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First Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998

Malawi, 1997 - 1998
Reference ID
MWI_1997_IHS-I_v01_M
Producer(s)
National Statistical Office (NSO)
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Created on
Dec 20, 2012
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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Questionnaires
Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998 - Main Questionnaire
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subtitle FORM I.H.S-2 Household Characteristics, Income and Expenditure
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description Household Level - 11 core modules
· Household roster
· Vital statistics
· Fertility and mortality
· Nutrition and anthropometrics
· Education
· Health
· Current expenditure
· Crop production and sales
· Livestock and poultry ownership
· Non-farm activities and income
· Assets
· Employment and Migration
· Access to social facilities
Table of contents PART 1: Household Identification
SECTION A: Initial Household Identification
SECTION B: Supervisor (Final identification of household)

PART 2: Household Characteristics, Income and Expenditure
SECTION A: Identification
SECTION B: Household Roster for each person
SECTION C: Education
PART C-1
PART C-2
SECTION D: Health
PART D-1 Health condition in the past 2 weeks
PART D-2 Fertility
PART D-3 Deaths in the household during last 12 months
SECTION E: Nutrition
SECTION F: Household Income
PART F-1 Agricultural crop production
PART F-2 Income from sale of livestock, poultry and related products
PART F-3 Income from non-farming business
PART F-4 Income from employment, transfers and other income last one month
PART F-4 a Salary/wages, rental income and interest received
PART F-4 b Income transfers by source
SECTION G: Employment last 12 months
PART G-1a Main occupation
PART G-1 b Secondary occupation
PART G-2: Employment search
PART G-3: Time use of household members last 7 days
SECTION H: Migration
SECTION I: Housing and Access to facilities
PART I-1 Housing amenities
PART I-2 Access to facilities
SECTION J: Assets (possession and mode of acquisition of assets)
PART J-1 Household durables
PART J-2 Livestock and Poultry
PART J-3 Land cultivated
SECTION K: Household expenditures
PART K-1 Own account (non cash) food expenditure last 3 days
PART K-2 Major household expenditures
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Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998 - Supplemental Questionnaire
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subtitle FORM I.H.S-2a Household Characteristics, Income and Expenditure
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description This is a supplementary questionnaire to the main questionnaire.
Table of contents SECTION E-1: Immunization [applies to children up to 5 years of age]
SECTION F: Household Income [Supplementary questions]
PART F-1 Agricultural crop production
SECTION I: Housing and Access to facilities
PART I-2A Access to facilities
SECTION J-3A: Land cultivated
SECTION K - 1A: Own account (non-cash) non-food expenditure
SECTION L: Credit last 12 months
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Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998- Diary Questionnaire
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subtitle I.H.S - 3 Diary of expenditure
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description This asks type of date, source of purchase, quantity, type of item purchased andamount paid
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Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998 - Community Questionnaire
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subtitle Form I.H.S - 5 Community Level Questionnaire
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description Part A: Questionnaire for TAs and wards
A1. Broad TA/WARD Characteristics
A2. General Social Infrastructure
A2.1 Institutions at TA/WARD level
A2.2 Are there TA/Ward groups/clubs/associations formed by the people themselves (with or without help from government or NGO) catering for /working towards improved services in the community?
A2.3 Access to health services in TA/Ward
A2.4 Services provided by nearest health center
A2.5 Representation of TA/Ward in political organizations
A2.6 Access of TA/Ward to consumer outlets.
A3.2 Infrastructure of TA/Ward in 1988
A4. Prices and wages in last 12 months in TA/Ward (in MK)
A5. Programs offering services to residents of TA/Ward (excluding credit/loans/savings services)
A6. Programs offering financial services (credit, savings) to residents of TA/Ward
A7. General risks/problems in the TA/Ward
A8. Changes in livelihood in TA/Ward

