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    Home / Central Data Catalog / URY_1963_PHC_V01_M_V03_A_IPUMS / variable [F2]
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General Population Census IV and Housing II 1963 - IPUMS Subset

Uruguay, 1963
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Reference ID
URY_1963_PHC_v01_M_v03_A_IPUMS
Producer(s)
General Office of Statistics and Censuses, Minnesota Population Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
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Created on
Dec 20, 2012
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • URY1963-H-H
  • URY1963-P-H

Primary occupation [2-digit] (UY1963A_0419)

Data file: URY1963-P-H

Overview

Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 178
End: 180
Width: 3
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
Occupational characteristics
For persons age 8 or older
[Questions 13-18 were asked of persons age 8 or older.]




14. Principal occupation: ________

Only for employed, unemployed and those looking for work for the first time.

If someone employed does more than one job, write down the one that produces the largest income. For unemployed, write down the last job. For one who is looking for work for the first time write down the profession or office if one exists or "None" in the other case. Examples: lawyer, carpenter, bricklayer, dairy worker, tractor driver, etc.
Categories
Value Category
0 Architects, engineers, surveyors, and related technicians and workers
1 Chemists, physicists, geologists, technicians and lab assistants, and other physical scientists
2 Biologists, veterinarians, agronomists, related technicians and scientists
3 Physicians, surgeons, and dentists
4 Professional medical workers not elsewhere classified and medical technicians
5 Nurses and midwives
6 Teachers
7 Accountants, economists, actuaries, statisticians, and other professional workers not elsewhere classified
8 Jurists
9 Artists, writers, and related workers
10 Clergy, members of religious orders, and social workers
11 Librarians, archivists, and translators
20 Administrators and executive officials, government
21 Directors and managers in wholesale and retail trade, mining and quarrying, and manufacturing
22 Directors and managers in construction, government-owned firms, banking and insurance, and transport
29 Managers and executive officials, not further specified
30 Accounting auditor
31 Book-keepers and cashiers
32 Stenographers and typists
33 Office-machine operators
34 Controller, railway transport
35 Postmen and messengers
36 Telephone, telegraph, and related telecommunication operators
37 Inspector in buses
38 Other clerical workers
39 Office workers and persons in related occupations, not further specified
40 Wholesale proprietors, wholesale and retail trade
41 Salesmen, shop assistants, and related workers
42 Commercial travellers and manufacturers' agents
43 Insurance and real-estate salesmen, salesmen of securities and services, and auctioneers
49 Salespersons and persons in related occupations, not further specified
50 Farmers and farm managers
51 Agricultural workers
53 Hunters
54 Loggers and other forestry workers
59 Agriculture, livestock, fishery, hunting, forestry workers and persons in related occupations, not further specified
63 Miners and quarrymen
69 Miners, quarry workers, and persons in related occupations, not further specified
70 Drivers, road transport
71 Drivers and firemen, railway engine
72 Deck officers, engineer officers and pilots, ship
73 Deck and engine-room (ship), barge crews and boatmen
74 Aircraft pilots, navigators, and flight engineers
75 Brakemen, railway
76 Railway shunter
77 Traffic controllers and dispatchers, air transport
79 Transportation drivers and persons in related occupations, not further specified
80 Spinners, weavers, knitters, dyers, and related workers
81 Tailors, cutters, and related workers
82 Shoemakers, leather-product makers, and related workers
83 Carpenters, cabinetmakers, coopers, and related workers
84 Bricklayers, stonemasons, tile setters, cement finishers, and terrazzo workers
85 Painters and paperhangers
86 Toolmakers, welders, platers, and related workers
87 Electricians and related electrical and electronic workers
88 Fitter-machinists, machine tool setters, fitter-assemblers, and machine erectors
89 Precision-instrument makers, watchmakers, jewellers, and related workers
90 Machine-tool operators
91 Pressmen, engravers, bookbinders, and related workers
100 Furnacement, rollers, drawers, moulders, and related metal making and treating workers
101 Potters, kilnmen, glass and clay formers, workers in the production of cement and dolmenit, and related workers
102 Chemical and related process workers, except production of paper and cement
103 Millers, bakers, brewmasters, and related food and beverage workers
104 Tobacco preparers and tobacco-product makers
105 Tanners, fellmongers, pelt dressers, and related workers
106 Workers in the production of paper
107 Craftsmen and production-process workers not elsewhere classified
108 Packers, labellers, and related workers
109 Laborers not elsewhere classified
110 Other craftsmen and operators, not further specified
120 Supervisors and laborers in construction
121 Longshoremen and related freight handlers
122 Launderers, dry cleaners, and related workers
123 Service, sport, and recreation workers not elsewhere classified
129 Laborers, not further specified
130 Fire fighters, policement, guards, and related workers
131 Housekeepers, cooks, maids, and related workers in private houses
132 Launderers in private house
134 Waiters, bartenders, and related workers
135 Housekeepers, cooks, maids, and related workers in hotels, restaurants, and similar establishments, not in private houses
136 Hairdressers, beauticians, and related workers
137 Building caretakers, cleaners, and related workers
138 Athletes, sportsmen, and related workers
139 Photographers and related camera operators
140 Service, sport, and recreation workers not elsewhere classified
149 Workers in personal services and related occupations, not further specified
150 Members of the armed forces
155 Operators and laborers in factories not elsewhere classified
159 Other workers not elsewhere classified and unknown occupations, not further specified
998 Unknown
999 NIU (not in universe)
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Interviewer instructions
Occupational characteristics

Observation
222. Under the general title "Occupational characteristics" are six themes for titles 13 to 18. For the information to be collected, firstly the whole population of the country has to be grouped within two primary groups:


a) The economically active population.

b) The not economically active population.


