Symposium 2001/18

6 July 2001

 

                                                                                                           English only

 

Symposium on Global Review of 2000 Round of

Population and Housing Censuses: 

Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects

Statistics Division

Department of Economic and Social Affairs

United Nations Secretariat

New York, 7-10 August 2001

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Implementing the UN Census Recommendations on economic characteristics:

An ILO perspective on issues, experiences and possibilities *

Eivind Hoffmann**

                  

CONTENTS

 

A. Introduction. 1

B. Involving the stakeholders. 1

C. Alternative data-collection methods. 2

D. New technologies. 2

E. Follow-up and preparations during the intercensal period. 2

F. Census mapping. 3

G. Post-enumeration surveys. 3

H. Concluding remarks. 3

References. 4

Annex 1: 5

Annex 2: 13

Annex 3: 14

Annex 4: 15

 



 A. Introduction

1.                  Both the revised UN Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses and the Recommendations for the 2000 Censuses of Population and Housing in the ECE Region jointly prepared by UN/ECE and Eurostat include recommendations for a range of economic characteristics. The former makes recommendations for eight characteristics and their value sets, and the latter does so for six “core” and 12 “non-core” topics, where three of the latter can be derived from the others (see United Nations, 1998, and UN/ECE and Eurostat, 1998).

 

2.                  Some economic characteristics have traditionally been among those most commonly included in national censuses—for example, “source of livelihood” or whether the persons are “economically active” and in what type of work. These topics have long been regarded as being among the more complex and expensive variables to include in a census in a manner which will yield reliable results with the degree of detail which the census results can support and important groups of users will need.  The International Labour Office (ILO) therefore has advocated that further guidance should be provided on how to effectively implement the recommendations for these characteristics/topics, either as part of the recommendations or as a supplement to them.  Following the acceptance of the revised Principles and Recommendations, the UN Statistics Division (UNSD) and ILO have cooperated on the preparation of a Guide for the Collection of Economic Characteristics as part III of the UN Handbook of Population and Housing Censuses.  Drafts for chapters on the formulation of questions and response alternatives and on coding strategies and procedures for “industry” and “occupation” were discussed at a meeting of experts convened in 1998.  To expedite availability before the publication of the complete document, they have recently been distributed by the ILO (see Gilbert, 2001, and Hoffman 2001).

 

3.                  This note will briefly review from the perspective of the ILO relevant issues, experiences and possibilities concerning the economic characteristics in relation to the topics specified for discussion at this Symposium.

B. Involving the stakeholders

4.                  Before discussing possible strategies for involving stakeholders in census activities, it is necessary to identify the stakeholders particularly interested in the economic characteristics and the reason for and nature of their interest.  Both their identity and the interest that they have are related to the fact that a census is the only source for detailed statistics on the most important economic resource of a locality, a region and a country, namely, the persons who live and work there. It is the economic activities of these persons and their type of work that are the main determinants of their economic welfare and the basis for future improvements. Thus the stakeholders for the census characteristics that are needed to describe in detail the economic activities and capacities of the population are all those who need to understand the structure of local, regional and national labour markets and resources.  This understanding is needed as a basis for the planning and implementation of investments in human and physical capital; of production, marketing and sales of goods and services; and of policies which can support and promote such activities.[1]  The unique capacity of censuses to give comprehensive and detailed statistics for small geographic areas is particularly important for statistics on participation in economic activities, because in practice most labour markets in a country are local.[2]  However, because it is impossible to identify all the many potential users of such statistics and obtain from them a financial commitment reflecting what they are willing to pay for timely census results of this type, the census planners should seek out those few institutions that have a mandate to represent groups of potential users, as well as relevant ministries and research institutions, to ensure their support for the inclusion of economic characteristics in a manner which can ensure that the resulting statistics have satisfactory quality.  For the economic characteristics such representatives of potential users will include chambers of commerce, employers’ and workers’ organizations as well as companies large enough to operate in or supply many localities.  In principle their support may take the form of contributions to the financing of the census as well as lobbying those responsible for its overall financing.

