In 1967, Muriel Nissel and Claus Moser started work on "a national survey analysing trends in social welfare", that was to become Social Trends, first published in 1970, and considered to be the "statistician's bible".
[1] Nissel edited Social Trends until 1975, when she began work on the "distribution and redistribution of wealth".
[2] It was produced annually by the Office for National Statistics in the United Kingdom.
It gathers social and economic data from many governmental and other sources to form a comprehensive picture of how British society is at the moment and how it has changed over time.
It covers various different topics and policy areas e.g. housing, crime, income and wealth, transport, population.