Government Expenditure on Social Security Benefits: January-December 2023
Be advised that the second salient point has been amended from The 1,728 additional Two-Thirds pensioners was the principal catalyst for the reported rise in Contributory Benefits. Online document was updated on 9 April 2024 at 08:30hrs.

- Contributory Benefits outlay totalled €1,038.7 million by the end of December 2023, 7.5 per cent higher than in 2022.
- The number of Two-Thirds pensioners increased by 1,728 in 2023.
- Non-Contributory expenditure amounted to €269.5 million, an 11.1 per cent increase from 2022.
- The largest cohort of Contributory beneficiaries was registered under the Two-Thirds Pension (59,660).
- A total of 95,579 families obtained the Additional COLA Household Mechanism by the end of December 2023.
Government Expenditure on Social Security Benefits: January-December 2023
Government Expenditure on Social Security Benefits: January-December 2023
Be advised that the second salient point has been amended from The 1,728 additional Two-Thirds pensioners was the principal catalyst for the reported rise in Contributory Benefits. Online document was updated on 9 April 2024 at 08:30hrs.

Social Security Benefits Expenditure
Between January and December 2023, spending on Social Security Benefits totalled €1,308.2 million, an 8.3 per cent rise from the previous year. Higher expenditure was reported for both Contributory (€72.7 million) and Non-Contributory Benefits (€27.0 million) (Table 1).
Government spending towards Contributory Benefits amounted to €1,038.7 million, a 7.5 per cent rise from 2022. Pensions in respect of Retirement recorded the largest increase of €44.5 million, resulting partly from an additional 1,728 persons in receipt of the Two-Thirds Pension. Further increases were registered under Contributory Bonus (€16.3 million) and Pensions in respect of Widowhood (€12.1 million) (Table 2).
By the end of December 2023, €269.5 million went towards Non-Contributory Benefits, an 11.1 per cent increase in comparison to the previous year. All benefit categories registered increases, with the main ones recorded under Child Allowance (€7.3 million), Total Supplementary Allowance (€6.1 million) and Total Social Assistance (€3.7 million) (Table 3).
In comparison to 2022, an additional €20.8 million was spent on social security benefits between October and December 2023, amounting to €327.7 million. Contributory expenditure rose by €18.6 million, with the largest increase registered under Pensions in respect of Retirement (€12.4 million) (Table 4). Furthermore, spending towards Non-Contributory Benefits increased by €2.3 million, with the largest growth recorded under Child Allowance (€3.7 million) (Table 5).
Social Security Beneficiaries
During 2023, the largest number of Contributory beneficiaries was recorded under the Two-Thirds Pension (59,660). The same benefit reported the highest increase among recipients, with 1,728 additional pensioners when compared to 2022. On the other hand, the biggest drop in recipients was registered under Sickness Benefit (5,693) (Table 2).
The Additional COLA Household Mechanism reported the highest number of Non-Contributory recipients, with 95,579 beneficiaries by the end of 2023. The same benefit also recorded the largest increase in recipients at 54,801, while the largest decline in recipients was witnessed under Supplementary Allowance (521) (Table 3).
In the final quarter of 2023, the Two-Thirds Pension (57,710) and Additional COLA Household Mechanism (92,109) were the most received Contributory and Non-Contributory Benefits, respectively (Tables 4 and 5).
Chart 1. Social Security Benefits Expenditure
January-December in € million
No Data Found
Contributory Benefits
January-December 2023
Non-Contributory Benefits
January-December 2023
Tables
Tables
Be advised that the second salient point has been amended from The 1,728 additional Two-Thirds pensioners was the principal catalyst for the reported rise in Contributory Benefits. Online document was updated on 9 April 2024 at 08:30hrs.
Methodological Notes
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