IHSN Survey Catalog
  • Home
  • Microdata Catalog
  • Citations
  • Login
    Login
    Home / Central Data Catalog / WBG_1996_PECS_V01_M / variable [F2]
central

Expenditure and Consumption Survey, 1996

West Bank and Gaza, 1995 - 1996
Reference ID
WBG_1996_PECS_v01_M
Producer(s)
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
Jul 10, 2013
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
Page views
14932
Downloads
1031
  • Study Description
  • Data Dictionary
  • Downloads
  • Get Microdata
  • Related Publications
  • Data files
  • Pal_1996_HH
  • Pal_1996_Person

Father present at home (PFPRES)

Data file: Pal_1996_Person

Overview

Valid: 0
Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 35
End: 35
Width: 1
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Categories
Value Category
1 Yes
2 Father is not a household member
3 Father is dead
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.

Description

Definition
Indicates whether the father is present at home, not a household member or dead.
Universe
All individuals

Others

Notes
GENERAL NOTES
----------------------
In case there is no information available about whether the father is dead or not we just use code 2 (not a HH member). In case, the relationship to head variable indicates that the brother of the head is living in the HH with nephews/nieces of the head we assume that these last are the sons/daughters of the head's brother.


COUNTRY SPECIFIC NOTES
----------------------------------
• All parents related variables were generated by ERF including the presence status generated using the relationship to head variable, therefore those dead could not be identified.

• Father's and Mother's variables were generated for head of the household's children, the head him/herself whenever his/her parent(s) are household members, for head’s siblings if parents’ data is available, and for head’s grandchildren if he/she has married sons/daughters or in laws living in the household. In some cases, children were linked to their parents based on the HH data entry order.

• Since the relationship to the head variable did not include the son/daughter in law category, to generate the in-laws' characteristics, we assumed that the son in law is a married male recoded as other relative in the relationship to head variable where the number of married female daughters in the household >=1.
The same technique was applied to the daughter in law, a married female recoded as other relative in the relationship to head variable where the number of married male sons >=1 is considered a daughter in law.

• In case of the head has multiple spouses, the identification of the children’s mothers among different spouses is judgmental whether on age basis, or on members order in the household.
Back to Catalog
IHSN Survey Catalog

© IHSN Survey Catalog, All Rights Reserved.