GHA_2006_UHPS_v01_M
Urban Household Panel Survey 2006
Round 3
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Ghana | GHA |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
The Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) at Oxford University in collaboration with the Ghana Statistical Office (GSO) has been conducting a labour market panel survey of urban sectors in Ghana since 2004. There are now three waves of this survey covering the period 2004 to 2006. There are two unique features of the Urban Panel Survey (UPS) that are important. First, the UPS provides comparable information, including income data, on both wage employees and the self-employed. All labor force participants in the selected households were to be interviewed. Thus the sample of workers spans the formal and informal sectors, public and private employees, the self-employed, unemployed and so on. The second unique feature of the UPS data set is its panel dimension. During the course of July-August 2005 the initial UPS sample was resurveyed and questions were asked in order to link their activities and earnings in 2005 with the same variables in 2003/04, creating a panel of individual workers. During the period August-October 2006 a further survey was conducted. Thus the UPS constitutes one of very few household panel data sets in sub-Saharan Africa.
The survey was repeated 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012 and 2013. The most recent wave, 2013, is currently being cleaned and will become publicly available at the end of 2014.
The Ghanaian worker-household survey is designed to track a large number of workers and apprentices that are either currently in the manufacturing sector or have been employed in the manufacturing sector in the past. The survey records the skills and education of individuals, their professional career choices and their spending decisions in their private lives. By investigating these different dimensions of an individual's behaviour, the survey seeks to establish links between the earnings and the spending decisions of individuals. This will enable a greater understanding of the behaviour of individuals in their working lives and the driving forces behind their career choices and subsequent earnings. A key element of this survey is that it attempts to create a profile for each worker by recording information relevant to their labour market movements over the period of their working lives.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Individual age 15 to 60
Version 01
A substantial amount of cleaning has been carried out on the data but it is essential that any user of the data check the data further.
The scope the of Urban Household Panel Survey includes:
The survey spans the four largest urban centers in Ghana: Accra (and neighboring Tema), Kumasi, Takoradi, and Cape Coast.
Labor force participants, ages 15 to 60, in urban areas.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) | University of Oxford |
Ghana Statistical Service (GSO) | Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning |
Name | Role |
---|---|
Economic and Social Research Council | Funding the study |
Department for International Development | Funding the study |
Name | Role |
---|---|
Neil Rankin | Responsible for setting surveys in the form they currently run |
Justin Sandefur | Principal person responsible for the Ghana survey work in 2005 and 2006. |
The samples were based on a stratified random sample of urban households from the 2000 census in Ghana. There was a follow-up survey of workers in Ghana's manufacturing firms who had been surveyed from 1995. Thus the Ghana data contains those sampled on the basis of households and those drawn from firms. In using the data it is important to allow for the different basis of the two components of the sample.
In this round of the surveys there were three questionnaires: one individual based, one household based, and a fertility questionnaire addressed to women. At present only the first of these is available. The survey is divided into the following sections:
Start | End |
---|---|
2006-08 | 2006-10 |
In this round of the Urban Household Survey Panel detailed information about education, health, fertility, labour market outcomes, savings, assets, shocks, social capital, opinions, attitudes, and perceived well-being was collected.
Use of the dataset must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:
Example:
Centre for the study of African Economies and Ghana Statistical Service. Ghana Urban Household Panel Survey Quarterly Labour Force Survey (UHPS) 2006. Ref. GHA_2006_UHPS_v01_M. 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 | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
The World Bank Microdata Library | World Bank | microdata@worldbank.org | |
Centre for the Study of African Economies | University of Oxford | csae.enquiries@economics.ox.ac.uk | http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/ |
Ghana Statistical Service | Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning | info@statsghana.gov.gh | http://www.statsghana.gov.gh/ |
DDI_GHA_2006_UHPS_v01_M_WB
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Development Economics Data Group | World Bank | Documentation of the DDI |
2013-09-09
Version 01 (September 2013)