| Literature DB >> 32836621 |
Sri Noerhidajati1, Agung Bayu Purwoko1, Hesti Werdaningtyas1, Amalia Insan Kamil1, Teguh Dartanto2.
Abstract
This study assesses the level of financial vulnerability of Indonesian households using data from the Household's Balance Sheet Survey (Survei Neraca Rumah Tangga/SNRT) 2016 and 2017. The SNRT are micro-unit of household data that contains information on preferences and behavior. Through both objective and subjective measurements of the Household Financial Vulnerability Index (FVI), we find that the financial vulnerability of Indonesian households is not only strongly influenced by income factors, but also by finance-related behavioral characteristics and several socio-economic factors. As a consistency and robustness check, we also estimate econometric models using the Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS) panel data for the periods 1993, 1997, 2000, 2007 and 2014. Our study then conclude that the level of household financial vulnerability decreased in 2017. Moreover, the study suggests that we should carefully monitor the behaviour of middle income group as they contribute significantly to the household financial vulnerability in Indonesia.Entities:
Keywords: Determinants; Financial Vulnerability Index; Household finance; Indonesia; Measurement
Year: 2020 PMID: 32836621 PMCID: PMC7255276 DOI: 10.1016/j.econmod.2020.03.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Econ Model ISSN: 0264-9993
Summary of studies on household financial vulnerability.
| Author | Findings |
|---|---|
The accumulation of debt and assets of the same household caused the rapid growth of household’s debt and assets in the UK during 1995–2000. Debt Households tend to be vulnerable to corrections to house prices, income shocks, and increases in interest rates because assets owned tend to be illiquid. | |
There is a relationship between the vulnerability of household and the life span and total life insurance purchases in the USA. Demand for life insurance is part of the household portfolio, where household takes into account the value of non-monetary contributions from household members in purchasing life insurance. | |
There has been a significant increase in housing debt driven by stable macroeconomic conditions and innovative access to housing loans in OECD. The household survey shows that the majority of debt holdings are in the upper-middle-income group, so the value of income-to-debt services tends to be low. An increase in interest rates affects the level of consumption because the more income used to pay the debt. | |
Analyze the impact of short-term interest rates on the ratio of loans to savings for Households in Bulgaria, Czech, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Romania Excessive financial imbalances are related to household and can be predicted by monetary policy. | |
Identify vulnerable Households and estimate potential financial sector exposure to situations of default and financial losses due to default in Austria.0 Economic losses due to default have ranged from 0.2% to 10%, in line with similar studies for other countries. | |
Compile the household Financial Condition Index that consists of subjective and objective indicators, to capture uncertainty regarding the household ‘s financial situation in Italy. There is a positive relationship between age, financial position and caution. There is a positive impact of formal work on financial conditions. | |
Debt service-to-income (DSTI) can be a good indicator in measuring over-indebtedness of Households in Poland. 37% of Households have debts, of which 10% of Households are classified as vulnerable because they have a DSTI value above 40%. Simulation of shocks in the form of unemployment increases the percentage of Households with excessive debt. | |
Capturing heterogeneity in household finance to detect household groups that display various forms of financial vulnerability in EU countries Macroeconomic information can be used to convey current vulnerabilities. | |
Use stress testing to capture responses to shocks by considering the distribution aspects vulnerability of Households with macroprudential instruments such as LTV and DSTI of the ability to pay debts by the household in Namibia. Estimating vulnerability of Households with macroprudential instruments such as LTV and DSTI. | |
Most Households borrow in self-help groups (24%), microfinance institutions (12%), banking (12%) in India. Loans are used to finance religious ceremonies/festivals (14%) and farming (14%). Households in rural areas without land ownership are more vulnerable to financial shocks due to celebrations/traditions. |
Grouping of SNRT Household Economic Classes. This table reports the income classes of households based on expenditure average per month in Indonesian rupiah (IDR). KE1 refers to household with average expenditure below IDR 2.2 million; and hence households in KE1 are in the low-income class. KE2 and KE3 denote, respectively, middle and high-income classes. These groups are arranged by Statistics Department of Bank Indonesia. The changed in expenditure value are based on 2016–2017 SNRT Implementation Guidebook, Bank Indonesia.
