5 datasets found
  1. i

    Census of Population and Housing 2010 - Philippines

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Oct 10, 2017
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    National Statistics Office (2017). Census of Population and Housing 2010 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/7171
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    National Statistics Office
    Time period covered
    2010
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    Census of Population and Housing (CPH) refers to the entire process of collecting, compiling, evaluating, analyzing, publishing, and disseminating data about the population and the living quarters in a country. It entails the listing and recording of the characteristics of each individual and each living quarter as of a specified time and within a specified territory. In other words, the CPH offers a “snapshot” of the entire population on a specific date, that is, how many people reside within the national borders, who they are, and where they live during such specified date. Also, included are the characteristics of the housing units where they reside.

    The 2010 CPH is designed to take an inventory of the total population and housing units in the Philippines and collect information about their characteristics. The census of population is the source of information on the size and distribution of the population, as well as their demographic, social, economic, and cultural characteristics. The census of housing, on the other hand, provides information on the stock of housing units and their structural characteristics and facilities which have bearing on the maintenance of privacy and health, and the development of normal family living conditions. These information are vital for making rational plans and programs for local and national development.

    Specifically, the 2010 CPH aims to: - obtain comprehensive data on the size, composition, and distribution of the population of the Philippines; - gather data on birth registration, literacy, school attendance, place of school, highest grade/year completed, residence 5 years ago, overseas worker, usual occupation, kind of business or industry, class of worker, place of work, fertility, religion, citizenship, ethnic group, disability, and functional difficulty, and determine their geographic distribution; - take stock of the housing units existing in the country and to get information about their geographic location, structural characteristics, and facilities, among others; - obtain information on the characteristics of the barangay, which will be used as basis for urban-rural classification; and - serve as sampling frame for use in household-based surveys.

    Data collected in this census were compiled, evaluated, analyzed, published, and disseminated for the use of government, business, industry, social scientists, other research and academic institutions, and the general public. Among the important uses of census data are the following:

    In government: - redistricting and apportionment of congressional seats; - allocation of resources and revenues; - creation of political and administrative units; - formulation of policies concerning population and housing; and - formulation of programs relative to the delivery of basic services for health, education, housing, and others

    In business and industry: - determination of sites for establishing businesses; - determination of consumer demands for various goods and services; and - determination of supply of labor for the production of goods and services

    In research and academic institutions: - conduct of researches on population and other disciplines; and - study of population growth and distribution as basis in preparing projections

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage Regions Provinces Cities and Municipalities Barangays

    Analysis unit

    household questionnaire: individuals (household members), households, housing units institutional questionnaire: individuals (institutional population), institutional living quarters barangay questionnaire: barangay

    Universe

    Census-taking in the Philippines follows a de-jure concept wherein a person is counted in the usual place of residence or the place where the person usually resides. Information on the count of the population and living quarters were collected with 12:01 a.m. of May 1, 2010 as the census reference time and date.

    The following individuals were enumerated:

    • Those who were present at the time of visit and whose usual place of residence is the housing unit where the household lives.

    • Those whose usual place of residence is the place where the household lives but are temporarily away at the time of the census.

    • Boarders/lodgers of the household or employees of household-operated businesses who do not usually return/go to their respective homes weekly.

    • Overseas workers and who have been away at the time of the census for not more than five years from the date of departure and are expected to be back within five years from the date of last departure.

    • Filipino "balikbayans" with usual place of residence in a foreign country but have resided or are expected to reside in the Philippines for at least a year from their arrival.

    • Citizens of foreign countries who have resided or are expected to reside in the Philippines for at least a year from their arrival, except members of diplomatic missions and non-Filipino members of international organizations.

    • Persons temporarily staying with the household who have no usual place of residence or who are not certain to be enumerated elsewhere.

    Kind of data

    Census/enumeration data [cen]

    Sampling procedure

    In the 2010 CPH, there are basically two types of questionnaires used for the enumeration of household members. These are CPH Form 2 or the Common Household Questionnaire and CPH Form 3 or the Sample Household Questionnaire. CPH Form 3 contains more questions than CPH Form 2.

    The 2010 CPH was carried out through a combination of complete enumeration and sampling. For this census, systematic cluster sampling was adopted. This sampling method is designed in such a way that efficient and accurate estimates will be obtained at the city/municipality level.

