NGA_2021-2024_NLPS_v09_M
National Longitudinal Phone Survey 2021-2024
Phase 2
NGA HFPS 2021-24
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Nigeria | NGA |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
The Nigeria National Longitudinal Phone Survey (NLPS) is a high-frequency phone survey of households, which was initially designed to follow the same households over time making it a powerful tool for studying and understanding the socio-economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria.
From April 2020 to April 2021, the NBS has successfully implemented the Nigeria COVID-19 NLPS Phase 1 (https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/3712) with technical support from a World Bank team from the Development Data Group (DECDG) and the Poverty and Equity Global Practice. In Phase 1, the NBS conducted 12 rounds of monthly phone interviews with over 1,700 households that were selected from the General Household Survey-Panel (GHS-Panel) 2018/19. The extensive information collected in the GHS-Panel just over a year prior to the pandemic provided a rich set of background information on the Nigeria NLPS households which can be leveraged to assess the differential impacts of the health crisis in the country.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Version 09: Edited, anonymized dataset for public distribution
2024-10-09
This version includes datasets from Baseline (Round 1), Round 2, Round 3, Round 4, Round 5, Round 6, Round 7, Round 8, Round 9, Round 10, Round 11 and Round 12 surveys.
The Nigeria National Longitudinal Phone Survey 2021-2024 covered the following topics:
National coverage
Name | Affiliation |
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National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) | Federal Government of Nigeria |
Name | Role |
---|---|
The World Bank | Collaborated in the implementation of the survey |
60_decibels | Collaborated in the implementation of the survey |
Name | Abbreviation | Role |
---|---|---|
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation | BMGF | Funded the study |
Federal Government of Nigeria | FGN | Funded the study |
United States Agency for International Development | USAID | Funded the study |
The World Bank | WB | Funded the study |
The Global Financing Facility for Women, Children and Adolescents | GFF | Funded the study |
Busara Center | BC | Funded the study |
BASELINE (ROUND 1): Wave 4 of the GHS-Panel conducted in 2018/19 served as the frame for the Nigeria NLPS surveys. The GHS-Panel sample includes 4,976 households that were interviewed in the post-harvest visit of the fourth wave in January/February 2019. This sample of households is representative nationally as well as across the 6 geopolitical Zones that divide up the country. In every visit of the GHS-Panel, phone numbers are collected from interviewed households for up to 4 household members and 2 reference persons who are in close contact with the household in order to assist in locating and interviewing households who may have moved in subsequent waves of the survey. This comprehensive set of phone numbers as well as the already well-established relationship between NBS and the GHS-Panel households made this an ideal frame from which to conduct the NLPS in Nigeria.
Among the 4,976 households interviewed in the post-harvest visit of the GHS-Panel in 2019, 4,934 (99.2%) provided at least one phone number. Around 90 percent of these households (4,440) provided a phone number for at least one household member while the remaining 10 percent only provided a phone number for a reference person. For the second phase of the NLPS, all 4,440 GHS-Panel households with household member contact details were included in the sample to be contacted. This included the sample of households from the first phase of the NLPS who had household member contact details (2,701 of 3,000). Based on the response rate in the first phase of the NLPS of 65 percent, this was expected to yield an interviewed sample of nearly 2,900 households that is both nationally representative as well as representative of urban and rural areas of the country.
ROUND 2: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview all 2,922 households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2. The second round of the NLPS Phase 2 also included individual-level data collection on the migration history of household members. For the migration module, information on adult (15 years or older) members of the household was targeted, including respondents that fall into this age range. However, information was not captured for all adult members. In order to limit the burden for respondents and interviewers in cases where the number of adult members is large, a maximum of 6 household members were selected (in addition to the main respondent) to capture information on migration. Therefore, for households with less than 6 adult members, all eligible members were included. However, 93 percent of interviewed households had 6 or less adult members and only 7 percent had more than six. For the 7 percent with more than 6 adult members, 6 members were randomly selected from among the pool of eligible members. The selection was stratified by sex with an equal split of 3 male and 3 females was targeted, depending on the pool of eligible males and females. However, the application of selection as relatively rare.
ROUND 3: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview all 2,811 households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2, excluding 41 households that refused in Round 2. The third round of the NLPS Phase 2 also included individual-level data collection on employment and job history of household members. For the employment and job history modules, information on adult (15 years or older) members of the household was targeted, including respondents that fall into this age range. However, information was not captured for all adult members. In order to limit the burden for respondents and interviewers in cases where the number of adult members is large, a maximum of 4 household members were selected (in addition to the main respondent) to capture information on employment and job history. Therefore, for households with less than 4 adult members, all eligible members were included.