 

5.                  The above formulation that the inclusion of economic characteristics in the census should be “in a manner which can ensure that the resulting statistics have satisfactory quality” is important. As discussed in Gilbert, 2001, and Hoffmann, 2001, there are many examples of census questionnaires and processing procedures which have been designed and planned in a manner which has resulted in statistics on economic activities with very limited reliability, and thus also limited usefulness. Too often these solutions have been chosen on the basis of undocumented claims that the extra costs of alternatives could not be accommodated by the census budget, even though some seldom-tried alternatives are free—for example, the specification of categories for pre-coded “industry” and “occupation” responses which reflect the structure of the national economy instead of the top-level categories of the respective international classifications.  The implementation of many possible improvements to question formulations is also virtually costless.

C. Alternative data-collection methods

6.                  For 95 per cent of the countries in the world, there are no realistic alternatives to either the current or the next census if one wants to obtain the type of comprehensive, integrated and detailed statistics on the structure of the population’s economic activities that the census can provide.  Even for the 5 per cent of countries, mostly small or medium-sized ones in Europe, that have established the institutional infrastructure as well as the administrative and statistical procedures needed to make the use of administrative records a viable alternative, perhaps in combination with a large sample survey for some characteristics, there is a significant quality reduction in some aspects of the resulting statistics[3].  This is the price that has to be paid for the resulting cost reductions to the census organization and the quality gains[4] for some other aspects of the statistics that can be produced.

 

7.                  In the majority of countries that cannot produce “census-like” statistics from administrative records, the statistics that can be produced from other available sources will always fall short of those which can be obtained from the census in some respects which are important for certain groups of users:

 

·        Even where statistics from large sample surveys of households, such as labour force surveys (LFS), are available they will tend to exclude from their coverage certain “hard-to-observe” population groups, such as “nomads” and those living in institutional households.  An important concern is also that the resulting statistics cannot be produced with sufficient precision to give statistics for the small groups and the small geographic areas which may constitute individual labour markets.[5]

 

·        Even when they are designed to cover all sectors of the economy (and few are), statistics from establishment surveys will tend to exclude from their coverage “establishments” that are small (this is often deliberate), “invisible” because they are indistinguishable from the households of their owner(s), and/or unstable, particularly those in the informal sector, as well as individual own-account workers.  Thus a significant proportion of total employment, as well as all those persons who are unemployed or inactive, will be excluded from such statistics.  An additional consideration is that the personnel records of establishments seldom include the information needed for detailed statistics on the distribution of employed persons according to important characteristics, such as sex, age, educational attainment and occupation, and that even if they do the consequent workload on establishments to provide even simple distributions according to them will be prohibitive.[6]

 

·        Even where they exist, statistics based on administrative records such as tax records, social security records and unemployment registrations will tend to suffer from quality problems related to coverage and timeliness as well as to scope, validity and reliability of the variables which are used to produce statistics for different groups, as indicated above.

 

8.                  However, the fact that some users will be satisfied to some extent by the statistics on the structure of the economically active population produced from sources other than a census, means that whether and how to include any or certain economic characteristics in a census will be a question of priorities.  Hopefully, the process of consultations undertaken as part of the preparations for the census, as well as careful analysis of the costs of including, in an adequate manner, the possible characteristics, will have provided the information needed to understand how the trade-offs relate to the priorities for favoured groups of users.

D. New technologies

9.                  It is difficult to see that there are special considerations related to the use of new technologies or new ways of organizing census operations for the economic characteristics, with one exception: the use of computer-assisted (or automatic) coding (CAC)[7] of “industry” and “occupation”[8].  The manual coding of these variables has traditionally been among the most costly and least reliable elements in the processing of a census[9]: error rates of 20 per cent or more have frequently been reported from quality control studies.  The experiences with the development and use of CAC systems in several countries over the last 20 years have demonstrated (1) that dramatic gains in the productivity and quality of the coding process can be gained from the use of such systems; but also (2) that many of the quality gains have been due to the improved understanding of the coding task and the improved coding indexes and procedures which were necessary for CAC systems to be developed and used effectively, and that these improved tools can and should be used also with manual coding procedures.[10]  It is also clear that to reap the possible productivity gains and cost reductions from the use of CAC systems, they should be completely integrated into the overall census operations and processing procedures.