    The sampling rate or the proportion of households to be selected as samples depends on the size of the city/municipality where the Enumeration Area (EA) is located. For the cities/municipalities with estimated number of households of 500 and below, 100 percent sampling rate was used. While for those cities/municipalities with estimated number of households of 501 and above, a sampling rate of 20 percent was implemented.

    In this sampling scheme, each city/municipality was treated as a domain. For city/municipality with 100 percent sampling rate, all households in all the EAs within this city/municipality were selected as samples. For those with a 20 percent sampling rate, systematic cluster sampling was adopted. That is, sample selection of one in five clusters with the first cluster selected at random. Thus in effect, the EAs belonging to the city/municipality with 20 percent sampling rate are divided into clusters of size 5. Random start is pre-determined for each EA.

    If the sampling rate applied to a city/municipality is 100 percent, it means that all households in that municipality were administered with CPH Form 3. If it is 20 percent, it means that 20 percent of all households used CPH Form 3 while 80 percent used CPH Form 2.

    The random start used by EA is a number from 1 to 5 which was used to select the cluster where the first sample households in an EA, and subsequently the other sample households, were included.

    Clusters are formed by grouping together households that have been assigned consecutive serial numbers as they were listed in the Listing Booklet. For a 20 percent sampling rate, clusters were formed by grouping together five households.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    CPH Form 1 - Listing Booklet This form is a booklet used to list the buildings, housing units, households, and the Institutional Living Quarters (ILQs) within an EA. This form also records other important information such as the name of household heads and name and type of institutions and their addresses, population totals, and counts of males and females.

    CPH Form 2 - Common Household Questionnaire This is the basic census questionnaire, which was used to interview and record information about the common or nonsample households. This questionnaire gathered information on the following demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the population: relationship to household head, sex, date of birth, age, birth registration, marital status, religion, ethnicity, citizenship, disability, functional difficulty, highest grade/year completed, residence 5 years ago, and overseas worker. It also contains questions on the type of building/house, construction materials of the roof and outer walls, state of repair of the building/house, year the building/house was built, floor area of the housing unit, and tenure status of the lot.

    CPH Form 3 - Sample Household Questionnaire This is the basic census questionnaire, which was used to interview and record information about the sample households. This questionnaire contains ALL questions asked in CPH Form 2 PLUS additional population questions: literacy, school attendance, place of school, usual occupation, kind of business or industry, class of worker, place of work, and some items on fertility. Moreover, there are additional questions on household characteristics: fuel for lighting and cooking, source of water supply for drinking and/or cooking and for laundry, and bathing, tenure status of the housing unit, acquisition of the housing unit, source of financing of the housing unit, monthly rental of the housing unit, tenure status of the lot, usual manner of garbage disposal, kind of toilet facility, and land ownership. It also asked questions on the language/dialect generally spoken at home, residence five years from now, and presence of household conveniences/devices, and access to internet.

    CPH Form 4 -

  2. P

    Philippines Employment: Industry: Construction

    • ceicdata.com
    Updated Apr 15, 2018
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    CEICdata.com (2018). Philippines Employment: Industry: Construction [Dataset]. https://www.ceicdata.com/en/philippines/labour-force-survey-employment-by-industry-occupation-and-class/employment-industry-construction
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 15, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    CEICdata.com
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Feb 1, 2024 - Jan 1, 2025
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Variables measured
    Employment
    Description

    Philippines Employment: Industry: Construction data was reported at 4,597.000 Person th in Jan 2025. This records a decrease from the previous number of 5,347.000 Person th for Dec 2024. Philippines Employment: Industry: Construction data is updated monthly, averaging 4,514.000 Person th from Jan 2021 (Median) to Jan 2025, with 49 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 5,769.000 Person th in Jun 2024 and a record low of 4,018.000 Person th in Jan 2023. Philippines Employment: Industry: Construction data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.G025: Labour Force Survey: Employment: by Industry, Occupation and Class.

  3. Contentment with K-12 basic education Philippines 2019-2022

    • statista.com
    Updated Sep 7, 2023
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    Contentment with K-12 basic education Philippines 2019-2022 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1306961/philippines-satisfaction-on-k-12-education/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 7, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    Sep 2019 - Jun 2022
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    According to a survey on the implementation of the K-12 basic education system in the Philippines, 44 percent of adult respondents stated that they were dissatisfied with the program as of June 2022. That was in comparison with the share of dissatisfied respondents in September 2019 which amounted to 28 percent.