However, 90 percent of interviewed households had 4 or less adult members and only 10 percent had more than four. For the 10 percent with more than 4 adult members, 4 members were randomly selected from among the pool of eligible members. The selection was stratified by sex with an equal split of 2 male and 2 females was targeted, depending on the pool of eligible males and females. The selection of eligible household members in Round 3 was conditional to the selection conducted in Round 2 for the migration module. In that round, up to 6 household members were selected (15 years or older) to answer the migration module. However, the application of selection as relatively rare.
ROUND 4: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview all 2,852 households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2, excluding 70 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 5: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,824 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 98 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 6: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,799 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 123 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 7: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,784 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 138 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 8: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,771 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 151 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 9: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,753 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 169 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 10: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,743 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 179 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 11: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,732 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 190 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
ROUND 12: Interviewers attempted to contact and interview 2,724 households consisting of households that were successfully interviewed in the baseline (round 1) of the NLPS Phase 2 excluding 198 households that refused in previous rounds of the survey.
BASELINE (ROUND 1): All 4,440 households were contacted in the first round of this second phase of the NLPS. 71 percent of sampled households were successfully contacted. Of those contacted, 93 percent or 2,922 households were fully interviewed. These 2,922 households constitute the final successful sample and will be contacted in subsequent rounds of the survey. Among those household that were contacted, only 121 refused to be interviewed (about 4% of successfully contacted households). Among the sample of households who were not successfully contacted, the predominant reason for noncontact was that the phone was switched off at every attempt (18% of all households). Wrong numbers and non-existent numbers were also present but less common affecting only 4.8 and 2.5 percent of sampled households while for 2.6 percent of households the phone was ringing (and thus an active line and phone) but no one was answering.
ROUND 2: 2,797 households (95.7% of the 2,922 attempted) were contacted and 2,750 (94.1%) were successfully interviewed in the second round. Of those contacted, 36 households refused outright to be interviewed and 10 were partially interviewed. For the individual-level data collection, of 7,653 adult members of the household in round 2 (excluding the main respondent), information was collected on 7,058 or about 92.2 percent of eligible individuals. In addition, 2,750 main respondents were interviewed bringing the final sample of adult members with migration information to 9,808. Although interviewers made attempts to collect migration information directly from each individual selected, it proved exceedingly difficult to do so. As a result, only 34.6% of individual responses were obtained from the actual individual in question with the remaining 65.4% being collected via proxy (typically provided by the main respondent).
ROUND 3: 2,694 households (93.5% of the 2,881 attempted) were contacted and 2,647 (91.9%) were successfully interviewed in the third round. Of those contacted, 21 households refused outright to be interviewed and 22 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,647 successfully interviewed households, 2,575 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all three rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. The third round of the NLPS Phase 2 also included individual-level data collection on employment and job history of household members. For the individual-level data collection, of 7,887 adult members of the household in round 3 (excluding the main respondent), information was collected on 5,942 or about 75.3 percent of eligible individuals. In addition, 2,665 main respondents were interviewed bringing the final sample of adult members with employment information to 8,597.
ROUND 4: 2,646 households (92.8% of the 2,852 attempted) were contacted and 2,605 (91.3%) were successfully interviewed in the fourth round. Of those contacted, 25 households refused outright to be interviewed and 8 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,605 successfully interviewed households, 2,431 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all four rounds of the phase 2 survey so far.
ROUND 5: 2,610 households (92.4% of the 2,824 attempted) were contacted and 2,574 (91.1%) were successfully interviewed in the fifth round. Of those contacted, 25 households refused outright to be interviewed and 5 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,574 successfully interviewed households, 2,319 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all five rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the five rounds.
ROUND 6: 2,495 households (89.1% of the 2,799 attempted) were contacted and 2,461 (87.9%) were successfully interviewed in the sixth round. Of those contacted, 13 households refused outright to be interviewed and 20 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,461 successfully interviewed households, 2,174 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all six rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the six rounds.
ROUND 7: 2,482 households (89.2% of the 2,784 attempted) were contacted and 2,351 (84.4%) were successfully interviewed in the seventh round. Of those contacted, 15 households refused outright to be interviewed and 18 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,351 successfully interviewed households, 1,957 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all seven rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the seven rounds.
