ICT usage in households

Updated: 22 September 2023

Next update: Not yet determined

Share of Norwegians between 16 and 79 years that have bought/ordered films or music online the last 3 months
Share of Norwegians between 16 and 79 years that have bought/ordered films or music online the last 3 months
2023
61
%
ICT usage in the population
ICT usage in the population
2017201920212023
Share of population aged 16-79 - Internet use
Use of Internet last 3 months96989999
Used the internet for e-mail91939696
Used the internet for banking91949596
Used the internet for selling goods or services32323840
Bought/ordered films/music42486361
Bought/ordered clothes/sports goods44495252
Bought/ordered travel or holiday accomodation54603459
Explanation of symbols

About the statistics

The survey gives information about the use of internet by the population. The survey covers areas such as online shopping, digital skills, data security, the use of government websites, internet banking, social media and online news.

ICT

Information and communications technology. All kinds of technology used for communication as well as treatment, presentation and storage of information.

Household
A household includes all persons who resides permanently in the residence and who have a common food budget. Persons who reside permanently in the residence but are away from the residence, due to for instance work, are also included in the household.

Type of household
We get information about the respondent’s type of household from the national population register. Households are grouped into households with children, and households without children. The definition for children used is persons who were under the age of 18 at the turn of the year before the last publication.

Household income
The sum of the household net income the year before the last publication, rounded to the nearest 1 000 kr.

Not relevant

Name: ICT usage in households
Topic: Technology and innovation

Not yet determined

Division for Business Dynamics Statistics

National.

Annual.

The statistics is published in the second half of the year.

The results are reported to Eurostat and OECD.

Primary data are deleted after two years.

The survey is developed through a European project, initiated by Eurostat and OECD.

The survey was conducted for the first time in the spring of 2003. The statistics were published for the first time in the autumn of 2003.

EU-flagg med finansieringserkæring. EU flag with Funded by the European Union

Eurostat is also an important user of the statistic. Public authorities, business and trade associations, research institutes and media are important users.

No external users have access to the statistics and analyses before they are published and accessible simultaneously on ssb.no at 8 am. Prior to this, a minimum of three months' advance notice is given inthe Statistics Release Calendar.

The statistics are comparable to corresponding statistics from other European countries.

Statistics from other countries can be found in Eurostat's database.

Parts of the survey are also used in EU’s "Digital Economy and Society Index" for comparison.

Some of the variables, such as access to computers and internet, are also surveyed in Statistics Norway’s “Norwegian media barometer”.

Not relevant

Regulation (EC) No. 808/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 April 2004 concerning Community statistics on the Information Society.

The statistics cover the Norwegian population between 16 and 79 years. Statistical unit is person. For questions regarding the household, the household is the statistical unit.

The sample is drawn from the national population register. We draw 5 000 persons between the age of 16 and 79 years as of 31.12 the year before the survey.

We collect background variables from several registers:

  • The income registry – The household income after tax
  • The registry of education – The educational level of the person
  • The national population register – Type of household, country of birth, citizenship and municipality of residence.

The survey is a social survey where interviews lay the basis for the statistics. The interviews were until 2019 done as a part of Statistics Norway’s Omnibus survey. The survey is from 2020 a stand-alone survey, which means that those who are interviewed are only asked about the use of ICT.

The data collection was until 2019 done by telephone interviews. In 2020 it was also possible to answer the survey via a web-questionnaire. From 2021 the data collection is mainly done via a web-questionnaire, with the option of answering via telephone interview for those who prefer it.

The interviews are carried out April/May every year. Those who are selected for interviews are not obliged to let themselves be interviewed. Those who are interviewed answers for both themselves and their household.

The interviewer uses a PC during the telephone interview. The questions are read from the screen, and the answers are registered directly. This reduces the possibility of asking the questions incorrectly. The answers are also easier to control with set rules for valid answers.

The numbers represent the use of ICT in both individuals and in households. The numbers are therefore weighted. The weight of a unit tells you how many units in the population the sample unit represents. The goal of weighting the numbers is to gross up the numbers so that they, after non-response, correspond as closely as possible to the population.

Not relevant

The interviewers and all the others who works at Statistics Norway has obligation to maintain secrecy. Statistics Norway will never publish or spread information about what an individual has answered.

The survey was conducted for the first time in 2003, and most of the variables are comparable over time.

This survey was mainly done via web-questionnaire. Some questions may be misinterpreted by the respondents.

The sample is based on Statistics Norway’s general plan for sample selection, and the sample is partially drawn in two steps. This means that the uncertainty in the numbers are slightly higher than in a randomly drawn sample.

If the statistical unit is a person, then the sample can be viewed as a self-weighting sample. This means that we do not have to consider the probability of selection when calculating weights.

When the statistical unit is the household, we must consider that large households have a higher probability of selection. The weights are therefore adjusted according to the size of the household.

Not relevant

Contact

Bruk av IKT i husholdningene

ikthus@ssb.no