    "K to 12" was launched in the Philippines in 2012 to reform its basic education with the aim of catching up to global education standards. Before the implementation of K-12, the country had a 10-year pre-university program.

  4. Number of senior high graduates Philippines SY 2022-2023, by track

    • statista.com
    Updated Dec 10, 2024
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    Statista (2024). Number of senior high graduates Philippines SY 2022-2023, by track [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1440014/philippines-number-of-senior-high-graduates-by-track/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 10, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    During the 2022-2023 school year, the majority of students who graduated from senior high school in the Philippines took the academic track. In particular, there were over 1.3 million graduates from this track, followed by less than 500,000 who graduated from the technical vocational livelihood track.

  5. Real estate developers in the Philippines 2022, by net income

    • statista.com
    • flwrdeptvarieties.store
    Updated Jun 13, 2023
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    Statista (2023). Real estate developers in the Philippines 2022, by net income [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1249845/philippines-real-estate-developers-by-net-income/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 13, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    2022
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    SM Prime Holdings, Inc. was the leading real estate developer in the Philippines regarding net income in 2022. That year, the company reported a net income of approximately 22 billion Philippine pesos. Its closest competitor, Ayala Land, generated a net income of about 13.3 billion Philippine pesos in the same year.

    SM Prime Holdings – more information

    SM Prime Holdings is a property developer that primarily builds and manages shopping malls in the country and abroad. In 2022, malls accounted for about half of the company’s total revenue. As of the first quarter of 2023, SM Prime owns and operates 82 malls in the country and seven in China. Its largest mall – SM Mall of Asia, is one of the largest nationwide, with over 600 shops. Aside from malls, the company also started venturing into the real estate segment and has been providing mid-rise buildings and single detached houses in multiple essential areas, such as cities in Metro Manila, Tagaytay, Cavite, Iloilo, and Davao. SM Prime also owns and operates convention centers and hotels.

    The state of property development in the Philippines

    Real estate in the Philippines has undergone massive developments in the past decade. The industry has grown significantly thanks to foreign investment growth, a growing middle-class population, and sustained remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), especially after the economic recovery post-COVID. Property developers are expected to maximize the increasing demand for property supply as multiple opportunities for real estate segments arise.

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Cite
National Statistics Office (2017). Census of Population and Housing 2010 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/7171

Census of Population and Housing 2010 - Philippines

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Oct 10, 2017
Dataset authored and provided by
National Statistics Office
Time period covered
2010
Area covered
Philippines
Description

Abstract

Census of Population and Housing (CPH) refers to the entire process of collecting, compiling, evaluating, analyzing, publishing, and disseminating data about the population and the living quarters in a country. It entails the listing and recording of the characteristics of each individual and each living quarter as of a specified time and within a specified territory. In other words, the CPH offers a “snapshot” of the entire population on a specific date, that is, how many people reside within the national borders, who they are, and where they live during such specified date. Also, included are the characteristics of the housing units where they reside.

The 2010 CPH is designed to take an inventory of the total population and housing units in the Philippines and collect information about their characteristics. The census of population is the source of information on the size and distribution of the population, as well as their demographic, social, economic, and cultural characteristics. The census of housing, on the other hand, provides information on the stock of housing units and their structural characteristics and facilities which have bearing on the maintenance of privacy and health, and the development of normal family living conditions. These information are vital for making rational plans and programs for local and national development.

Specifically, the 2010 CPH aims to: - obtain comprehensive data on the size, composition, and distribution of the population of the Philippines; - gather data on birth registration, literacy, school attendance, place of school, highest grade/year completed, residence 5 years ago, overseas worker, usual occupation, kind of business or industry, class of worker, place of work, fertility, religion, citizenship, ethnic group, disability, and functional difficulty, and determine their geographic distribution; - take stock of the housing units existing in the country and to get information about their geographic location, structural characteristics, and facilities, among others; - obtain information on the characteristics of the barangay, which will be used as basis for urban-rural classification; and - serve as sampling frame for use in household-based surveys.