Each one of these two large groups will be, at the same time, differentiated into sub-groups, and each and every one of these will be specified under title 13.

[p. 36]

223. Next, the principal occupation of those to be enumerated is investigated (title 14), considering that when a person works more than one occupation, it is the one that supplies the greatest income; and secondary occupation, that which follows the principal in importance regarding income. If a person only works one occupation, this will be the principal occupation.

224. Next, under the name industry of principal activity, the class of industry or place of work where said principal occupation is done (title 15) is to be investigated, and the category or role with which it is done, as employee, worker, etc. (title 16).

The same is for the investigation of secondary occupation when it exists (title 17), and the industry of secondary activity or class of industry where this last activity is done (title 18).

225. In order to get a rational and appropriate group of information, many individual situations should be contemplated which are adjusted to definitions, each time more refined by economic, social and technical censuses. Such definitions and methodological procedures to register information are structured in the form that reflects the occupational situation of those enumerated on the "day of the census".

226. The information asked for in titles 13 to 18 is intimately correlated. This means that once initial basic information is registered, no other information in titles 14 to 18 should be written down without having clarified, whether proceeding or not, the registration of information in the title immediately before. The information registered in title 13 is clarified, and continue conditionally for each one of the following titles until 18, according to the situation of the person enumerated.




Title 14: Principal occupation on the "day on the census"
240. Write down in a specific form the profession, office, or class of work that is done on the day on the census only by people classified in the previous title (title 13) within one of three groups: "Employed", "Unemployed", and "Looking for work for the first time".

241. Avoid vague names like: workers, operator, office worker, vendor, etc., instead use names that give a possibly more complete idea of people's occupations, like for example: agronomy engineer, movie theater operator, fruit vendor, travel agent, shoemaker's apprentice, etc.

242. There are some occupations of workers, artisans, and professionals that are precise simply by their name like: carpenter, bricklayer, plumber, doctor, lawyer, etc.

243. Certain occupations in the field of commerce require specification, like: agent vendor, sales counter worker, etc. Equally, in the case of office workers, clarify if they mean typist, cashier, teller, bookkeeper, archive manager, etc.

244. In case of professionals like doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc., this is the class of occupation which in general should be registered. There exist, however, cases in which such people do not do these professions that they are trained in, instead doing other activities. For example, a lawyer who works exclusively as a bank manager; a doctor who works exclusively teaching at a university. In these cases, the last activity said will be written down, like: bank manager, university professor, and so on.

245. For government workers also write down their specific occupations according to the given examples in the previous cases, avoiding the name "public employee". If a person is a member of the "armed forces" (not including the police), whatever their class or hierarchy, they should be noted as "military".

246. With respect to domestic employees, it should be specified if it includes, for example, cook, launderer, servant, etc. Equally, in the case of those who do agricultural and livestock activities, the terms "farmer" and "agrarian" should be reserved for those who run a farm or small farm respectively, and not for those who do general activities such as manager, caretakers, tenant farmer, tractor drivers, etc., whose specific operation will be written down.

[p. 39]

247. There exist also some people who according to the time of year or due to some circumstances, do not do any occupation or determined activity and change it frequently, constituting a group of those who do "odd jobs" or "make a living doing odd jobs". Practically, one who "makes a living doing odd jobs" is doing a remunerated occupation on the date or "day of the census" that can be identified, such as collector, package loader, etc., and will have to be registered in this manner, not using the name "odd job".

If a person declares to "make a living doing odd jobs" they will have to be asked what the "odd job" consists of, on the "day of the census".

248. It should also be taken into account that the inexactly named occupation "odd job" can be in some cases the principal occupation because it can be the only one which the person has on the date of the census. In other cases, such an occupation ("odd job") can constitute a secondary occupation, since it is one which supplies the second most income. In the case of people who do "domestic duties" or "students", it is important to find out if they do an "odd job", where the affirmative case should be registered as "employed", considering the respective occupation as principal.

249. In the case of "unemployed" people, write down the last occupation they had.

250. For people who "are looking for work for the first time", register the profession, office, or class of work that they are ready or qualified to do, and in the case that there is not any, simply register "none".

251. With the notation of the occupation having been made, according to these cases ["looking for work for the first time"], this group is finished with its census investigation. Consequently, a diagonal line should be drawn through the spaces corresponding to the registration of the pertinent information in the following titles (titles 15 to 18).

Description

Definition
This variable indicates the person's primary occupation [2-digit].
Universe
Persons 8+ in the labor force

concept

Concept
Name Vocabulary
Work: Occupation Variables -- PERSON IPUMS
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