Part B: Questionnaire for TAs (rural, agricultural areas) only. Not urban wards.
B.1 Access to agricultural input and output markets and extension service and changes during past 5 years
B.1.1: Number of crop buyers and input dealers (excluding ADMARC) in 97/98 agricultural season and change compared to five years ago.
B1.2 Compared to the situation 5 years ago, do farmers in this village have more or less choice in whom to sell to or whom they buy from:
B1.3 Compared to the situation 5 years ago, what were the changes in the agricultural extension service provided in this TA?
B2. Land tenure and soil fertility
B2.1 For the customary land in your TA, tell us about the changes that have occurred during the past 5 years with respect to………..?
B2.2 Changes in land tenure and irrigation Of the total area (except buildings, roads) in TA, how did different types of land uses change over the past ten years?
B2.3 Maize yields and availability of customary land for smallholders
B3 Risks of crop and animal production in the TA
Table of contents Part A: Questionnaire for TAs and wards

Part B: Questionnaire for TAs (rural, agricultural areas) only. Not urban wards.
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Reports
Integrated Household Survey, 1997-1998
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subtitle Statistical Abstract
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36547
Summary Tables of the Community Level Questionnaire for the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
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Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1999-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36548
Profile of poverty in Malawi, 1998
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subtitle Poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) National Economic Council (Poverty Monitoring System)
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Description This is a revised version of the document prepared for the dissemination workshop on the poverty analysis of the Integrated Household Survey held at the Capital Hotel, Lilongwe on 01 December 2000. After the original document had gone to the printers, errors were detected in the analysis of the effects of possible poverty reduction strategies on the national poverty gap and poverty severity indices found on page 13 and in Table 5. These few errors have been corrected here.
Table of contents 1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 6
2. Poverty analysis.................................................................................................................. 7
2.1. Welfare measure ............................................................................................................ 7
2.2. Poverty line derivation..................................................................................................... 7
2.2.1. The poverty line ............................................................................................................ 8
2.2.2. The ultra-poverty line..................................................................................................... 9
3. Poverty in Malawi – 1998 ............................................................................................... 10
3.1. Poverty measures ......................................................................................................... 10
3.1.1. Poverty headcount....................................................................................................... 10
3.1.2. Poverty gap and poverty severity.................................................................................. 11
3.1.3. Ultra-poverty............................................................................................................... 14
3.1.4. Inequality in consumption.............................................................................................. 14
3.1.5. Comparison to earlier poverty lines and head counts ...................................................... 15
3.1.6. Comparison of poverty measures to those of neighboring countries ................................. 15
3.2. Demographic characteristics of the poor ........................................................................ 16
3.2.1. Household composition................................................................................................. 16
3.2.2. Characteristics of the head of household....................................................................... 17
3.3. Education and the poor ................................................................................................ 19
3.3.1. Educational attainment of adults and heads of household ............................................... 19
3.4. Health and the poor ..................................................................................................... 22
3.4.1. Morbidity ................................................................................................................... 22
3.4.2. Fertility....................................................................................................................... 23
3.4.3. Nutritional status and immunization coverage of poor children ....................................... 24
3.5. Economic activities of the poor .................................................................................... 26
3.5.1. Agriculture ................................................................................................................ 26
3.5.2. Economic activity status ............................................................................................. 29
3.5.3. Non-farm business ownership...................................................................................... 30
3.5.4. Industry of occupation................................................................................................. 30
3.6. Income, expenditure, and consumption of the poor........................................................ 31
3.6.1. Income sources.......................................................................................................... 31
3.6.2. Access to and use of credit......................................................................................... 33
3.6.3. Expenditures and consumption ................................................................................... 34
4. Conclusion..................................................................................................................... 38
5. Bibliography................................................................................................................... 40
6. Tables ........................................................................................................................... 41
7. Figures........................................................................................................................... 88
8. Annex - Methodology ................................................................................................... 95
8.1. The 1997-98 Integrated Household Survey ................................................................ 95
8.2. Poverty analysis ......................................................................................................... 95
8.2.1. Welfare measure ..................................................................................................... 95
8.2.2. Poverty line derivation .............................................................................................. 97
8.2.3. Deriving a proxy welfare indicator for dropped households......................................... 102
8.2.4. Poverty and inequality measures............................................................................... 104
8.3. Annex tables............................................................................................................ 107
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A Relative Profile of Povertu in Malawi, 1998
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subtitle A quintile-based poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System, Government of Malawi
Date 2001-12-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System, Government of Malawi
Description This report is a supplement to the Profile of Poverty in Malawi, 1998 report that was published in November 2000 following the completion of the poverty analysis of the 1997-98 Malawi Integrated Household Survey (IHS). The poverty analysis was carried out by the National Statistical Office (NSO) and the National Economic Council (NEC) of the government of Malawi, with the technical assistance of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), as an activity of the Malawi Poverty Monitoring System. The research reported here is a continuation of this work.
Table of contents 1. INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................5