| Economic Income Class | Definition of Economic Level Based on Household Expenditures | Expenditure Average household per month (IDR. Million) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 2016 | Year 2017 | ||
| Low (KE1) | The lowest 40% expenditure | <2.1 | <2.2 |
| Middle (KE2) | The second lowest 40% expenditure | 2.1–4.7 | 2.2–5 |
| High (KE3) | The highest 20% expenditure | >4.7 | >5 |
FVI Compiler Variable Score. This table report the compiler variable score from 0 to 1 to show the correlation of variable explains the financial vulnerable from SNRT-BI 2016 and 2017. Higher score reflects better or important those variables explains the dependent. DEBT is total debt’s own; ARREARS is total arears in one month, BUDGETING SKILLS is ratio expenditure to total income, FINANCIAL RESILIENCE is total deposits or saving owned by household, and SOCIAL EXCLUSION is total expenditure for social activities. MEETING ENDS is perception of household to inability meet basic needs. DEBT SOLVENCY; inability to pay debt. PERCEPTION OF INCOME SHOCK: perception of household’s saving to meet basic needs. PERCEPTION OF EXPENDITURE; the ability of household to finance the unexpected expenditure. PERCEPTION OF CHANGE INCOME CONDITIONS RELATIVE OF LAST YEAR: perception the income level of household relative to last year.
| Vulnerability Index Compiler Variables | SNRT 2016 | SNRT 2017 |
|---|---|---|
| Debt | 0.043 | 0.037 |
| Arrears | 0.148 | 0.131 |
| Budgeting Skills | 0.655 | 0.661 |
| Financial Resilience | 0.790 | 0.788 |
| Social Exclusion | 0.538 | 0.550 |
| Meeting Ends | 0.795 | 0.763 |
| Debt Solvency | 0.706 | 0.673 |
| Perception of Income shock | 0.675 | 0.724 |
| Perception of Expenditure shockl | 0.626 | 0.671 |
| Perception of change income conditions Relative of last year | – | 0.448 |
Adjusted FVI Rescaling Results. This table report rescaling value of the accumulative score of objective (Debt, Arrears, Budgeting Skills, Financial Resilience, and Social Exclusion) and Subjective (Meeting Ends, Debt Solvency, Perception of Income Shock, Perception of Expenditure Shock and Perception of Change Income Condition relative to Last Year). For Each FVI, we report, total observation, average, standard deviation and the score that has been rescaling from 1 to 10.
| Index | Obs. | Average | Std.Dev. | Min Score | Max Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FVI Objectives – 2016 | 3.500 | 6.033 | 2.271 | 1 | 10 |
| FVI Objectives – 2017 | 3.500 | 5.662 | 2.315 | 1 | 10 |
| FVI Subjectives – 2016 | 4.000 | 6.452 | 1.755 | 1 | 10 |
| FVI Subjectives – 2017 | 4.000 | 5.567 | 2.230 | 1 | 10 |
Fig. 1Correlation between FVI objective - subjective (mean) per economy class.
Fig. 2Box-plot analysis between objective FVI and subjective FVI.
Financial Vulnerability Estimation Determinants (. This table shows determinants estimation of financial vulnerabilities using SNRT 2017 using 29 determinants which is divide to subjective measures and objective measure. To note, M.E.: Marginal Effect, S.E: Standard Error and Significance level ∗∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗p < 0.05, ∗p < 0.1.