The seventh round of the NLPS Phase 2 included a farmer annual profile module which was fielded to agricultural households. The agricultural households (engaged in either crop or livestock farming) were identified using the data collected during the fifth round (Section 13 Farmer Screening). Among 2,784 households that interviewers attempted to contact, 1,897 households were agricultural households. Of these households, 91 could not be interviewed because the selected famer was not available to respond to the interview.
Within the selected agricultural households, one household member was pre-selected to be the respondent (“selected farmer”) and interviewers attempted to contact the selected farmer for an interview. Farmers were selected in order to maintain an approximate balance of male and female respondents. The Farmer Screening implemented in the fifth round identified the male and female member of the household who is most knowledgeable about the household’s farming activities.
Out of the total sample of 2,784 households, 1,897 of them were selected to respond to the farmer annual profile module. For the selection of target respondents, two cases needed to be considered:
a) The household only had one person who was the most knowledgeable about the household’s farming activities (886 households). For those cases, we automatically selected the most knowledgeable person as the selected farmer (620 males and 266 females)
b) The household had two people (one male and one female member) classified as the most knowledgeable about the household’s farming activities (1,011 households). For those households, we randomly selected respondents to fulfill the quota to reach an approximate balance of male and female respondents (328 males and 683 females)
ROUND 8: 2,433 households (87.8% of the 2,771 attempted) were contacted and 2,402 (86.7%) were successfully interviewed in the eighth round. Of those contacted, 18 households refused outright to be interviewed and 8 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,402 successfully interviewed households, 1,852 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all eight rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the eight rounds.
ROUND 9: 2,451 households (89.0% of the 2,753 attempted) were contacted and 2,429 (89.0%) were successfully interviewed in the ninth round. Of those contacted, 10 households refused outright to be interviewed and 7 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,429 successfully interviewed households, 1,791 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all nine rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the nine rounds.
ROUND 10: 2,594 households (94.6% of the 2,743 attempted) were contacted and 2,573 (93.8%) were successfully interviewed in the tenth round. Of those contacted, 10 households refused outright to be interviewed and 10 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,573 successfully interviewed households, 1,755 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all ten rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the ten rounds.
ROUND 11: 2,515 households (92.1% of the 2,732 attempted) were contacted and 2,484 (90.9%) were successfully interviewed in the eleventh round. Of those contacted, 8 households refused outright to be interviewed and 10 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,484 successfully interviewed households, 1,677 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all eleven rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the eleven rounds.
ROUND 12: 2,475 households (90.9% of the 2,724 attempted) were contacted and 2,454 (90.1%) were successfully interviewed in the twelfth round. Of those contacted, 8 households refused outright to be interviewed and 12 were partially interviewed. Of the 2,454 successfully interviewed households, 1,632 were households that have been successfully interviewed in all twelve rounds of the phase 2 survey so far. These are the households that form a complete panel across the twelve rounds.
BASELINE (ROUND 1): In order to produce national estimates from the successfully interviewed sample, weights must be applied to the information provided by sampled households. Weights for the GHS-Panel serve as the basis for the Nigeria NLPS surveys, but the weights must be adjusted to reflect the selection and interviewing process. The weights for the Nigeria NLPS were calculated in several stages.
In subsequent rounds of the survey, steps 4, 5, and 6 will be applied to the final baseline weights.
The baseline (round 1) weights are located in the household-level data file (p2r1_sect_a_2_5_6_9a_12.dta) under the variable name wt_p2round1.
ROUND 2: In Round 2, several different weights are provided: one at the household-level and three at the individual-level. The household weights are the same as was provided in previous round. For the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in Round 1 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 2 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r2_sect_a_2_2a_2b_6_12) in the variable named wt_p2round2.
Given the focus on individual migration information in round 2 and the selection steps outlined above for the sample of adult members, an additional three individual-level weights were calculated and provided in the round 2 data. The individual weights for the migration module were calculated according to:
w_ish=w_h x (n_hs/N_hs )^(-1)
Where w_ih is the sampling weight for individual i who is sex s (male or female) in household h, w_h is the final household level weight (i.e., wt_p2round2), N_hs is the total number of eligible adult household members (15 years or older) of sex s in household h and n_hs is the equivalent number of selected eligible individuals in the household. The individual weights were then calibrated to correspond to the sex and age distribution of the total adult population according to the post-harvest visit of the GHS-Panel. The age groups considered in the calibration were 15-24, 25-34, 35-44, 45-54, 55-64, and 65 years or older, all further disaggregated by sex (male/female).
