more but less than 12 3 months or more but less than 6Less than 3 months
202315.213.322.549
202214.513.621.950
202115.816.921.945.5

Analysis by household composition shows that one in five (19.2%) single-adult households with children could maintain the same standard of living for at least three months if they were to lose their income sources. Two-adult households where at least one was aged 65 or over were most likely to have savings that could maintain the same standard of living with approximately two-thirds (68.2%) of this group being able to sustain the same standard of living for three months or longer. See figure 4.6 and table 4.2.

X-axis label3 months or moreLess than 3 months
Other households with children under 18 years29.870.3
2 adults, with 1-3 children under 18 years48.351.8
1 adult, with children under 18 years19.280.8
3 or more adults59.140.9
2 adults, both aged less than 65 years58.141.9
2 adults, at least 1 aged 65 years and over68.231.8
1 adult aged less than 65 years45.454.6
1 adult aged 65 years and over53.646.4

Seven in ten (71.1%) rented or rent-free households and four in ten (38.5%) owner-occupied households could maintain the same standard of living for less than three months. Almost one in five (19.5%) of owner-occupied households could maintain the same standard of living for at least one year. The comparable rate for rented households was 6.0%. See figure 4.7 and table 4.2.

X-axis label12 months or more6 months or more but less than 12 3 months or more but less than 6Less than 3 months
Rented or rent free66.116.771.1
Owner-occupied19.516.725.338.5
Table 4.2 Duration households able to maintain the same standard of living using savings, without receiving income by demographic characteristics and year (% of households)