2. ABSOLUTE VS. RELATIVE POVERTY ANALYSIS.........................................................................6

3. METHODOLOGY FOR THE RELATIVE POVERTY PROFILE ..................................................................7
3.1. DEFINING THE QUINTILES ......................................................................................7
3.2. CONSTRUCTING THE RELATIVE POVERTY PROFILE TABLES.............................................................9

4. SELECTED FINDINGS FROM THE RELATIVE POVERTY ANALYSIS ..........................................................11
4.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF THE HOUSEHOLD HEAD .......................................................................11
4.2. EDUCATION....................................................................................................12
4.2.1. Education of adults aged 25 and above......................................................................12
4.2.2. Current school attendance..................................................................................12
4.3. HEALTH, FERTILITY, AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS ...................................................................15
4.3.1. Morbidity .................................................................................................15
4.3.2. Fertility .................................................................................................16
4.3.3. Nutritional status of children.............................................................................17
4.3.4. Immunization ..............................................................................................18
4.4. FOOD CONSUMPTION.............................................................................................18
4.5. ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES..........................................................................................19
4.5.1. Agriculture................................................................................................19
4.5.2. Non-farm business activities and employment................................................................19
4.6. INCOME ......................................................................................................20
4.7. ACCESS TO CREDIT.............................................................................................21
4.8. EXPENDITURES ................................................................................................21
4.9. AMENITIES, ACCESS TO SERVICES, AND OWNERSHIP OF DURABLE ITEMS................................................22

5. CONCLUSION.....................................................................................................23

6. REFERENCES ....................................................................................................24

7. TABLES ........................................................................................................24

8. FIGURES .......................................................................................................94
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Detailed Tables for a Poverty Profile of Malawi, 1998
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subtitle From the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System, Government of Malawi
Date 2000-12-01
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System, Government of Malawi
Table of contents POVERTY IN MALAWI......................................................................................... 7
Table 1: Poverty line, food poverty line, non-food poverty line, and ultra-poverty line
and spatial price indices at April 1998 prices, by poverty line region. ............................ 7
Table 2: Poverty line and ultra-poverty line at July 2000 prices (daily per capita
consumption (MK)), by poverty line region. ......................................................... 7
Table 3: Individual poverty estimates and mean consumption by district, region, and
rural/urban, 10,698 household data set.............................................................. 8
Table 4: Household poverty estimates and mean consumption by district, region,
and rural/urban, 10,698 household data set..........................................................10
Table 5: Individual poverty estimates and mean consumption by region and
rural/urban, 6,586 household dataset. ..............................................................12
Table 6: Household poverty estimates and mean consumption by region and
rural/urban, 6,586 household dataset. ..............................................................12
Table 7: Individual ultra-poverty estimates and mean consumption by district,
region, and rural/urban, 10,698 household data set..................................................13
Table 8: Household ultra-poverty estimates and mean consumption by district,
region, and rural/urban, 10,698 household data set..................................................15
Table 9: Individual ultra-poverty estimates and mean consumption by region and
rural/urban, 6,586 household data set...............................................................17
Table 10: Household ultra-poverty estimates and mean consumption by region and
rural/urban, 6,586 household data set...............................................................17
Figure 1: Cumulative distributions for household welfare indicator. 10,698 and 6,586
household data sets, April 1998 and July 2000 prices................................................18
Table 11: Indices of welfare indicator inequality (total daily per capita consumption),
by region (10,693 household data set). .............................................................21
Table 12: Indices of welfare indicator inequality (total daily per capita consumption),
by region (6,586 household data set). ..............................................................21
Figure 2: Lorenz curves for household welfare indicator (total per capita
consumption (MK)). .................................................................................22

HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS AND POVERTY.....................................................................25
Table 13: Household size, dependency ratio, age composition and sex ratio, by
wealth group and region.............................................................................25
Figure 3: Population pyramids of the IHS weighted population, by wealth group ............................27
Table 14: Household size, dependency ratio, age composition and sex ratio, by
consumption quintile and region. ...................................................................28
Table 15: Sex and age of household heads, by percent of household heads in
wealth group and region.............................................................................30
Table 16: Poverty measures, by sex of head of household and region. ......................................32
Table 17: Poverty measures, by age of head of household...................................................32
Table 18: Migration of household heads, by percent of individuals in wealth group
and region..........................................................................................33
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT AND POVERTY........................................................................36
Table 19: Education level of adults aged 25 and older, by percent of individuals in
wealth group, sex, and region.......................................................................36
Table 20: Education level of household heads, by percent of household heads in
wealth group, sex, and region.......................................................................38
Table 21: Poverty measures, by educational level of household head. ......................................39
Table 22: Primary school aged children who are in proper grade for age (net
enrolment) and total students in primary school (gross enrolment), by percent
of all primary school aged children (ages 6 to 13) in wealth and sex group. ........................40
Table 23: Percent of children in age group attending school, by wealth group, sex,
and region..........................................................................................41
Table 24: Percent of population who are attending secondary school or university,
by wealth group and sex.............................................................................43

HEALTH, FERTILITY, IMMUNIZATION, NUTRITION, AND POVERTY...................................................44
Table 25: Morbidity, by wealth group and region...........................................................44
Table 26: Fertility of women aged 15 to 45, by wealth group and region. ..................................47
Table 27: Fertility of women aged 15 to 45, by wealth group and highest
educational level. .................................................................................50
Table 28: Adverse anthropometric nutritional indicators for children age 6 to 59
months, by percent of children with anthropometric indicator in wealth and sex
group...............................................................................................52
Table 29: Adverse anthropometric nutritional indicators for children age 6 to 59
months by mother’s maximum level of education, by percent of children with
anthropometric indicator in wealth group. ..........................................................56
Table 30: Immunization, percent of children aged 6 to 59 months, by wealth group
and region..........................................................................................57
Table 31: Source of food, by proportion of the cash value of total daily per capita
food consumed, by wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). ..............................58
Table 32: Source of food, by proportion of the calorie value of total daily per capita
food consumed, by wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). ..............................59
Table 33: Proportion of the cash value of total daily per capita food consumed made
up by different food groups, by wealth group and region (6,586 household data
set)................................................................................................60
Table 34: Proportion of the calorie value of total daily per capita food consumed
made up by different food groups, by wealth group and region (6,586
household data set).................................................................................62
Table 35: Cash value of daily per capita food consumed by month of interview, by
wealth group and region (6,586 household data set)..................................................64
Table 36: Calorie value of daily per capita food consumed by month of interview, by
wealth group and region (6,586 household data set)..................................................70
Table 37: Proportion of mean per capita recommended daily requirement (RDR) for
calories which is provided for by all calories reported consumed and by
calories from own production of food, by wealth group and region (6,586
household data set).................................................................................76

AGRICULTURE AND POVERTY...................................................................................77
Table 38: Cropland – percentage of households with cropland and size of holdings,
by wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). .............................................77
Table 39: Food crops – cropping pattern, production, and sales of households, by
crop, wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). ..........................................79
Table 40: Cash crops – cropping pattern, gross sales, and value of input use, by
crop, wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). ..........................................85
Table 41: Livestock and livestock products, by wealth group and region (6,586
household data set).................................................................................88

ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES AND POVERTY...........................................................................91
Table 42: Activity status of household heads and household members aged 10 and
above, by percent of individuals in wealth group and region (6,586 household
data set). .........................................................................................91
Table 43: Labour force participation of those aged 10 and older, by percent of
individuals in age group in wealth group, by region (6,586 household data set)......................94
Table 44: Non-farm business activities of households, by wealth group and region
(6,586 household data set)..........................................................................95
Table 45: Industry of main occupation over past 12 months (individuals age 10 and
older), by wealth group and region (6,586 household data set). .....................................98