The basic individual weight described above is the cross section individual weight that considers all individuals that migration information was collected on. This weight is called wt_migr_p2r2 and can be found in the individual-level data file (p2r2_sect_2_2a). However, an additional two weights are provided for the panel of individuals interviewed in the GHS-Panel wave 4 and round 2 of the NLPS Phase II (i.e., excluding individuals added in any round of the NLPS). The first weight (wt_migr_p2r2_pp_panel) contains the weight for individuals interviewed in the post-planting visit of the GHS-Panel wave 4 and the second (wt_migr_p2r2_ph_panel) contains the weight for individuals interviewed in the post-harvest visit of the GHS-Panel wave 4.
ROUND 3: In Round 3, several different weights are provided: two at the household-level and three at the individual-level. The two household weights provided are cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 3 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 3 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all three rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 3 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r3_sect_a_2_5_6_6c_9a_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round3 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round3_panel.
Given the focus on individual employment and job history information in round 3 and the selection steps outlined above for the sample of adult members, an additional three individual-level weights were calculated and provided in the round 3 data. The individual weights for the employment and job history modules were calculated according to:
w_ish=w_h x (n_hs/N_hs )^(-1)
Where w_ih is the sampling weight for individual i who is sex s (male or female) in household h, w_h is the final household level weight (i.e., wt_p2round3), N_hs is the total number of eligible adult household members (15 years or older) of sex s in household h and n_hs is the equivalent number of selected eligible individuals in the household. The individual weights were then calibrated to correspond to the sex and age distribution of the total adult population according to the post-harvest visit of the GHS-Panel (The age groups considered in the calibration were 15-24, 25-34, 35-44, 45-54, 55-64, and 65 years or older, all further disaggregated by sex (male/female).
The basic individual weight described above is the cross section individual weight that considers all individuals that migration information was collected on. This weight is called wt_emp_p2r3 and can be found in the individual-level data file (p2r3_sect_2_6b_6c.dta). However, an additional two weights are provided for the panel of individuals interviewed in the GHS-Panel wave 4 and round 2 of the NLPS Phase II (i.e., excluding individuals added in any round of the NLPS). The first weight (wt_emp_p2rr_pp_panel) contains the weight for individuals interviewed in the post-planting visit of the GHS-Panel wave 4 and the second (wt_emp_p2r3_ph_panel) contains the weight for individuals interviewed in the post-harvest visit of the GHS-Panel wave 4.
ROUND 4: In Round 4, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 4 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 4 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all four rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 4 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r4_sect_a_2_5_5g_6_11a_11b_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round4 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round4_panel.
ROUND 5: In Round 5, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 5 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 5 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all five rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 5 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r5_sect_a_2_5_6_9a_11b_13_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round5 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round5_panel.
ROUND 6: In Round 6, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 6 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 6 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all six rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 6 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r6_sect_a_2_5_6_8_11b_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round6 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round6_panel.
ROUND 7: In Round 7, three different household weights are provided. Two household weights are the same as the ones that have been provided in previous rounds, that is cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 7 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 7 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all seven rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of these household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in BASELINE (steps 4, 5 and 6).
Given the additional module (farmer annual profile) that was fielded only for agricultural households identified during round 5, an additional weight for agricultural households was estimated. A similar process to the weight adjustments was adopted with some additional considerations to improve representativeness of the results for crop and livestock farming households. The round 5 of phase 2 weights were first adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse (steps 4 and 5 in section 2.2) following the same ratio adjustment to preserve the sum of weights for eligible households at zone-level as well as across three different types of agricultural households based on their reported agricultural activities in round 5 of phase 2: (1) those only engaged in crop farming, (2) those only engaged in livestock raising, and (3) those engaged in both crop farming and livestock raising. Following these adjustments, the weights were then calibrated (step 6 in section 2.2.) according to the profile of characteristics from GHS-Panel Wave 4 for crop and livestock farming households. This calibration step will further help to counteract any bias and help to ensure the estimates for this subsample are broadly representative of crop and livestock farming households in Nigeria.
The round 7 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r7_sect_a_2_5g_11b_13a_12.dta) with the cross-section weights in the variable named wt_p2round7, the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round7_panel and the agricultural households weights in the variable named wt_p2round7_farmer.
