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UNITED NATIONS EXPERT GROUP MEETING ON REVISING THE PRINCIPLES AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUSES NEW YORK, 29 OCTOBER- 1 NOVEMBER 2013 SESSION 2 OVERVIEW OF THE 2010 ROUND OF POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUSES REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES UNECE REGION IAN WHITE
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UNITED NATIONS EXPERT GROUP MEETING ON REVISING THE PRINCIPLES AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUSES NEW YORK, 29 OCTOBER- 1 NOVEMBER 2013 SESSION 2 OVERVIEW OF THE 2010 ROUND OF POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUSES REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES UNECE REGION IAN WHITE UNECE CENSUS STEERING GROUP
PREPARATION OF CES RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE 2020 ROUND • Conference of European Statisticians approved Work • Plan in Paris in June 2012 • Task Force established and Terms of Reference agreed • September 2012 • Online survey questionnaire developed September- • December 2012 • 24 Sections, more than 250 questions • Survey launched January 2013 (in SurveyMonkey format) • Response from 51 out of 57 countries • Results analysed by Task Forces February-May 2013 • Preparation of Task Force reports on 2010 practices • and proposals for changes to the 2010 • Recommendations June-September 2013 • Papers presented at joint UNECE/Eurostat Group of • Experts meeting Geneva, 30 Sept-3 Oct 2013
UNECE TASK FORCES • Census methodology • (Erich Schulte-Nordholt, Statistics Netherlands) • Census technology • (Janusz Dygaszewicz, Central Statistics Office, Poland) • Quality and coverage • (Peter Benton, Office for National Statistics, UK) • Costs and benefits • (Alistair Calder, Office for National Statistics, UK) • Population bases and geographic characteristics • - Population bases (Giampaolo Lanzieri, Eurostat) • - Geographic characteristics • (Harald Utne, Statistics Norway) • Demographic, household and family characteristics • (Howard Hogan, US Census Bureau) • Economic and educational characteristics • (Jari Nieminen, Statistics Finland) • Migration and ethno-cultural characteristics • (Jane Badets, Statistics Canada) • Housing • (Adelheid Bauer, Statistics Austria)
OTHER TOPICS/ISSUES COVERED BY THE UNECE STEERING GROUP • Disability • Agriculture • Legislation • Field Operations • Communications and publicity • Security, confidentiality and disclosure control • Documentation, metadata and archiving • Innovations • Problems and successes
Methodology in the UNECE Region Traditional census – 31 countries (36 in 2000) - Full field enumeration, no registers 20 - Full field enumeration supported by registers 10 - Full field enumeration plus annual sample survey 1 - Rolling census 1 Register based census – 9 countries (3 in 2000) - Only registers used 6 - Registers plus existing sample survey data 3 Combined methodology – 10 countries (6 in 2000) - Registers plus full field enumeration for selected topics 4 - Registers plus sample field data for selected topics 5
Core topics in the UNECE Region • Place of usual residence not asked in survey • Locality 82% • Sex 100% • Age 100% • Legal (de jure) marital status 92% • Current activity status 96% • Workplace 92% • Occupation 96% • Industry 96% • Employment status 98% • Educational attainment 98% • Country/place of birth 98% • Country of citizenship 98% • Ever resided abroad 75% • Year of arrival from abroad 100% • Previous place of usual residence 86% • Date of arrival from previous usual residence 67% • Relationship between household members 98% • Household status 84% • Type of household 96% • Size of household not asked in survey
Core topics in the UNECE Region • Family status 86% • Type of family nucleus 86% • Size of family nucleusnot asked in survey • Tenure status (of household) 94% • Housing arrangement 92% • Type of living quarters 92% • Location of living quarters 100% • Occupancy status 86% • Type of ownership 96% • Number of occupants not asked in survey • Useful floor space/Number of rooms 84/92% • Density standard 80/57% • Water supply system 78% • Toilet facilities 82% • Bathing facilities 86% • Type of heating 92% • Type of building 86% • Period of construction 94%
Non core topics in the UNECE Region • Urban/rural status 92% • Location of place of education 44% • Mode of transport to work/place of education 45/33% • Distance travelled to work/place of education 15/13% • Time taken to travel to work/place of education 29/25% • De facto marital status 84% • Children born alive 69% • Date(s) of first/current marriage 14/24% • Date(s) of first/current consensual union 2/12% • Usual activity status 12% • Unpaid/voluntary work 6% • Type of sector (institutional unit) 12% • Informal employment status 4% • Type of place of work 27% • Time usually worked 29% • Time-related unemployment 2% • Duration of unemployment 18% • Size of workforce at workplace 15% • Main source of livelihood 42% • Income 12% • Socio-economic group 27%
Non core topics in the UNECE Region • Education qualifications 33% • Field of study 40% • School attendance 69% • Literacy 49% • Computer literacy 18% • Country of previous usual residence 62% • Total duration of residence in the country 20% • 5-year migration 22% • Reason for migration 37% • Country of birth of parent(s) 16% • Citizenship acquisition 14% • Foreign background not asked in survey • Population relevant to international migration not asked in survey • Refugee background not asked un survey • Internally displaced persons not asked in survey • Ethnicity 63% • Language 71% • Religion 55% • Disability status 67%
Non core topics in the UNECE Region • Same-sex partnerships not asked in survey • Extended family status not asked in survey • Type of reconstituted family not asked in survey • Generational composition of household not asked in survey • Single or shared occupancy 43% • Rent 29% • Durable consumer goods 12% • Car availability 27% • Car parking 18% • Telephone/internet connection 29/43% • Own account agricultural production (household) 20% • Agricultural work 8% • Unoccupied dwellings 86% • Multi-occupancy 48% • Type of rooms 16% • Kitchen 52% • Cooking facilities 12% • Hot water 48% • Type of sewage disposal system 44% • Main type of energy for heating 58%
