:
Bolivia:
1.Title of the survey:
Integrated Household Survey (Encuesta Integrada de Hogares - EIH).
2.Organization responsible for the survey:
National Institute of Statistics, Area of Social Statistics (Instituto
Nacional de Estadística, Area de Estadísticas Sociales).
3.Coverage of the survey:
(a) Geographical:
The nine departmental capitals: La Paz, Cochabamba, Santa Cruz, Sucre,
Oruro, Potosí, Tarija, Trinidad and Cobija; and the town of El Alto,
which is separate from La Paz.
(b) Persons covered:
All persons living in private households. Included as members of the
household are persons who live in it for longer than three months
but are not blood relatives of its members, domestic servants living
in the household, etc.
Excluded are collective households (barracks, convents, hotels, etc.).
Information on the armed forces is not collected.
The economically active population comprises persons aged 10 years
and over.
4.Periodicity of the survey:
The survey was first conducted in February/March 1989 and is intended to
take place half-yearly (see History of the Survey, below).
5.Reference period:
The calendar week preceding the interview.
6.Topics covered:
The survey provides information on employment, unemployment, hours of
work, type of wage, income in the main and secondary activity, duration
of employment and unemployment, discouraged and occasional workers,
industry, occupation, status in employment and level of education.
It is also possible to estimate underemployment from the data on hours
of work, income and job seeking.
The EIH is a polythematic survey. It collects information on persons'
activity and other topics in the same unit of investigation, such as
rural-urban and urban-urban migration, education (rates of literacy,
school attendance, languages in common use, etc.) and housing (tenancy
and building materials, services provided, etc.).
7.Concepts and definitions:
(a) Employment:
"The employed population comprises all persons aged 10 years and over
who worked at least one hour during the reference week. Included in
this category are all persons who were:
- working for a salary, wage or other kind of income in an activity,
- working without being paid (including unpaid family workers),
- in employment or a job, but who did not work during the reference
week because they were on holiday or leave or in other similar
circumstances, including illness or injury, maternity or paternity
leave, educational leave (if the person concerned is following a course
of study and is in receipt of an income for that purpose), absence
without leave (always provided that the person does not claim to have
lost his/her job on that account), labour-management dispute, mechanical
breakdowns, etc."
Also included are:
- full- and part-time workers seeking other work during the reference
week;
- persons who performed some work for pay or profit during the
reference week, while being subject to compulsory schooling, or retired
and receiving a pension;
- full- and part-time students working full- or part-time;
- paid and unpaid apprentices and trainees, if their apprenticeship is
in a center or establishment that is a usual workplace;
- participants in employment promotion schemes;
- private domestic servants;
- members of producers' co-operatives, if they worked in their
co-operative in the reference period. If they are merely members who
derive income from shares or sales of property, they are considered as
inactive;
- persons doing unpaid community or social work;
- volunteer and career members of the armed forces.
Excluded from the employed and considered as inactive are:
- paid or unpaid apprentices and persons on regular training courses;
- unpaid family workers temporarily absent from work;
- persons only engaged in their own housework (housewives);
- conscripts and members of civilian services equivalent to
military service.
(b) Underemployment:
The survey does not provide full information on underemployment, but
only indicates conclusions that may be drawn from its information on
hours of work, income and job seeking.
(c) Unemployment:
"The unemployed population comprises all persons aged 10 years and
over who, during the reference week, did not work but were actively
looking for work or awaiting an opportunity to offer goods or
services as self-employed or as independent professional workers."
The unemployed are divided into:
- those who have already worked and are trying to re-enter the
labour market;
- first-time jobseekers.
Also considered as unemployed are:
- persons laid off temporarily or for an indefinite period without
pay;
- persons without work and available for work, who have made
arrangements to start work in a new job at a date after the reference
period (no time limit is set for the new job to begin);
- full- and part-time students seeking full- or part-time work.
