ZAF_2016_GHS_v02_M
General Household Survey 2016
Name | Country code |
---|---|
South Africa | ZAF |
Household Survey [hh]
Sample survey data [ssd]
Households and individuals
v1.1: Edited, anonymised dataset for public distribution
2018
Version 1.0 was originally downloaded from Stats SA on July 2017.
Version 1.1 was downloaded in August 2018 and introduced several changes to the data:
Q11Relsh - relationship to head; addressed cases in which persons aged < 10 were identified as parents to the head
Q16dfees - Added 0 option, which was excluded previously
Q28aProv - Gauteng and North West were swopped in the questionnaire and data file. Swopped back. Data not affected, just corrected the order.
Q1.3cFAR - father part of household: reviewed based on whether father was part of the household
Q13dFPSN - father person number: reviewed by verifying that personno referred to a male
Q14dMPSN - mother's person number: reviewed by verifying that personno referred to a female
Language spoken inside and outside the household added (this was asked, but not reported previously)
Added new weights - the weights were recalibrated using the 2017 series mid year population estimates
Two duplicates were removed.
The scope of the General Household Survey includes:
Household characteristics: Dwelling type, home ownership, access to water and sanitation, access to services, transport, household assets, land ownership, agricultural production
Individuals' characteristics: demographic characteristics, relationship to household head, marital status, language, education, employment, income, health, fertility, mortality, disability, access to social services
Topic | Vocabulary | URI |
---|---|---|
employment [3.1] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
unemployment [3.5] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT [3] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
DEMOGRAPHY AND POPULATION [14] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
The General Household Survey has national coverage.
The lowest level of geographic aggregation for the data is Province (and metropolitan municipality, where this applies)
The survey covers all de jure household members (usual residents) of households in the nine provinces of South Africa, and residents in workers' hostels. The survey does not cover collective living quarters such as student hostels, old age homes, hospitals, prisons, and military barracks.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Statistics South Africa | Government of South Africa |
From 2015 the General Household Survey (GHS) uses a Master Sample (MS) frame developed in 2013 as a general-purpose sampling frame to be used for all Stats SA household-based surveys. This MS has design requirements that are reasonably compatible with the GHS. The 2013 Master Sample is based on information collected during the 2011 Census conducted by Stats SA. In preparation for Census 2011, the country was divided into 103 576 enumeration areas (EAs). The census EAs, together with the auxiliary information for the EAs, were used as the frame units or building blocks for the formation of primary sampling units (PSUs) for the Master Sample, since they covered the entire country, and had other information that is crucial for stratification and creation of PSUs. There are 3 324 primary sampling units (PSUs) in the Master Sample, with an expected sample of approximately 33 000 dwelling units (DUs). The number of PSUs in the current Master Sample (3 324) reflect an 8,0% increase in the size of the Master Sample compared to the previous (2008) Master Sample (which had 3 080 PSUs). The larger Master Sample of PSUs was selected to improve the precision (smaller coefficients of variation, known as CVs) of the GHS estimates. The Master Sample is designed to be representative at provincial level and within provinces at metro/non-metro levels. Within the metros, the sample is further distributed by geographical type. The three geography types are Urban, Tribal and Farms. This implies, for example, that within a metropolitan area, the sample is representative of the different geography types that may exist within that metro.
The sample for the GHS is based on a stratified two-stage design with probability proportional to size (PPS) sampling of PSUs in the first stage, and sampling of dwelling units (DUs) with systematic sampling in the second stage.After allocating the sample to the provinces, the sample was further stratified by geography (primary stratification), and by population attributes using Census 2011 data (secondary stratification).
The sample weights were constructed in order to account for the following: the original selection probabilities (design weights), adjustments for PSUs that were sub-sampled or segmented, excluded population from the sampling frame, non-response, weight trimming, and benchmarking to known population estimates from the Demographic Analysis Division within Stats SA.
The sampling weights for the data collected from the sampled households were constructed so that the responses could be properly expanded to represent the entire civilian population of South Africa. The design weights, which are the inverse sampling rate (ISR) for the province, are assigned to each of the households in a province.
Mid-year population estimates produced by the Demographic Analysis Division were used for benchmarking. The final survey weights were constructed using regression estimation to calibrate to national level population estimates cross-classified by 5-year age groups, gender and race, and provincial population estimates by broad age groups. The 5-year age groups are: 0–4, 5–9, 10–14, 55–59, 60–64; and 65 and over. The provincial level age groups are 0–14, 15–34, 35–64; and 65 years and over. The calibrated weights were constructed such that all persons in a household would have the same final weight.
The Statistics Canada software StatMx was used for constructing calibration weights. The population controls at national and provincial level were used for the cells defined by cross-classification of Age by Gender by Race. Records for which the age, population group or sex had item non-response could not be weighted and were therefore excluded from the dataset. No additional imputation was done to retain these records.
Household estimates that were developed using the UN headship ratio methodology were used to weight household files. The databases of Census 1996, Census 2001, Community Survey 2007 Census 2011 were used to analyse trends and develop models to predict the number of households for each year. The weighting system was based on tables for the expected distribution of household heads for specific age categories, per population group and province.
Data was collected with a household questionnaire and a questionnaire administered to a household member to elicit information on household members.
Start | End |
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2016-01 | 2016-12 |
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Name | Affiliation | URL | |
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DataFirst | University of Cape Town | www.support.datafirst.org | support@data1st.org |
Public use files, available to all
Statistics South Africa. 2017. General Household Survey 2016 [dataset]. Version 1.1. Pretoria: Statistics SA [producer], 2017. Cape Town: DataFirst [distributor], 2017.
Copyright 2014, Statistics South Africa
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
DataFirst Helpdesk | University of Cape Town | support@data1st.org | www.support.data1st.org/ |
DDI_ZAF_2016_GHS_v02_M
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
DataFirst | University of Cape Town | Metadata Producer |
2018-09-04
Version 02 (September 2018): This DDI is identical to ddi-zaf-datafirst-ghs-2016-v1.1 which was downloaded from the DataFirst website.
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