ROUND 8: In Round 8, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 8 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 8 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all eight rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 8 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r8_sect_a_2_5_5g_6_11c_14_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round8 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round8_panel.
ROUND 9: In Round 9, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 9 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 9 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all nine rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 9 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r9_sect_a_2_5g_5j_6_6e_8_8a_11c_11c2_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round9 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round9_panel.
ROUND 10: In Round 10, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 10 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 10 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all ten rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 10 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r10_sect_a_2_8_11c_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round10 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round10_panel.
ROUND 11: In Round 11, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross section weights are applicable to the entire round 11 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 11 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all eleven rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 10 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r11_sect_a_6_6d_13b_12.dta) with the cross section weights in the variable named wt_p2round11 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round11_panel.
ROUND 12: In Round 12, two different household weights are provided: cross section and panel weights. The cross-section weights are applicable to the entire round 12 sample while the panel weights are only applicable to round 12 sample households that have been successfully interviewed in all twelve rounds of phase 2 of the survey so far. For both of the household weights, the baseline (round 1 of phase 2) weights were adjusted for noncontact and nonresponse as well as calibrated following the same procedures outlined in section 2.2 (steps 4, 5 and 6). The round 12 household weights can be found in the household-level data file (p2r12_sect_a_2_5g_5j_6_8a_11c_11c2_12.dta) with the cross-section weights in the variable named wt_p2round12 and the panel weights in the variable named wt_p2round12_panel.
BASELINE (ROUND 1): One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; employment and non-farm enterprise; and COVID-19 vaccine.
ROUND 2: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; migration; employment; and household migrants.
ROUND 3: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; employment; job history; and COVID-19 vaccine.
ROUND 4: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; petrol; employment; credit; and economic sentiments. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, economic sentiments questions were asked to only half of the sample households (randomly selected).
ROUND 5: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; employment; COVID-19 vaccine; economic sentiments; and farmer screening. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, economic sentiments questions were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 4).
ROUND 6: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; employment and non-farm enterprise; food security; coping/shocks; and economic sentiments. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, economic sentiments questions were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 5).
ROUND 7: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; petrol; food prices; transportation prices; farmer annual profile; and economic sentiments. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, economic sentiments questions were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 6). Alternatively, prices questions were administered to only half of the sample households that were not selected to answer economic sentiments questions. Farmer annual profile questions were administered to agricultural households, that were identified using the farmer screening data collected in the fifth round.
ROUND 8: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to health services; petrol; food prices; transportation prices; employment; subjective welfare and expectations on climate extremes and past experience. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, subjective welfare questions were administered to only half of the sample households. Alternatively, prices questions were administered to only half of the sample households that were not selected to answer subjective welfare questions.
ROUND 9: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; petrol; fertilizer; agriculture; agricultural labor; food security; aggregated food consumption and subjective welfare. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, selected subjective welfare questions (Q1-Q6 specifically) were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 8). Aggregated food consumption questions were also administered to these households. Alternatively, food security, petrol and fertilizer questions were administered to only half of the sample households that were not selected to answer aggregated food consumption and selected subjective welfare (Q1-Q6) questions.
ROUND 10: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; access to essential goods; food security; coping strategies and subjective welfare. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, the subjective welfare questions were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 9). Alternatively, food security questions were administered to only half of the sample households that were not selected to answer the subjective welfare questions.
ROUND 11: One questionnaire, the Household Questionnaire, was administered to all households in the sample. The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; employment and non-farm enterprise; casual labor; and digital farming.
ROUND 12: The Household Questionnaire provides information on demographics; agriculture; aggregated food consumption; petrol subsidy, awareness and support; fertilizer; and subjective welfare. While the Household Questionnaire was administered to all the sample households, selected subjective welfare questions (Q1-Q6 specifically) were administered to only half of the sample households (those that were not selected to answer these questions in Round 10). Alternatively, aggregated food consumption questions were administered to only half of the sample households that were not selected to answer selected subjective welfare (Q1-Q6) questions.