Non core topics in the UNECE Region • Availability of electricity 38% • Availability of piped gas 38% • Air-conditioning 22% • Position of dwelling in building 30% • Accessibility to dwelling 8% • Lift 24% • Number of floors in building 44% • Construction materials 36% • State of repair 14%
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Methodology • More emphasis on the use of administrative registers and multi-modal approach to data collection • An closer examination of the benefits and disadvantages of the different methodologies • Technology • More focus on GIS • Benefits of OCR/OMR to be re-assessed • Cost and benefits • New chapter • Costs of different methodologies to be compared • The value of cost-benefit analysis to be stressed • Documentation, metadata and archiving • The importance of keeping good records and an audit trail • The value of census records as a source of socio-historical data
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Quality and coverage • Consolidate separate sections of the 2010 • Recommendations into a single chapter • Specific recommendations proposed: • - Accuracy should be measured (by whatever method • the country deems appropriate) • - Accuracy measurements and methods should be published • - Whatever method chosen should result in a comparable set of output-oriented • quantitative indicators • - An adjusted national total population estimate should be published • - At the national level countries should aim to publish statistics that are accurate to within • x% of the (unknown) true value - Not supported • Outsourcing • The importance of good project management skills and knowledge of procurement to be • stressed • The cheapest option is not always the best • Specific areas to be identified • More aligned with global recommendations, with particular emphasis on the need to: • - protect confidentiality • - gain public confidence • - ensure data quality • What about Big Data? • n
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Communication/Publicity • Still important for register-based censuses • Use of social media to be considered • Population bases • A more detailed exposition of ‘usual residence’ • Geographic characteristics • Urban/rural area to be a core (derived) topic • Degree of urbanization • Classification of place of work • New classification of mode of transport • Demographic characteristics • De facto vs de jure marital status • Should de facto marital status be a core topic? • Should the use of a mixed classification of de jure and de facto • marital status be discouraged explicitly? • Should ‘consensual union’ and ‘registered partnership’ be • distinguished in the typology of family nuclei? • Should more focus be put on reconstituted families? • More focus on same sex unions be included as a non-core topic?
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Migration • More clearly distinguish topics related to international • and internal migration • More clarity on the concept of year of arrival • Is there a case for promoting ‘country of previous residence • abroad’ and ‘reason for migration’ to core status? • Recognition of value (but difficulty) of collecting information • on ‘emigration’ • Consider ‘circular migration’ as a new topic • Ethno-cultural characteristics • Importance of consultation community leaders and • organisation to be stressed • Put ‘No religion’ response category first • Should ‘language’ be a core topic and should a • classification be recommended? • Consider recommending the ‘Prefer not to answer’ • approach to voluntary questions.
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Economic characteristics • Possible changes to ‘activity status’ classification • Possible changes to ‘employment status’ classification • Need to conform to any new ILO recommendations • (such as the recognition of voluntary work as an activity • status) • Difficulties with reconciling outputs from administrative • and statistical data sources • Housing • Treatment of ‘semi-independent’ housing as private or • institutional • More focus on homelessness – but is this a housing or • population base issue? • ‘Usable floor space’ vs ‘Number of rooms’ • Is a definition a room necessary? • Some core topics are no longer relevant (such as water • supply and bathing facilities) • Proposal to modify ‘occupancy status’ and ‘type of • building’ classifications • Focus of new ‘green’ topics such as use of solar or • thermal energy
Summary of main proposals for possible changes to the CES Recommendations • Dissemination • 2010 Recommendations to be expanded to cover • - Microdata • - New media • - Data visualisation • - Value added products and mash-ups
Timetable for the 2020 CES Recommendations • 1st Draft of 2020 Recommendations submitted • to Steering Group February 2014 • 2nd Draft prepared by June 2014 to be • discussed at UNECE/Eurostat meeting • September 2014 • Final Draft by December 2014 to be discussed • by CES Bureau February 2015 • Adoption by CES at June 2015 Plenary • Session • Electronic version posted in July 2015 • Hard copy published end 2015 • Harmonization with global recommendations important • Impact on 2020 EU Census legislation
Timetable for the 2020 CES Recommendations • 1st Draft of 2020 Recommendations submitted • to Steering Group February 2014 • 2nd Draft prepared by June 2014 to be • discussed at UNECE/Eurostat meeting • September 2014 • Final Draft by December 2014 to be discussed • by CES Bureau February 2015 • Adoption by CES at June 2015 Plenary • Session • Electronic version posted in July 2015 • Hard copy published end 2015 • Harmonization with global recommendations important • Impact on 2020 EU Census legislation THANK YOU