Until now, the study of the structure of the family household spending often focused research for a single national uniform in structure due to the consumer. Meanwhile, the research at international level is quite limited. Even so, there are also a number of studies on the structure of spending at the level region as (Avilciņa, Gunta Grīnberga Anastasij-Zālīte, Raivis & Andersons, n.d.; Besa Muwele et al., 2012; Christine Gerstberger & Daniela Yaneva, 2013; Romualdas Genovaitė Liobikienė & Juknys, 2012); ... Research of Romualdas Juknys Genovaitė Liobikienė & (2012) has reviewed the spending structure of Lithuania in the period 1995-2007 to consider the effects from joining the EU to spending structure of households in Lithuania. In the study, the authors have shown that (i) the change in income will contribute to changing the structure of expenditure and (ii) the Lithuania joined the EU have contributed to changing the structure of spending by households in Lithuania have the possibility of access to the goods and services from Europe with a cheaper price. The research of Avilciņa, Gunta Grīnberga Anastasij-Zālīte, Raivis & Andersons (n. d.); Romualdas Juknys Genovaitė Liobikienė & (2012) also pointed out that for households in developing countries, often spending structure is characterized by spending for food, eating often representing high, while spending for education, health and other types of services representing fairly low. For the developed countries, the structure of incentives spending trends reduce food spending and increase the proportion of expenditure on these services, education, health and entertainment.
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