Abstract

Geodemographics is a spatially explicit classification of socio-economic data, which can be used to describe and analyse individuals by where they live. Geodemographic information is used by the public sector for planning and resource allocation but it also has considerable use within commercial sector applications. Early geodemographic systems, such as the UK’s ACORN (A Classification of Residential Neighbourhoods), used only area-based census data, but more recent systems have added supplementary layers of information, e.g. credit details and survey data, to provide better discrimination between classes. Although much more data has now become available, geodemographic systems are still fundamentally built from area-based census information. This is partly because privacy laws require release of census data at an aggregate level but mostly because much of the research remains proprietary. Household level classifications do exist but they are often based on regressions between area and household data sets. This paper presents a different approach for creating a geodemographic classification at the individual level using only census data. A generic framework is presented, which classifies data from the UK Census Small Area Microdata and then allocates the resulting clusters to a synthetic population created via microsimulation. The framework is then applied to the creation of an individual-based system for the city of Leeds, demonstrated using data from the 2001 census, and is further validated using individual and household survey data from the British Household Panel Survey.

Highlights

  • Geodemographics is widely defined as the analysis of people based on where they live

  • A link to the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) was established. This link enabled each of the individual records in the BHPS to be assigned to one of five Small Area Microdata (SAM) clusters

  • The framework presented and discussed in this paper is one of the first fully open and transparent methodologies geared towards individual-level classification that uses only data from the UK census

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Summary

Introduction

Geodemographics is widely defined as the analysis of people based on where they live. It is concerned with segmenting the population into homogeneous groups based on a range of characteristics to enable the profiling of neighbourhood areas for commercial and public service planning applications (Longley 2017). In the UK, the concept can be dated back to the 1970s and evolved from coarse scale census-based classifications to systems nowadays that make use of a myriad of individual and lifestyle data (Harris et al 2005).

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