| Dependent Variable: | Subjective Measures | Objective Measures | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | |
| 0.001 | (0.001) | 0.000∗∗ | (0.001) | |
| 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | |
| Household | −0.790∗∗∗ | (0.047) | −1.180∗∗∗ | (0.047) |
| 0.030 | (0.019) | −0.020 | (0.020) | |
| −0.570∗∗∗ | (0.089) | −0.770∗∗∗ | (0.080) | |
| −0.530∗∗∗ | (0.122) | −0.130 | (0.114) | |
| −0.830∗∗∗ | (0.079) | −0.440∗∗∗ | (0.075) | |
| Age | −0.010∗∗∗ | (0.003) | 0.004 | (0.003) |
| Household | 0.094∗∗∗ | (0.020) | 0.157∗∗∗ | (0.020) |
| 0.180∗∗∗ | (0.068) | 0.215∗∗∗ | (0.068) | |
| −0.100 | (0.207) | 0.190 | (0.235) | |
| −0.460∗∗∗ | (0.118) | −0.450∗∗∗ | (0.079) | |
| 0.626∗∗∗ | (0.084) | 0.360∗∗∗ | (0.085) | |
| 0.398∗∗∗ | (0.107) | 0.301∗∗∗ | (0.109) | |
| 0.892∗∗∗ | (0.149) | 0.182 | (0.153) | |
| 0.568∗∗∗ | (0.133) | 0.394∗∗∗ | (0.132) | |
| 1.306∗∗∗ | (0.104) | 0.464∗∗∗ | (0.100) | |
| 0.995∗∗∗ | (0.269) | 0.535∗∗ | (0.235) | |
| 0.462∗∗ | (0.211) | 0.462∗∗ | (0.217) | |
| 1.383∗∗∗ | (0.347) | 0.938∗∗∗ | (0.300) | |
| 1.667∗∗∗ | (0.447) | 0.305 | (0.871) | |
| 1.793∗∗∗ | (0.261) | −0.370 | (1.214) | |
| 0.296 | (0.187) | 0.907∗∗∗ | (0.165) | |
| 0.089 | (0.225) | 0.708∗∗∗ | (0.197) | |
| 1.153∗∗∗ | (0.444) | 0.679∗∗ | (0.291) | |
| 1.689 | (1.232) | 0.130 | (0.635) | |
| 3.317∗∗∗ | (0.467) | 1.125∗ | (0.683) | |
| −0.480 | (0.951) | −0.020 | (0.768) | |
| 1.474∗∗∗ | (0.433) | 0.207 | (0.332) | |
| Yes | Yes | |||
| Yes | Yes | |||
Determinants Estimation of Household Financial Vulnerability (Panel). This table shows determinants estimation of financial vulnerabilities using panel data of SNRT 2016 and 2017. It has 12 determinants, which is divide to subjective measures and objective measure. To note, M.E.: Marginal Effect, S.E: Standard Error and Significance level ∗∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗p < 0.05, ∗p < 0.1.
| Dependent Variables: | Subjective Measures | Objective Measures | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | |
| 0.000 | (0.000) | 0.000∗∗∗ | (0.000) | |
| 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | |
| −0.690∗∗∗ | (0.035) | −1.130∗∗∗ | (0.038) | |
| 0.000 | (0.011) | −0.030∗∗∗ | (0.012) | |
| −0.770∗∗∗ | (0.052) | −0.390∗∗∗ | (0.058) | |
| −0.500∗∗∗ | (0.088) | −0.260∗∗∗ | (0.083) | |
| −0.700∗∗∗ | (0.053) | −0.500∗∗∗ | (0.054) | |
| Age | −0.010∗∗∗ | (0.002) | 0.004∗∗ | (0.002) |
| Household | 0.093∗∗∗ | (0.016) | 0.108∗∗∗ | (0.023) |
| 0.142∗∗∗ | (0.046) | 0.266∗∗∗ | (0.049) | |
| −0.220 | (0.191) | 0.120 | (0.246) | |
| −0.650∗∗∗ | (0.110) | −1.000∗∗∗ | (0.120) | |
Fig. 3The correlation among FVI subjective, FVI objectives, and household income.
Estimation of Financial Vulnerability Determinants by Economic Class. This table shows determinants estimation of financial vulnerabilities by economic class using SNRT 2017 which is divided into three different measures for Low, Middle and High Income class of household that differ to subjective and objective index. To note, M.E.: Marginal Effect, S.E: Standard Error and Significance level ∗∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗p < 0.05, ∗p < 0.1.