E. Follow-up and preparations during the intercensal period

10.              Few special considerations emerge from a concern with economic characteristics with respect to issues concerning the retention of institutional memory, organizational structures and archiving in intercensal years.  However, it may be worth pointing out that a programme of regular labour force surveys (LFS) will provide both a good reason to retain in the national statistical office relevant competence and experience on the economic characteristics and coding procedures developed for and during the census, and an opportunity to gain experience and carry out relevant experiments in preparation for the next census.  Studies to establish any systematic differences between the statistics from the two sources will be very useful. If they are carried out both for the census reference period and at regular intervals in the intercensal period, they may provide a basis for projecting in intercensal years statistics similar to those from the census for smaller areas and for groups other than those for which LFS results can be produced with satisfactory precision. They may also assist in the preparations for the next census.

F. Census mapping

11.              Census mapping has two objectives: (1) to facilitate census operations, and (2) to make it possible to identify the location of households in relation to the geographic units for which statistics from the census are to be produced.  Good, large-scale maps are obviously important for both objectives.  Concern with economic characteristics and their use does not add anything to the understanding of how to obtain and update such maps, nor on how to identify the location of dwellings and other structures of interest, but this concern will stress the need to ensure that such locations are documented on the census file in a way that makes it possible to define alternative areas as a function of the interest of the users of the census results.  Where for practical and economic reasons it may not be possible to allocate precise geographic coordinates to each dwelling or structure, it will be important to document, for example, on large-scale maps, aerial photos or satellite images, the precise delineation of small “census tracts” which can be used as building blocks for larger small areas for which statistics will be needed.  Because the area that can be considered a “local labour market” will depend on the presence of public transport services and the quality of roads and tracks for trains and subways, it will be important that areas served by transportation facilities can be approximated by aggregating such basic census tracts.  Statistics on employment and the structure of economic activities in such “labour markets” (or “commuting areas”) will be important supplements to statistics for the areas administered by local governments.

G. Post-enumeration surveys

12.              It is important to carry out investigations into the quality of the census results, both on how well the census has been able to cover the total target population and on the quality of the measurement of the various characteristics included in the census.  Whether a post-enumeration survey (PES) should be one of the instruments of such investigations will depend on the other instruments available and how confident one can be that the measurements resulting from the PES will provide a more accurate reflection of the situation at the time of the census than those that can be obtained by using the same resources to (1) improve the basic census operations; and (2) strengthen other quality control instruments.  For some important groups of the population the actual reference period used will determine the value observed for some of the economic characteristics. This will tend to favour the use of resources to ensure the quality of the census itself rather than to conduct a PES. In addition, when there is a regular LFS survey in the country it may be possible to use it as a vehicle for a PES-type investigation, e.g., by adding a module with census-type questions. It would be particularly unfortunate to drop a regular LFS in the census year, because of the consequent breaks in the LFS time series.  LFS results cannot be replaced by census results, partly because of the influence that the differences in data-collection procedures will have (see also the above remarks on activities in the intercensal period) and partly because of the difference in the timeliness of the results[11].

H. Concluding remarks

13.              Following previous census rounds both UNSD and the UN/ECE Statistics Division have collected and presented overviews of the content of the national censuses undertaken.  In 1990 ILO published the first edition of its Sources and Methods. Labour Statistics. Vol. 5: Total and economically active population, employment and unemployment (population censuses), with a second, updated edition in 1996.  Annex 1 to this note presents a sample description from the latter, as well as a synoptic table summarizing the information about key economic characteristics included in almost all censuses: those used to make the necessary distinction between the employed, unemployed and the not economically active, as well as “industry”, “occupation” and “status in employment”.  Other economic characteristics have been much less “popular”.