Steps taken to find work are not investigated, but periods of
unemployment between jobs, and job search periods, are investigated.
The EIH does not cover seasonal workers awaiting agricultural or other
seasonal work, as the survey does not cover work in rural areas, but if
such workers look for work in town they are classified as unemployed.
Persons willing to offer their services but who did not do so in the
reference period because they thought it was impossible to get a job are
excluded from the unemployed and considered as inactive. They are known
as "discouraged workers".
(d) Hours of work:
This means usual hours, but for self-employed workers may approximate to
hours actually worked. The average hours per day and average days per
week in the main and secondary activities are ascertained and converted
into hours per week. Average hours and days are those the employed
person considers as such, and include overtime hours of attendance, and
normal and abnormal periods of work.
The only hours investigated and reckoned as hours of work are those
actually spent on the activity within the workplace or work station,
including the time at work of self-employed workers and excluding travel
time to and from work. The interviewee also states the number of hours'
overtime spent in his/her activity, whether he/she works on public
holidays or feast days, etc.
Holidays for persons employed on "formal" activities are considered as
part of the period of work.
(e) Informal sector:
No specific treatment is given, but inferences may be drawn from
family workers and/or self-employed workers.
(f) Usual activity:
Data on the usual activity are obtainable from data on seniority at
work. Employment record data are not handled.
8.Classifications used:
Employed and unemployed persons are classified by industry and
occupation. Employed persons only are classified by status in
employment and all persons aged 6 years and over who are covered by
the survey are classified by level of education.
(a) Industry:
Coding is done to the 2-digit level, using the International
Standard Industrial Classification of all Economic Activities
(ISIC-1968), with nine major divisions and 33 divisions.
(b) Occupation:
Occupations are classified in accordance with the Occupational
Classification for the Census of America (COTA-1970), which divides
occupations into 11 categories or groups, with 89 three-digit subgroups.
The nine categories of this classification are regrouped into the
following three categories:
- White collar workers (COAT categories 1-3), comprising professional
workers, public administration officials, other office workers,
managers, directors, etc.
- Production workers: this category covers COTA categories 4 and 6-8,
comprising manual workers in handicrafts, factory hands, etc.
- Workers in services: this category covers COTA categories 5 and 9,
which correspond by and large to workers in services, and workmen and
drivers employed on heavy machinery and general transport equipment.
COTA is convertible to the International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO-1968).
(c) Status in employment:
This relates to the individual worker's position in his work hierarchy.
That position determines how he is paid, the kind of work he does, his
links with the market, use of secondary labour, etc. The occupational
categories concerned are:
- Employees: wage earners and salaried employees, and domestic
employees;
- Self-employed: owners employing labour, independent professional
workers and own-account workers;
- Unpaid workers: unpaid apprentices and unpaid family workers.
(d) Level of education/qualifications:
The level of education is classified in the following groups:
- None,
- Basic,
- Intermediate,
- Medium,
- Technical education,
- Teachers' training college education,
- University education,
- Others.
9.Sample size and design:
(a) The sample frame:
It is provided by the cartography of the latest Population and
Housing Census, which mapped and divided into blocks all the major
populated centres, the capital cities and other important towns in the
country.
(b) The sample:
The sample is based on a two-stage simple random sample design. Taking
the rate of unemployment as a random variable, the size of the
independent sample for each town is first fixed. Certain blocks
(primary sampling units) are then selected from the sample frame. At
the second stage households are selected within the blocks as elementary
units of investigation.
The size of the sample is approximately 5,000 households, giving an
average total of 25,000 persons.
(c) Rotation:
Rotation is not applied.
10.Field work:
(a) Data collection:
Data are obtained by direct interview in the household from each and
every one of its members. There is a permanent basic survey team,
but the interviewers, supervisors and other staff are engaged by
contract for each survey. Data collection takes 15 consecutive days
for each of the capital cities, by interviews lasting on average
45 minutes.