| Dependent Variables: | Low Income Class | Middle Income Class | High Income Class | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective | Objective | Subjective | Objective | Subjective | Objective | |||||||
| M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | M.E. | S.E | |
| 0.000 | (0.002) | 0.000 | (0.002) | 0.002∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.000 | (0.001) | 0.000 | (0.001) | 0.000 | (0.001) | |
| 0.012∗∗∗ | (0.002) | 0.006∗∗∗ | (0.002) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.003∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.001) | |
| −0.740∗∗∗ | (0.260) | −0.640∗∗ | (0.264) | −0.550∗∗∗ | (0.116) | −0.910∗∗∗ | (0.109) | −0.060 | (0.213) | −0.730∗∗∗ | −0.730∗∗∗ | |
| −0.570∗∗ | (0.236) | −0.470∗∗ | (0.212) | −0.430∗∗ | (0.185) | −0.250 | (0.163) | −0.500∗∗ | (0.203) | 0.176 | (0.222) | |
| −0.450∗∗∗ | (0.144) | −0.210 | (0.134) | −0.820∗∗∗ | (0.115) | −0.470∗∗∗ | (0.106) | −1.080∗∗∗ | (0.154) | −0.670∗∗∗ | (0.144) | |
| −0.180 | (0.117) | −1.100∗∗∗ | (0.141) | −0.620∗∗∗ | (0.092) | −1.940∗∗∗ | (0.114) | −0.730∗∗∗ | (0.076) | −1.350∗∗∗ | (0.082) | |
| 0.047 | (0.040) | 0.019 | (0.039) | 0.052∗ | (0.028) | 0.001 | (0.029) | 0.014 | (0.037) | −0.070∗ | (0.039) | |
| 0.263 | (0.166) | 0.026 | (0.158) | 0.319∗∗∗ | (0.098) | 0.222∗∗ | (0.096) | −0.060 | (0.117) | 0.169 | (0.113) | |
| −0.020 | (0.589) | −0.270 | (0.480) | −0.330 | (0.288) | −0.050 | (0.300) | 0.186 | (0.342) | 0.104 | (0.386) | |
| −0.110 | (0.602) | −0.830 | (0.606) | −0.250∗ | (0.131) | −0.540∗∗∗ | (0.152) | −0.520∗∗∗ | (0.150) | −0.550∗∗∗ | (0.137) | |
| 0.000 | (0.006) | 0.000 | (0.005) | 0.000∗∗ | (0.004) | 0.003 | (0.004) | 0.000 | (0.005) | 0.004 | (0.005) | |
| 0.124∗∗ | (0.048) | 0.178∗∗∗ | (0.044) | 0.161∗∗∗ | (0.031) | 0.153∗∗∗ | (0.030) | 0.067∗∗ | (0.029) | 0.094∗∗∗ | (0.030) | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||
| 0.605∗∗ | (0.282) | 0.369 | (0.269) | 0.631∗∗∗ | (0.122) | 0.478∗∗∗ | (0.126) | 0.626∗∗∗ | (0.133) | 0.382∗∗∗ | (0.129) | |
| 0.134 | (0.308) | 0.506∗ | (0.270) | 0.390∗∗ | (0.159) | 0.381∗∗ | (0.159) | 0.467∗∗∗ | (0.173) | 0.324∗ | (0.177) | |
| 0.758∗∗ | (0.334) | 0.560∗ | (0.299) | 0.744∗∗∗ | (0.211) | 0.287 | (0.219) | 0.851∗∗∗ | (0.312) | −0.050 | (0.333) | |
| 0.307 | (0.312) | 0.396 | (0.335) | 0.402∗∗ | (0.186) | 0.472∗∗∗ | (0.172) | 0.937∗∗∗ | (0.265) | 0.461∗ | (0.263) | |
| 1.261∗∗∗ | (0.291) | 0.336 | (0.277) | 1.220∗∗∗ | (0.152) | 0.752∗∗∗ | (0.141) | 1.268∗∗∗ | (0.178) | 0.398∗∗ | (0.174) | |
| 1.008∗∗ | (0.467) | 0.274 | (0.385) | 1.056∗∗ | (0.425) | 1.269∗∗∗ | (0.397) | 0.348 | (0.434) | 0.194 | (0.443) | |
| 0.558 | (0.740) | −0.240 | (0.498) | 0.206 | (0.292) | 0.616∗ | (0.331) | 0.774∗∗ | (0.325) | 0.513 | (0.326) | |
| 1.488∗∗∗ | (0.428) | 1.168∗∗∗ | (0.438) | 1.676∗∗∗ | (0.568) | 1.687∗∗∗ | (0.411) | 0.566 | (0.493) | 0.000 | (0.513) | |
| 3.521∗∗∗ | (0.251) | 1.360∗∗∗ | (0.280) | 0.822∗∗ | (0.337) | −1.100∗∗∗ | (0.350) | 1.674∗∗∗ | (0.394) | 0.593 | (1.042) | |
| 1.838∗∗∗ | (0.457) | −0.970 | (1.218) | |||||||||