 

14.              It is certainly to be hoped on the basis of similar information from the current census round that a number of countries at different levels of economic and social development will be selected for closer review of their actual census procedures and experiences.  To have more systematic information on the costs and benefits of different practices will be useful for the preparations for the next round.  The experiences and opinions of a wide range of users should also be obtained.

 

NOTE

 

15.              This paper was prepared for the United Nations Symposium on Global Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects, organized by the United Nations Statistics Division and held 7-10 August 2001. Suggestions from colleagues to a draft have improved the paper, but the views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the organizers, the ILO or its Bureau of Statistics. The author apologizes for all errors and omissions and would welcome comments and suggestions for improvements and correction. Address: CH-1211 Geneve 22, Switzerland; e-mail: hoffmann@ilo.org.


References

Gilbert, R. (2001). Asking questions on economic characteristics in a population census. STAT working paper, no. 2001/1. International Labour Office, Geneva.

 

Hoffmann, E. (1995). We must use administrative records for official statistics – but how should we use them? Statistical Journal of the United Nations ECE, vol. 12, pp. 41-48.

 

Hoffmann E. (2001).  Coding occupation and industry in a population census. STAT working paper, no. 2001/2. International Labour Office, Geneva.

 

ILO (1996). Sources and Methods. Labour Statistics. Vol. 5: Total and economically active population, employment and unemployment (population censuses) (Second edition). International Labour Office, Geneva.

 

United Nations (1998).  Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1. Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 67/Rev. 1. Sales No. E.98.XVII.8.

 

UN/ECE and Eurostat (1998).  Recommendations for the 2000 Censuses of Population and Housing in the ECE Region.  Statistical Standards and Studies, No. 49.  United Nations, New York and Geneva.

 

United Nations and ILO (forthcoming). Guide for the Collection of Economic Characteristics.  Part III of Handbook of Population and Housing Censuses.  Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 54.  United Nations, New York.

 


Annex 1:

 

Sample description, from ILO (1996):

 

Australia

 

1. Name and address of the organization responsible for the census:

 

Australian Bureau of Statistics, P.O. Box 10, Belconnen ACT 2616.

 

2. Population censuses conducted since 1945 (years):

 

1947, 1954, 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986 and 1991.

The present description relates to the 1991 census (held on 6 August).

 

3. Coverage of the census:

 

(a) Geographical scope:

 

Whole country.

 

(b) Persons covered:

 

All persons of all ages, except foreign diplomats and their families.

 

4. Reference period:

 

The week prior to the census for full- and part-time workers, and the four weeks preceding the census day for jobseekers.

 

5. Main topics:

 

(a) Total population, by sex and age: yes

 

Economically active population by:

(b) Sex and age group: yes

(c) Industry: yes

(d) Occupation: yes

(e) Status in employment: yes

(f) Highest educational level: yes

(g) Hours of work: yes

(h) Other characteristics: yes

 

Re (a): The age is defined in terms of age at last birthday.

 

Re (g): Employed persons, at work, were asked to specify their actual hours of work during the reference period in the main job held.

 

Re (h): The census also collected information on gross income and means of transport used to travel to workplace.

 

6. Concepts and definitions:

 

(a)    Economically active population:  It comprises all persons aged 15 years and over who, during the reference period, were either employed or unemployed, according to the definitions given below. Excluded are persons who did not have a job and did not look for work in the 4-week period immediately prior to the census day; these persons were considered as inactive. Members of the armed forces are included in the definition.

 

(b)   Employment:  Considered as employed are all persons who, during the reference period, performed any full- or part-time work for payment or profit, or any unpaid work in a family business. Home duties are excluded unless payment was received for work in other households. The question used to determine if a person is to be counted as employed was: Last week, did the person have a full-time or part-time job of any kind?  It is reported that the following categories are included:

(1). persons doing unpaid work in family firm or business;

(2). employed persons, temporarily absent from work;

(3). working students with a part time job;

(4). seasonal or occasional workers;

(5). apprentices and trainees.

