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Karen Bowerman reports for BBC News
"For the first time most of our money is being spent on leisure"
 real 28k

Thursday, 25 November, 1999, 09:50 GMT
UK 'buying fun and technology'
We spend more on holidays than ever before

Britons now spend more on leisure activities than anything else, according to a study.

The survey by the Office for National Statistics says the average household spends £60 a week on leisure goods and services - for the first time, more than the average shopping bill.

Average weekly household spending
£60 Leisure goods and services
£59 Food and non-alcoholic drinks
£57 Housing
£52 Motoring
£22 Clothing
£14 Alcohol
£12 Fuel and power
£9 Tobacco
£8 Fares and travel
Today's households spend just £59, or 17%, of their £350 incomes on food.

This compares with 30 years ago when the average household spent 26% of their total income on food - £64 in today's prices.

Besides leisure - which covers areas such as electrical equipment, holidays, sports and cinema - the UK's other passion appears to be computing.

One in three households now have their own computer - and for the first time, researchers asked people whether they had access to the internet from home. One in 10 families said they did.

One in three households own a computer
Taking a long-term view, spending on computing has risen dramatically over the past 10 years - from 6 to 30%. And it has risen four-fold in the last 30 years.

However, when it comes to technology there is a sharp divide between low-income and high-income households.

Nearly a third of the nation's highest earners now have internet connection, for example, while less than 5% of poorer households have the chance to go on-line.

Households with computers
33% of all households
10% of low income households
70% of high income households
Expenditure on mobile phone accounts soared by 25% last year and people also forked out 8% more on other telephone accounts.

In 1970, only 35% of households had a telephone at all.

Households with internet connection
10% of all households
1-4% of low income households
32% of high income households
When it comes to food, the survey - extrapolated from about 6,600 household diaries - has thrown up some strange findings.

Spending on potatoes has risen by a dramatic 35%, which may be because of higher prices. But that on pasta has dropped by 15% and no-one as yet seems to know why.

Households in Northern Ireland spend less on food than anywhere else in the UK except for meat, where they spend 36% more than the national average.

Pasta - down 15% but no-one knows why
It seems the BSE scare may have also left its mark. The amount of money we now spend on beef is almost half what it was 10 years ago.

In comparison, spending on poultry has risen, with households in London spending more than twice as much on chicken and other birds, as they do on beef and veal.

As for other regional variations, the survey found that people in northwest England spend the most on alcohol at around £16 a week, while those in Northern Ireland spend the least at just £11.

Changes from previous year
+13% Takeaways
+35% Gas
-5% Electricity
-17% National Lottery
+25% Mobile phones
Londoners buy the most wine but it is the Scots who drink the most spirits, downing twice the UK average.

In general, total weekly expenditure per household was highest in London at £380 compared with £280 a week in the North East.

Households in Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland spent less generally than those in England.

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See also:
28 Jan 99 |  UK
Women lead social change
20 Jan 99 |  UK
Save now - buy later
31 Oct 97 |  UK
High-tech spending boom
30 Sep 99 |  UK
Survey emphasises north-south divide

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