| 0.308 | (0.293) | 0.574∗ | (0.301) | |||||||||
| 0.002 | (1.479) | 1.971∗∗∗ | (0.388) | 0.281 | (0.404) | 0.963∗∗∗ | (0.351) | 0.180 | (0.267) | 0.287 | (0.264) | |
| −0.070 | (0.471) | 0.723∗∗ | (0.340) | −0.050 | (0.846) | 0.240 | (0.322) | 2.092∗∗∗ | (0.542) | 1.085∗∗∗ | (0.374) | |
| 1.817 | (1.510) | 0.018 | (0.788) | 1.176∗∗∗ | (0.221) | 1.636∗∗∗ | (0.217) | |||||
| 3.520∗∗∗ | (0.251) | −2.030∗∗∗ | (0.480) | 3.287∗∗∗ | (1.002) | −0.020 | (0.369) | 3.580∗∗∗ | (0.280) | 2.818∗∗∗ | (0.294) | |
| 0.540 | (1.277) | 0.754∗ | (0.392) | −1.690∗∗∗ | (0.557) | −1.290 | (1.662) | |||||
| 1.987∗∗∗ | (0.553) | 0.581 | (0.592) | 1.660∗∗∗ | (0.444) | 0.603 | (0.569) | 0.670 | (0.968) | −0.480 | (0.588) | |
| 633 | 633 | 1630 | 1630 | 1408 | 1408 | |||||||
Determination ofHousehold Financial Vulnerability: Financial Margin. This table shows financial margin (financial asset minus debt) as determination of financial vulnerability using SNRT 2017 for cross-section and SNRT 2016 and 2017 for panel data. Coping strategies only shown in cross-section regression due to data availability. To note, M.E: Marginal Effect, S.E: Standard Error and Significance level ∗∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗p < 0.05, ∗p < 0.1.
| Dependent Variables: | SNRT 2017 | SNRT 2016–2017 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M.E. | S.E. | M.E. | S.E. | |
| −0.003∗∗∗ | (0.000) | −0.002∗∗∗ | (0.000) | |
| −0.002∗∗∗ | (0.000) | −0.002∗∗∗ | (0.000) | |
| 0.589∗∗∗ | (0.023) | 0.562∗∗∗ | (0.017) | |
| 0.063∗∗∗ | (0.010) | 0.070∗∗∗ | (0.006) | |
| 0.452∗∗∗ | (0.042) | 0.431∗∗∗ | (0.028) | |
| 2.397∗∗∗ | (0.061) | 2.345∗∗∗ | (0.045) | |
| 0.306∗∗∗ | (0.038) | 0.304∗∗∗ | (0.028) | |
| Age | 0.017∗∗∗ | (0.001) | 0.015∗∗∗ | (0.001) |
| Household | −0.040∗∗∗ | (0.010) | −0.020∗∗∗ | (0.007) |
| −0.052 | (0.036) | 0.008 | (0.026) | |
| −0.075 | (0.121) | −0.109 | (0.124) | |
| 0.216∗∗∗ | (0.038) | 0.419∗∗∗ | (0.033) | |
| −0.192∗∗∗ | (0.045) | |||
| −0.074 | (0.056) | |||
| −0.337∗∗∗ | (0.076) | |||
| −0.196∗∗∗ | (0.068) | |||
| −0.232∗∗∗ | (0.052) | |||
| −0.141 | (0.127) | |||
| −0.132 | (0.111) | |||
| −0.093 | (0.166) | |||
| −0.084 | (0.412) | |||
| −0.067 | (0.653) | |||
| 0.123 | (0.919) | |||
| −0.008 | (0.113) | |||
| −0.301 | (-0.198) | |||
| −0.972∗∗ | (0.412) | |||
| −0.742∗∗ | (0.378) | |||
| −0.158 | (0.413) | |||
| −0.19 | (0.183) | |||
Financial Vulnerability Determinants Household: Financial Margin (IFLS). This table show panel regression of financial margin using IFLS data set 1993, 1997, 2000, 2007, and 2014. The determinant is divided by household financial characteristics, financial attitudes (dummy of saving and debt ownership), social characteristic such as gender of head of household, dummy electricity access and etcetera. Regional characteristic (java and rural area) and based on shock characteristics such as decrease of number of household’s member and harvest failure dummy. We report coefficient and Standard deviation (SD) Significance level ∗∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗p < 0.05, ∗p < 0.1.