 

Only persons belonging to categories (1) and (2) can be identified separately according to status in employment and by cross-classification with data on hours worked.

 

(c)    Unemployment:  Considered as unemployed are all persons who were without work and seeking work. To determine if a person is to be counted as unemployed, the question used was: Did the person actively look for work at any time in the last four weeks? Actively looking for work means being registered with the Commonwealth Employment Service; writing, telephoning or applying in person to an employer for work, or advertising for work. Students seeking work are excluded from the definition.

 

7. Classifications used:

 

Only employed persons are classified by “industry”, by “occupation” and by “status in employment”.

 

(a)    Industry:  Based on the questions: For the main job held last week, what was the employer’s trading name and workplace address? and What kind of industry, business or service is carried out by the employer at that address? The answers provided information for industry coding. The industry classification is based on the Australian Standard Industrial Classification (ASIC) and the Industry and Destination Zone Index,  which is a listing of all establishments in Australia known to carry out economic activity. For coding industry, 615 classes were used. Links to the ISIC-rev.2 have been established to the group (4-digit) level.

 

(b)   Occupation:  Based on the questions: In the main job held last week, what was the person's occupation? (give full title; for example, accounts clerk, civil engineering draftsman, fast-foods cook, floor tiller, extruding machine operator; for public servants, state official designation as well as occupation; for armed services personnel, state rank as well as occupation) and What are the main tasks or duties that the person himself/herself usually performs in that occupation? (describe as fully as possible; for example, recording accounts, preparing drawings for dam construction, cooking hamburgers and chips, fixing cork tiles, operating plastic extruding machine). Occupation was classified in terms of the Australian Standard Classification of Occupations (ASCO) and coded to the unit group level of the classification. For coding occupation 337 group codes were used which comprised 282 unit groups, 52 minor groups, eight major groups and three additional codes to process responses which were inadequately described. Links to the ISCO have not been established.

 

(c)     Status in employment:  Based on the question: In the main job held last week, was the person: a wage or salary earner; conducting own business but not employing others; conducting own business and employing others; a helper not receiving wages or salary? For coding status in employment, the four following categories were used: wage or salary earner; self employed; employer; unpaid helper.

 

8. Main differences compared with the previous census:

 

No major difference.

 

9. Publication of the census results:

 

Final census data on the economically active population and its components (employment and unemployment) were available on a state-by-state basis beginning September 1992.  Preliminary results from the 1991 Census were released in a publication series First Counts for Statistical Local Areas (Cat. no. 2701.1-8) on a state-by-state basis from February to April 1992.  The ABS released final census results on a state by state basis in a publication series Census Counts for Small Areas. Detailed data are available on demand from ABS Information Services.  The 1991 census results are also available on floppy disk, magnetic tape, microfiche, cartridge and CD-ROM. For further information see 1991 Census: A Guide to Products and Services (Cat. no. 2910.0) or contact Census Marketing, Australian Bureau of Statistics, P.O. Box 10 Belconnen ACT 2616, phone 61 6 252 7879, fax 61 6 253 1809.

 

 


Table 1: Economic characteristics asked in censuses

 

Armed forces included

Students included

Data on time worked

Classification used

 

 

 

 

Industry

Occupation

Stat. in Emp.

Country, area or territory

Census year

Age limits

Ref. per.

Regular

Con-scripted

With a part time job

Seeking work

Last week or month

Last year

Number of groups

Links to ISIC

Number of digits

Number of groups

Links to ISCO

Number of digits

Number of groups

Albania

1989

15+

no

yes

yes

yes

no

no

.

...

no

.

...

no

.

3

American Samoa

1990

16+

w/y

yes

yes

yes

yes

ah

w

231

Rev.2

...

13

no

.

7

Anguilla

1992

12+

m <