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    Home / Central Data Catalog / URY_2006_PHC_V01_M_V03_A_IPUMS / variable [F2]
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Extended National Survey of Homes (ENHA) 2006 - IPUMS Subset

Uruguay, 2006
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Reference ID
URY_2006_PHC_v01_M_v03_A_IPUMS
Producer(s)
National Institute of Statistics, Minnesota Population Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
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Created on
Dec 23, 2014
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • Study Description
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  • URY2006-H-H
  • URY2006-P-H

Occupation (ISCO-88, 3 digits) (UY2006A_0946)

Data file: URY2006-P-H

Overview

Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 302
End: 304
Width: 3
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
F. Work activity

Only for persons age 14 or older



F.2 Characteristics of the main job



67. What activities do you perform in the work that brought you the most income? In other words, what is your occupation?

[Question 67 was asked of persons age 14 or older who worked last week or had a job or business to return to, as per questions 62, 63, and 64.]

________ _ _ _ _
Categories
Value Category
10 Armed forces, not further specified
11 Armed forces officers
12 Armed forces, non-officers
111 Legislators
112 Senior government officials
114 Senior officials of special-interest organizations
121 Directors and chief executives
122 Production and operations department managers
123 Other deparment managers
131 General managers (small enterprise)
211 Physicists, chemists, and related professionals
212 Mathematicians, statisticians, and related professionals
213 Computing professinoals
214 Architects, engineers, and related professionals
221 Life science professionals
222 Health professionals (except nursing)
223 Nursing and midwifery professionals
231 College, university, and higher education teaching professionals
232 Secondary education teaching professionals
233 Primary and pre-primary education teaching professionals
234 Special education teaching professionals
235 Other teaching professionals
241 Business professionals
242 Legal professionals
243 Archivists, librarians, and related information professionals
244 Social science and related professionals
245 Writers and creative or performing artists
246 Religious professionals
311 Physical and engineering science technicians
312 Computer associate professionals
313 Optical and electronic equipment operators
314 Ship and aircraft controllers and technicians
315 Safety and quality inspectors
321 Life science technicians and related associate professionals
322 Modern health associate professionals (except nursing)
323 Nursing and midwifery associate professionals
324 Traditional medicine practitioners and faith healers
331 Primary education teaching associate professionals
332 Pre-primary education teaching associate professionals
333 Special education teaching associate professionals
334 Other teaching associate professionals
341 Finance and sales associate professionals
342 Business services agents and trade brokers
343 Administrative associate professionals
344 Customs, tax, and related goverment associate professionals
345 Police inspectors and detectives
346 Social work associate professionals
347 Artistic, entertainment, and sports associate professionals
348 Religious associate professionals
411 Secretaries and keyboard-operating clerks
412 Numerical clerks
413 Material-recording and transport clerks
414 Library, mail, and related clerks
419 Other office clerks
421 Cashiers, tellers, and related clerks
422 Client information clerks
511 Travel attendants and related workers
512 Housekeeping and restaurant services workers
513 Personal care and related workers
514 Other personal service workers
515 Astrologers, fortune-tellers, and related workers
516 Protective services workers
520 Models, salespersons, and demostrators, not further specified
521 Fashion and other models
522 Shop salespersons and demostrators
523 Stall and market salespersons
610 Market-oriented skilled agricultural and fishery workers, not further specified
611 Market gardeners and crop growers
612 Market-oriented animal producers and related workers
613 Market-oriented crop and animal producers
614 Forestry and related workers
615 Fishery workers, hunters, and trappers
711 Miners, shotfirers, stone cutters, and carvers
712 Building frame and related trades workers
713 Building finishers and related trades workers
714 Painters, building structure cleaners, and related trades workers
720 Metal, machinery, and related workers, not further specified
721 Metal moulders, welders, sheet-metal workers, structural-metal preparers, and related trades workers
722 Blacksmiths, tool-makers, and related trades workers
723 Machinery mechanics and fitters
724 Electrical and electronicl equipment mechanics and fitters
731 Precision workers in metal and related materials
732 Potters, glass-makers, and related trades workers
733 Handicraft workers in wood, textile, leather, and related materials
734 Printing and related trades workers
741 Food processing and related trades workers
742 Wood treaters, cabinet-makers, and related trades workers
743 Textile, garment, and related trades workers
744 Pelt, leather, and shoemaking trades workers
811 Mining- and minteral-processing-plant operators
812 Metal-processing-plant operators
813 Glass, ceramics, and related plant operators
814 Wood-processing- and papermaking-plant operators
815 Chemical-processing-plant operators
816 Power-production and related plant operators
817 Automated-assembly-line and industrial-robot operators
821 Metal- and mineral-products machine operators
822 Chemical-products machine operators
823 Rubber- and plastic-products machine operators
824 Wood-products machine operators
825 Printing-, binding-, and paper-products machine operators
826 Textile-, fur-, and leather-products machine operators
827 Food and related products machine operators
828 Assemblers
829 Other machine operators and assemblers
830 Drivers and mobile-plant operators, not further specified
831 Locomotive-engine drivers and related workers
832 Motor-vehicle drivers
833 Agricultural and other mobile-plant operators
834 Ships' deck crews and related workers
911 Street vendors and related workers
912 Shoe cleaning and other street services elementary occupations
913 Domestic and related helpers, cleaners, and launderers
914 Building caretakers, window, and related cleaners
915 Messengers, porters, doorkeepers, and related workers
916 Garbage collectors and related laborers
917 Non-skilled personal service workers
921 Agricultura, fishery, and related workers
931 Mining and construction laborers
932 Manufacturing laborers
933 Transport laborers and freight handlers
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
F) Work activity
(Only for people age 14 or older)

This section of the questionnaire will be carried out only for people age 14 or older.

This collection of questions intends to investigate not only the current occupational status of a person, but also the basic characteristics of the employed, unemployed, and inactive.

The concepts and criteria to determine the occupational status of the population are those recommended by the International Office of Work (OIT), recognized by the different social actors of the country.

Who are the employed? They are all those who worked for at least an hour the week previous to the survey or that didn't work because of vacations, a sickness or accident, work conflict, or job interruption because of bad weather, or lack of raw materials, but he has employment to which it is sure he will return.


Characteristics of the main job



67. What activity do you perform in your work that gives you the most income?

The objective that this question pursues is to determine the occupation type of the interviewee, that in total is the collection of tasks completed by a person, and can be classified according to their complexity and level of knowledge required to carry them out.

It will be described with clear letters and in brief, but precise, form in order to achieve an adequate classification of the occupation of the people, avoiding in all cases annotations such as employee, worker, supervisor, boss, owner, odd-job worker, person in-charge, pawn, go-for. To serve as an example a brief list will be transcribed of the uniform international classifier of occupations (CIUO '88) that is currently used by the ECH.

Description

Definition
This variable indicates the person's occupation (ISCO-88, 3 digits).
Universe
Persons age 14+ working or with a job

concept

Concept
Name Vocabulary
Work: Occupation Variables -- PERSON IPUMS
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