This slide provides information about non-money income which is available to individuals and families.
It covers the types of non-money income: Productive income, Hidden income, Community income, Fringe benefits and Psychic income as well as consumer saving.
2. Non-money Income
Apart from money or cash income (rents, profit, interest, wages and salaries), there are
other forms of income.
These kinds of income are important because they free money income to purchase other
goods and services that are needed by the family.
Non-money incomes can be classified into two, they are
Productive and
Hidden Income.
3. Productive Income
This refers to the value of goods and service which are produced within the family
or by individuals for use by the family or themselves as well as the value of goods
owned by the family.
Productive income includes household production and service income.
4. Household Production
This refers to the goods and services that are produced by family members within
the family for their use OR they are goods and services that are provided by the
family members for themselves and the family as a group.
Each time you do some work which uses your labour, time and talent instead of
paying someone outside the family to do it, you are contributing income.
Examples of household production: the father preparing the family meals, the
mother cleaning the home.
5. Service Income
This comes from the use of services obtained from the family’s durable goods or
property such as the family car, sewing machine, the house, radio, television etc.
These give you and the family services that last over a number of years.
They contribute indirectly to increase income.
They can also serve as cash reserves as the items can be sold second-hand.
The prices may not be as when they were purchased but the potential of income to be
obtained can be assessed from time to time.
6. Hidden Income
Hidden income, income in kind or non-money income include
Community Income
Fringe benefits from employment,
Psychic income and
Consumer saving
7. Community Income
It refers to the value of public facilities in the community which are available for use by
the individual and the family.
These are schools, health clinics, and hospitals, roads, banks, shops, libraries, markets,
police protection, Soldiers that keep peace etc.
Families pay for these service in small amounts through taxes.
The government provides these services for our benefits. These free services are part of
our income because we would have had to pay for them if we were to provide them
ourselves.
8. Fringe Benefits
These are the various kinds of benefits that employees gain from their employer or come
with their jobs. Examples are:
free medical and health care; paid holiday or leave; free housing or car, educational or
training benefits for themselves, scholarships for their children
Employee benefits help to increase purchasing power because otherwise the individual
would have to allocate part of his or her cash income to acquire the items or pay for the
facilities.
9. Psychic Income
This is the feeling of satisfaction obtained from the use of resources.
This type of income is not tangible and difficult to measure because it
is rather subjective in nature.
Example: The satisfaction children from the use of the family’s car.
10. Consumer Savings
This is the money individuals and families are able to save when shopping for goods and
services because they are good at bargaining, they know the market, the quality and
know how to obtain what they want at reduced prices.
Strategies used by individuals and families to save money when purchasing goods and
services at reduced prices include:
Bargaining, bulk purchases and seasoning purchases.
Purchasing second-hand items and clothing and
Seasonal purchasing; during the periods that goods are reduced for sale.
11. Thank you
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