INCOME, CONSUMPTION, AND POVERTY.........................................................................101
Table 46: Income from employment, transfers, and other income, by wealth group
and region (6,586 household data set)..............................................................101
Table 47: Sources of income (MK per capita per day), by wealth group and region
(6,586 household data set).........................................................................107
Table 48: Sources of income as a percentage of total income per capita per day, by
wealth group and region (6,586 household data set).................................................108
Table 49: Households which acquired a loan in past 12 months, by wealth group
and region (6,586 household data set)..............................................................109
Table 50: Proportion of total daily per capita consumption expenditures allocated to
different expenditure categories, by wealth group and region (6,586 household
data set). ........................................................................................112
Table 51: Daily per capita consumption expenditures (MK) allocated to different
expenditure categories, by wealth group and region (6,586 household data
set)...............................................................................................114

ASSETS, AMENITIES, ACCESS TO SERVICES, AND POVERTY.......................................................116
Table 52: Household amenities – own/rent house, water source, fuel source,
lighting source, by percent of households in wealth group and region. .............................116
Table 53: Access to various facilities, average time of journey in hours to nearest,
by wealth group and region ........................................................................119
Table 54: Ownership of selected household durables, by percent of households in
wealth group and region (6586 household dataset). .................................................120

DESCRIPTION OF DATA SET AND METHODOLOGICAL TABLES........................................................123
Table 55: Integrated Household Survey questionnaire table of contents. ..................................123
Table 56: Distribution of Integrated Household Survey sample and the 10,698
household and 6,586 household analytical data sets, by district, region, and
rural/urban........................................................................................124
Table 57: Month of interview, percentage of households and individuals, by wealth
group and region - unweighted 10,698 household data set. ..........................................125
Table 58: Month of interview, percentage of households and individuals, by wealth
group and region – weighted population 10,698 household data set...................................127
Table 59: Month of interview, percentage of households and individuals, by wealth
group and region – unweighted 6,586 household data set.............................................129
Table 60: Month of interview, percentage of households and individuals, by wealth
group and region – weighted population 6,586 household data set. ..................................131
Table 61: Temporal price indices (total, food, and non-food) for the survey period,
by month, rural regions and urban centres, (April 1998 = 1.00) ....................................133
Table 62: July 2000 price indices (April 1998 = 100), by rural and urban.................................133
Figure 4: Temporal price indices (total, food, and non-food) for the survey period, by
month, rural regions and urban centres, (April 1998 = 1.00)........................................134
Table 63: Recommended daily calorie intake, by age and sex (WHO/CTA/ECSA)................................135
Table 64: Median and mean per capita recommended daily calorie intake
requirements (RDR) for calories, median and mean price per calorie, and food
poverty lines for poorer households, by poverty line regions. .....................................135
Table 65: Reference food bundles for poverty lines – proportion of the cash value of
total daily per capita food consumed by poorer households* made up by
different food groups, by poverty line region .....................................................136
Table 66: Reference food bundles for poverty lines – proportion of the calorie value
of total daily per capita food consumed by poorer households* made up by
different food groups, by poverty line region. ....................................................136
Table 67: Components of the welfare indicator (total per capita daily consumption
(MK)) for households whose welfare indicator is close to the poverty line, by
poverty line region................................................................................137
Table 68: Components of the welfare indicator (total per capita daily consumption
(MK)) for all households, by poverty line region (6,586 household data set). ......................137
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The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle Activities of the Poverty Monitoring System
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring system
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36553
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: The incidence, depth, and severity of poverty
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36554
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: Who they are
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36555
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: Their education
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36556
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: Their health
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36557
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: Their economic characteristics
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36558
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The state of Malawi’s poor: Agriculture and making a living from the land
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36559
The Poverty Analysis of the Integrated Household Survey
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subtitle The determinants of poverty in Malawi
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2001-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36560
Technical documents
Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998, Interviewer's Manual
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Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description Reason for the Survey
Analysis of Poverty: The I.H.S. will provide a complete and integrated data set that will provide a basis for establishing a poverty profile for the country.
Policy Analysis: The survey will serve a much broader set of applications on policy issues regarding: Household behaviour and welfare, Distribution of
Income, Employment, Health and Education.
Revision of weights for Consumer Price Indices: The weighting pattern and mix of commodities in the Consumer Price Indices gets out –dated over time. The I.H.S. will provide fresh information on income and expenditure patterns of households as well as on the current set of commodities in the consumer basket. This information will be useful in the revision of commodity weights and updating of types of commodities in the basket.
Estimation of Final Household Consumption Expenditure: In the National Accounts final household consumption expenditure is often derived as a residual owing to the difficulties encountered in trying to get a direct estimate. The I.H.S. will provide a direct estimate of final household consumption expenditure from the expenditure data of households covered in the survey.
Rationalisation of Data Collection: Household surveys have been carried out in an uncoordinated manner in the past. The I.H.S. will address the interests of various users in one integrated data set with inter-linked modules.
Table of contents 1 Introduction
2 Description of the Survey
Reasons for the Survey
Topics covered
Scope of the Survey
3 Expected Outputs
4 Pre-Enumeration Listing (HIS-1) and Selection of Households
5 Completion of Forms (IHS-2 to IHS-4)
IHS-2:
Part 1: Household Identification
Part 2: Household Characteristics, Income and Expenditure
Household Roster
Education
Health
Nutrition
Education
Health
Nutrition
Income
Employment and Time Use
Migration
Housing and Access to Facilities
Assets
Major Expenditures
IHS-3:
Diary of Expenditure
IHS-4:
Community Level Prices
6 Other Forms and Documents
IHS-6: Query Sheet
IHS-7: Letter of Introduction
IHS-8: Letter of Thanks
IHS-6: Query Sheet
7 Interview Procedure and Technique
Appendices
1 District Codes
2 I.H.S-1 Listing form
3 I.H.S-7 Letter of thanks (1)
4 I.H.S-8 Letter of thanks (2)