| Dependent Variables: | Coefficient | SD |
| Non-Business Fixed Asset Value Owned by household (million rupiahs) | 0.003∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Non-Business Animals Owned by household (million rupiahs) | 0.009 | (0.162) |
| Non-Business Receivables Owned by household (million rupiah) | 0.004∗∗∗ | (0.004) |
| Non-Business Jewelry Owned by household (million rupiah) | 0.032∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Agricultural Business Asset Value Owned by household (million rupiahs) | 0.001∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Non-Agricultural Business Asset Value Owned by household (million rupiahs) | 0.001∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Savings Ownership Dummy | 0.437∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Debt Ownership Dummy | −0.241∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Employee Household Budget | 0.333∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Electricity Access Dummy | 0.878∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Male Household leader Dummy | −0.032 | (0.177) |
| Year of Education of Head of Household | 0.079∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Head of Household Field of Occupation: Agriculture, Mining, and Excavation | 0.617∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Head of Household Field of Entrepreneurship: Manufacturing Industry, Processing, and Construction | 0.770∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Java Dummy | −0.151∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Rural Dummy | 0.595∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Deceased or Sick Household Members Dummy | −0.339∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Harvest Failure Dummy | −0.317∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
| Constants | 12.90∗∗∗ | (0.000) |
FVI Compiler Indicator Based on the Objective Approach.
| Indicator | Inquiries | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Debt | Does household need debt, whether it is paid in installments regularly or irregularly, to finance business needs or daily necessities including education and health? | Yes/No |
| Arrears | Has household ever been in arrears in debt repayments with regular installments at Financial Institutions in the past year? | Yes/No |
| Budgeting Ability | What is the ratio (N) between expenditure to household net income from a business or main job on average for a month? | 0 ≤ N < 1,1 ≤ N < 2, |
| Resilience to Financial Shocks | Length of time deposit/savings/deposit and cash deposits at a household that can cover the cost of living if the household loses its main source of income? | ≥12 months, 6–12 months, 3–6 months, 1–3 months, ≤ 1 month |
| Participation in Basic Social Activities (Social Exclusion) | Does household have the expenditure to be able to participate in basic social activities such as recreational, entertainment or hobby needs in the past year? | Yes/No |
Indicator of FVI Compiler based on Subjective Approach.
| Indicator | Inquiries | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Meeting Ends | In the past year, has household ever had trouble in meeting life’s needs? | Yes/No |
| Debt Solvency | In the past year, has household ever had trouble in paying debts? | Yes/No |
| Perception of Income Shock | If household loses its main source of income, how long can savings (e.g. demand deposits, savings and deposits) and household cash continue to cover the cost of living? | ≥12 months, |
| Perception of Expenditure Shock | If household has unexpected expenses that must be incurred now, what is the expenditure that can be paid easily without having to cause financial difficulties (in rupiah)? | ≥50 million, Max.50 million, Max. 25 million, Max. 10 million, Max.5 million, Max. 1 million Max 500 tho |
| Perception of change income conditions Relative of last year | According to respondents, how is the condition of household income this year relatively compared to the previous year? | Worse, The same, Better |
Accumulative Score Value of the FVI. This table report the accumulative score of Financial Vulnerabilities Index based on Objectives (Debt, Arrears, Budgeting Skills, Financial Resilience, and Social Exclusion) and Subjective (Meeting Ends, Debt Solvency, Perception of Income Shock, Perception of Expenditure Shock and Perception of Change Income Condition relative to Last Year). For Each FVI, we report, total observation, average, standard deviation, Min and Max Value.
| Index | Obs. | Average | Std.Dev. | Min. Value | Max. Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FVI Objectives – 2016 | 3.500 | −1.19e-08 | 1.365 | −3.026 | 2.385 |
| FVI Objectives – 2017 | 3.500 | 1.62e-08 | 1.379 | −2.776 | 2.583 |
| FVI Subjectives – 2016 | 4.000 | 1.86e-08 | 1.952 | −6.065 | 3.947 |
| FVI Subjectives – 2017 | 4.000 | −4.27e-08 | 2.010 | −4.117 | 3.995 |