Labour income share, economic activity
Economic activities/branches (SIC 2008) | Periods | Labour income share (%) | Compensation of employees (mln euro) | Imputed labour income (mln euro) | Net operating surplus (mln euro) | Remuneration of labour (mln euro) | Remuneration of labour and capital (mln euro) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O-Q Government and care | 2023* | 99.8 | 151,114 | 13,414 | 13,691 | 164,528 | 164,805 |
Source: CBS. |
Table explanation
This table presents data on the labour income share and the components used to calculate it. The labour income share is a measure of the distribution of earned income between providers of labour (employees and the self-employed) and providers of capital.
Data available from: 1995.
Status of the figures:
Data from 1995 up to and including 2021 are final. Data of 2022 and 2023 are provisional.
Changes as of June 24th 2024:
This is a new table. Statistics Netherlands has carried out a revision of the national accounts. The Dutch national accounts are recently revised. New statistical sources, methods and concepts are implemented in the national accounts, in order to align the picture of the Dutch economy with all underlying source data and international guidelines for the compilation of the national accounts. This table contains revised data. For further information see section 3.
When will new figures be published?
Provisional data are published 6 months after the end of the reporting year. Final data are released 18 months after the end of the reporting year.
Description topics
- The share of compensation of labor (employees and self-employed) in the total earned income of a country.
- Compensation of employees
- The total compensation, in cash or in kind, due by an employer to an employee for the work performed during a reporting period. The compensation of employees is equal to the total of wages and social contributions at the expense of employers.
- Imputed labour income
- Imputed labour income by self-employed and family workers.
- Net operating surplus
- The surplus that remains after compensation of employees and taxes less subsidies on production and imports have been subtracted from the sum of value added at basic prices. For the self-employed (who are part of the sector households) the surplus is called mixed income, it is partly a reward for their entrepreneurship compensation for their labour.
- Remuneration of labour
- Remuneration of labour and capital