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Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998, Instructions to Supervisors
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Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 1997-11-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description Supervisors instructions for all questionnaires
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36536
Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998, Data Dictionary for Main Questionnaire
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Author(s) National Statistical Office
Date 2000-05-23
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description The contents are organized according to the order of sections in the Integrated Household Survey questionnaire.
Table of contents District and TA codes common to all files ...............................................................................2
Section B – Household roster..................................................................................................4
Section C-1 – Education for school aged individuals ...............................................................5
Section C-2 – Education of non-school aged individuals .........................................................6
Section D-1 – Health..............................................................................................................7
Section D-2 – Fertility.............................................................................................................8
Section D-3 – Deaths .............................................................................................................9
Section E and E-1 (suppl.) – Nutritional indicators and immunization........................................10
Section F-1(2), J-3, and J-3 (suppl.) – Land (cultivated).........................................................12
Section F-1(3) and F-1A (suppl.) – Major food crops ...........................................................13
Section F-1(4) – Cash crop sales............................................................................................14
Section F-2 – Income from sales of livestock, poultry & related products ................................15
Section F-3 (2, 3, & 4) – Non-farming business.......................................................................16
Section F-4(a) – Income from employment, transfers, and other income ...................................18
Section F-4b(2) – Income transfers received ...........................................................................19
Section F-4b(3) – Outward income transfers............................................................................20
Section G-1 – Main and secondary occupations.......................................................................21
Section G-2 – Employment search...........................................................................................22
Section G-3 – Time use of household members .......................................................................23
Section H – Migration.............................................................................................................24
Section I-1 – Housing amenities .............................................................................................25
Section I-2 & I-2 (suppl.) – Access to facilities.......................................................................26
Section J-1 – Household durables...........................................................................................31
Section J-2 – Livestock and poultry ownership ......................................................................32
Section K-1 – Non-cash food expenditure..............................................................................33
Section K-2 – Major household expenditures.........................................................................35
Section F-1(5) (suppl.) – Inputs for food crops ......................................................................37
Section F-1(6) (suppl.) – Inputs for non-food crops ...............................................................38
Section K-1a (suppl.) – Non-cash non-food expenditure .......................................................39
Section L (suppl.) – Credit.....................................................................................................41
Diary of expenditure ..............................................................................................................42
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Data Dictionary for the Community Survey of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey 1997-1998
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subtitle Nov. 1998 - Jan. 1999
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) National Statistical Office
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description The files are named Cxx-'name'. The C stands for "Community survey'. The two digits following the C indicate the number of the first page of the questionnaire on which the data in that file was recorded. The name gives some indication of the content of the file.
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Working paper 1
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subtitle Criteria used for selecting sample households for the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36539
Working Paper 2
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subtitle Determining per capita calorie requirements for poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36540
Working Paper 3
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subtitle Deriving a household welfare indicator for households surveyed in the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36541
Working Paper 4
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subtitle The methodology for the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98, with provisional poverty lines
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36542
Working Paper 5
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subtitle Using earlier poverty lines for Malawi with household welfare information from the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36543
Working Paper 6
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subtitle Assessing poor or non-poor bias in the criteria used for selecting sample households for the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36544
Working Paper 7
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subtitle Assigning proxy welfare indicators to sample households dropped in the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36545
Working Paper 8
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subtitle Developing an ultra-poor poverty line for the poverty analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Date 2000-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Contributor(s) Poverty Monitoring System
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36546
Other Materials
Access Policy
Download [PDF, 57.51 KB]
Author(s) National Statistical Office
Country Malawi
Language English
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36529
National Statistical Office Overview
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Author(s) National Statistical Office
Country Malawi
Language English
Publisher(s) National Statistical Office
Description General overview of the Malawi National Statistical Office.
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36530
The Determinants of Poverty in Malawi, 1998
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subtitle An analysis of the Malawi Integrated Household Survey, 1997-98
Author(s) The National Economic Council, Lilongwe, Malawi The National Statistical Office, Zomba, Malawi The International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA
Date 2001-06-01
Country Malawi
Language English
Description The determinants of poverty analysis is a multi-variate analysis that extends the analysis of the poverty profile by attempting to infer the causality of specific household characteristics on household welfare. It attempts to answer the question of how a particular variable affects poverty conditional on the level of other potential determinants of poverty. It goes beyond the poverty profile of assessing mere correlation of the characteristics of a household with its poverty status to consider the causes of poverty at the household level. The results of this determinants of poverty analysis exercise should be of particular interest to policy makers since it provides a means to assess the likely impact on the incidence of poverty in Malawi of a range of specific government policies aimed at improving the welfare of the population.
Table of contents 1. Introduction ............................................................................................. 3