(b) Substitution of ultimate sampling units:
The final units (households) are replaced when more than 50 per cent of
the dwellings selected in the measure of size within the respective
block are unoccupied or refuse response, or when there is no contact
with their occupants.
11.Quality controls:
Field work is supervised by specialist staff using separate systems of
checking and scrutiny, as follows:
- by observation - the supervisor accompanies, observes, corrects and
helps the interviewer during the interview (there is one supervisor for
every four interviewers);
- by reinterview - the supervisor interviews a number of households
that have previously been surveyed and compares his results with the
previous ones;
- by checking - a return visit is made to a number of households
previously interviewed, with the questionnaire filled in at the previous
interview, and a number of topics and questions put by the survey are
checked.
Each and every questionnaire is subjected to critical examination and
coding before being transcribed with a validation programme and
processed by the ARIEL + PLUS programme in a mini-computer. This
programme detects errors and inconsistencies.
12.Weighting the sample:
The results are expanded by expansion coefficients in which the sampling
fraction and rate of coverage are estimated from the global data held on
the population of each town, taking into account the respective sample
sizes, whilst the rate of response is calculated from the actual results
of the survey as regards acceptance and response.
13.Sampling errors:
The results of the 1989 survey are not available yet.
14.Adjustments:
(a) Population not covered:
No adjustment is made.
(b) Under/overcoverage:
Not available for the 1989 survey. The 1988 Permanent Household Survey
showed a 1 per cent error in its estimate of the projection of the
aggregate population of the nine capital cities.
(c) Non-response:
This may be measured from the rate of response, which varies from one
town to another between 0.83 and 0.98 per cent of the total number of
households selected. In this connection the replacement system under
paragraph 10, subparagraph (b) should be borne in mind.
15.Seasonal adjustment:
No seasonal adjustment is made to the survey results. Efforts are
being made to fix the dates of the surveys in such a way that they
reflect seasonal variations.
16.Non-sampling errors:
Not available.
17.History of the survey:
The Integrated Household Survey was conducted for the first time in
February/March 1989. Its forerunners were the Permanent Household
Surveys (Encuestas Permanentes de Hogares - EPH) made by the National
Institute of Statistics between 1980 and 1988, with a different
coverage.
The coverage of the EPH was different because, due to limited funds and
other restrictions, some surveys covered all the capital cities in the
country, some only the cities of the "central axis" (La Paz, Cochabamba
and Santa Cruz) including
Oruro, and others excluded a number of capitals
in Eastern Bolivia such as Cobija and Trinidad.
Moreover, although the surveys were made annually, the months in which
information was collected were different in the various years, because
of seasonal or cyclical factors relating to the coverage of employment.
Also, the categories and concepts tried out as indicators were not
uniform over time (e.g., the employed population was considered as
including persons who during the reference week worked in an occupation
for payment in cash or kind for more than 12 hours weekly, including
unpaid family workers). Occasional attempts were made to follow a
number of EPH indicators every month and/or quarter, but this
periodicity never became a regular system. The only results available
from 1982 to 1988 are therefore annual ones.
It is planned to make the next EIH in the same capital cities, the town
of El Alto and population centres of 10,000 and more inhabitants, with
the object of also covering the rural area at peasant community level in
the medium term.
18.Documentation:
The publications relating to the 1989 EIH are still in course of
preparation, as the results are being processed. The aim is to obtain
the results about three months after the survey.
For information on the former Permanent Household Survey, see:
Instituto Nacional de Estadística: "Encuesta Permanente de Hogares,
1988" (Permanent Household Survey, 1988) (La Paz).
idem: "Encuesta Permanente de Hogares, 1987" (ibid.).
idem: "Serie EPH 1980-1986" (Permanent Household Surveys 1980-1986)
(ibid.)
Besides the results summarised in these publications, information is
available on diskettes for each individual departmental capital city and
for the whole of Bolivia.