Question Author
@dr b
//I suppose it would be too much to ask to report mean, median, mode, provide the full frequency distribution (say in bands of 1000), and then let people make of it what they will? Or is that placing too great a demand on people's numeracy? //
I wouldn't like to say that it's beyond people's numeracy. Then again, I don't think I learnt the distinction between the three types until some time after school so, at one stage it would have been beyond mine.
It's not a particularly difficult concept to grasp, once explained.
Quoting all three would be "too much information" in this sound-bite age. Anyone who wants detailed stats can look up earnings figures on Wiki, at their leisure.
Again, what I'm driving at is trying to get a feel for 'average' in terms of what is the most common experience. If there are 60 million of us and 30 million earn less than 26k, with a national minimum of 13k then you only need to display 13 of the £1000 bands to see where the biggest lump lies.
Above 26k, grading structure tends to make salaries go up in ever larger leaps so the histogram would be low numbers in any given band and I acknowledge that you'd need ever widening bands to bridge the yawning gap between 26k and the multi-million city-trader levels.
In any case, people on over 26k aren't financially uncomfortable although, if anything, it must be harder to negotiate for a raise if you're already demonstrably over the median income level.