2. Modeling the determinants of poverty ..................................................................... 5
2.1 The exogeneity of explanatory variables ................................................................. 5
2.2 Poverty line areas....................................................................................... 7
2.3 Agro eco-zones .......................................................................................... 8

3. Sources of data .......................................................................................... 9
3.1 Household survey......................................................................................... 9
3.2 Community survey.........................................................................................11

4. Estimation issues ........................................................................................11

5. Model variables ..........................................................................................14
5.1 Dependent variable ......................................................................................14
5.2 Independent variables ...................................................................................15
5.2.1 Demographic ...........................................................................................16
5.2.2 Education..............................................................................................16
5.2.3 Employment and occupation..............................................................................16
5.2.4 Agriculture............................................................................................17
5.2.5 Access to services and utilities at the household level................................................18
5.2.6 Community characteristics and access to services at the community level ...............................18
5.2.7 Agro-eco zone fixed effects variables .................................................................19

6. The Malawi determinants of poverty model..................................................................19
6.1 Demographic variables ...................................................................................20
6.2 Education variables......................................................................................22
6.3 Employment and occupation variables .....................................................................24
6.4 Agriculture variables....................................................................................26
6.5 Access to services at the household level ...............................................................27
6.6 Community characteristics................................................................................27
6.7 Agro-eco zone fixed effects variables....................................................................28

7. Poverty simulations ......................................................................................29
7.1 The methodology .........................................................................................29
7.2 The simulations..........................................................................................30
7.2.1 Household size and composition simulations ............................................................32
7.2.2 Education simulations..................................................................................33
7.2.3 Employment and occupation simulations .................................................................35
7.2.4 Agriculture simulations................................................................................36
7.2.5 Improvements in access to services and infrastructure simulation ......................................38
7.2.6 Community level simulations............................................................................38

8. Conclusions ..............................................................................................39

9. References ...............................................................................................41

10. Tables and Figures.......................................................................................42

11. Annexes .................................................................................................54
11.1 Abbreviations...........................................................................................54
11.2 Glossary ...............................................................................................55
11.3 Poverty line derivation.................................................................................57
11.4 Calculating welfare on a per capita versus an adult equivalent basis .................. ................60
Download https://datacatalog.ihsn.org//catalog/2299/download/36552
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