Start | End | Cycle |
---|---|---|
2021-11-29 | 2022-01-16 | Baseline (Round 1) |
2022-01-29 | 2022-02-14 | Round 2 |
2022-03-26 | 2022-04-12 | Round 3 |
2022-06-05 | 2022-06-20 | Round 4 |
2022-07-30 | 2022-08-16 | Round 5 |
2022-10-07 | 2022-10-25 | Round 6 |
2023-02-01 | 2023-02-20 | Round 7 |
2023-04-01 | 2023-04-24 | Round 8 |
2023-05-27 | 2023-06-12 | Round 9 |
2023-10-28 | 2023-11-15 | Round 10 |
2024-04-20 | 2024-05-17 | Round 11 |
2024-07-20 | 2024-08-11 | Round 12 |
ORGANIZATION OF FIELDWORK: Data were collected by trained NBS interviewers who individually made phone calls either from a dedicated call center established in NBS headquarters or from their respective homes. Interviewers were allowed to make calls from home due to capacity constraints in the call center as well as social distancing measures undertaken in the office. While interviewers would occasionally meet in the office, most correspondence with the interviewers was made through WhatsApp, phone and emails.
GIFTS TO HOUSEHOLD: As a show of appreciation for the households’ participation, all households that gave consent to be interviewed, were transferred 1000 Naira credit to their phones (even if their interviews are only partially completed). The transfers are made to successfully interviewed households in every round. Since some of the sampled households do not have personal phone numbers, they were interviewed via a reference person’s phone. These reference persons were also credited 1000 Naira credit to their phones when the households are successfully interviewed via their phones.
PRE-LOADED INFORMATION: Basic information on every household was pre-loaded in the CATI assignments for each interviewer. The information was pre-loaded to (1) assist interviewers in calling and identifying the household and (2) ensure that each pre-loaded person is properly addressed and easily matched to the most recent interviews. Basic household information (location, household head name, phone number, etc.) was pre-loaded. The list of individuals from the previous interview and their basic characteristics were uploaded. This helped maintain the panel of individuals and ensured the status of each individual in the subsequent round of the survey.
RESPONDENTS: Each round of the Nigeria NLPS Phase 2 has ONE RESPONDENT per household. The respondent was the household head or a knowledgeable adult household member. The respondent must be a member of the household. Interviewers were instructed to make every effort to reach the same respondent in subsequent rounds of the survey, in order to maintain the consistency of the information collected. However, in cases where the previous respondent was not available, interviewers would identify another knowledgeable adult household member to interview.
DATA MONITORING AND EVALUATION: As an additional aid to ensuring good quality data, extensive monitoring was performed throughout the fieldwork for each round of the survey. Two monitoring exercises were implemented during data collection. First, Survey Solutions’ audio recording functionality was activated for 25 percent of the sample. These interview recordings were audited by 3 trained monitors, though not all recorded interviewers were able to be reviewed due to personnel constraints. On a daily basis, the monitors will listen to these recordings and fill in a structured questionnaire with their observations on interviewer performance. The feedback from these audio audits are then filtered to the respective interviewers.
The second quality check implemented were call backs to contacted households. The call backs were conducted by trained interviewers who are not part of the main data collection interviewers. Each day, up to 36 households that were contacted by the interviewing team are called by these call back interviewers. The call back interviewers conduct a short interview with the household to confirm that the interviewer did indeed conduct the interview, that certain key elements were clearly stated to the respondent, that the interviewer conducted themselves in a professional manner, and other details on the interview process. Further, the call back team asked several time-invariant questions of the respondent to further confirm the interview was fully conducted and the interviewer captured the information correctly. Feedback from call backs were routed to the respective interviewers to improve on identified areas. Further, the call back interviewers also called households that were not successfully contacted by the main interviewer. In some cases, the call back interviewer was able to reach the household. In such cases, the case was sent back to the interviewer to conduct the interview.
As a result of these quality checks, some of the interviewers were dropped from participating in the survey. There were also regular check-ins to address questions and issues the interviewers might have.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Biyi Fafunmi, Head of Department - ICT | National Bureau of Statistics |
LSMS Data Manager | The World Bank |
National Bureau of Statistics (2024). Nigeria - National Longitudinal Phone Survey (NLPS) 2021-2024, Phase 2. Ref: NGA_2021-2024_NLPS_v09_M. Abuja. Dataset downloaded from [url] on [date].
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
Name | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|
Biyi Fafunmi, Head of Department - ICT | National Bureau of Statistics | biyifafunmi@nigerianstat.gov.ng |
LSMS Data Manager | The World Bank | lsms@worldbank.org |
DDI_NGA_2021-2024_NLPS_v09_M
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|---|
Development Data Group | DECDG | World Bank | Documentation of the study |
2022-08-17
Version 09 (October 2024). This is an update to the Nigeria National Longitudinal Phone Survey 2021-2024 Phase 2 with round 12 datasets and documents.
2024-10-09
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