Data collected in this census were compiled, evaluated, analyzed, published, and disseminated for the use of government, business, industry, social scientists, other research and academic institutions, and the general public. Among the important uses of census data are the following:

In government: - redistricting and apportionment of congressional seats; - allocation of resources and revenues; - creation of political and administrative units; - formulation of policies concerning population and housing; and - formulation of programs relative to the delivery of basic services for health, education, housing, and others

In business and industry: - determination of sites for establishing businesses; - determination of consumer demands for various goods and services; and - determination of supply of labor for the production of goods and services

In research and academic institutions: - conduct of researches on population and other disciplines; and - study of population growth and distribution as basis in preparing projections

Geographic coverage

National coverage Regions Provinces Cities and Municipalities Barangays

Analysis unit

household questionnaire: individuals (household members), households, housing units institutional questionnaire: individuals (institutional population), institutional living quarters barangay questionnaire: barangay

Universe

Census-taking in the Philippines follows a de-jure concept wherein a person is counted in the usual place of residence or the place where the person usually resides. Information on the count of the population and living quarters were collected with 12:01 a.m. of May 1, 2010 as the census reference time and date.

The following individuals were enumerated:

  • Those who were present at the time of visit and whose usual place of residence is the housing unit where the household lives.

  • Those whose usual place of residence is the place where the household lives but are temporarily away at the time of the census.

  • Boarders/lodgers of the household or employees of household-operated businesses who do not usually return/go to their respective homes weekly.

  • Overseas workers and who have been away at the time of the census for not more than five years from the date of departure and are expected to be back within five years from the date of last departure.

  • Filipino "balikbayans" with usual place of residence in a foreign country but have resided or are expected to reside in the Philippines for at least a year from their arrival.

  • Citizens of foreign countries who have resided or are expected to reside in the Philippines for at least a year from their arrival, except members of diplomatic missions and non-Filipino members of international organizations.

  • Persons temporarily staying with the household who have no usual place of residence or who are not certain to be enumerated elsewhere.

Kind of data

Census/enumeration data [cen]

Sampling procedure

In the 2010 CPH, there are basically two types of questionnaires used for the enumeration of household members. These are CPH Form 2 or the Common Household Questionnaire and CPH Form 3 or the Sample Household Questionnaire. CPH Form 3 contains more questions than CPH Form 2.

The 2010 CPH was carried out through a combination of complete enumeration and sampling. For this census, systematic cluster sampling was adopted. This sampling method is designed in such a way that efficient and accurate estimates will be obtained at the city/municipality level.

The sampling rate or the proportion of households to be selected as samples depends on the size of the city/municipality where the Enumeration Area (EA) is located. For the cities/municipalities with estimated number of households of 500 and below, 100 percent sampling rate was used. While for those cities/municipalities with estimated number of households of 501 and above, a sampling rate of 20 percent was implemented.

In this sampling scheme, each city/municipality was treated as a domain. For city/municipality with 100 percent sampling rate, all households in all the EAs within this city/municipality were selected as samples. For those with a 20 percent sampling rate, systematic cluster sampling was adopted. That is, sample selection of one in five clusters with the first cluster selected at random. Thus in effect, the EAs belonging to the city/municipality with 20 percent sampling rate are divided into clusters of size 5. Random start is pre-determined for each EA.

If the sampling rate applied to a city/municipality is 100 percent, it means that all households in that municipality were administered with CPH Form 3. If it is 20 percent, it means that 20 percent of all households used CPH Form 3 while 80 percent used CPH Form 2.

The random start used by EA is a number from 1 to 5 which was used to select the cluster where the first sample households in an EA, and subsequently the other sample households, were included.

Clusters are formed by grouping together households that have been assigned consecutive serial numbers as they were listed in the Listing Booklet. For a 20 percent sampling rate, clusters were formed by grouping together five households.

Mode of data collection

Face-to-face [f2f]

Research instrument

CPH Form 1 - Listing Booklet This form is a booklet used to list the buildings, housing units, households, and the Institutional Living Quarters (ILQs) within an EA. This form also records other important information such as the name of household heads and name and type of institutions and their addresses, population totals, and counts of males and females.

CPH Form 2 - Common Household Questionnaire This is the basic census questionnaire, which was used to interview and record information about the common or nonsample households. This questionnaire gathered information on the following demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the population: relationship to household head, sex, date of birth, age, birth registration, marital status, religion, ethnicity, citizenship, disability, functional difficulty, highest grade/year completed, residence 5 years ago, and overseas worker. It also contains questions on the type of building/house, construction materials of the roof and outer walls, state of repair of the building/house, year the building/house was built, floor area of the housing unit, and tenure status of the lot.

CPH Form 3 - Sample Household Questionnaire This is the basic census questionnaire, which was used to interview and record information about the sample households. This questionnaire contains ALL questions asked in CPH Form 2 PLUS additional population questions: literacy, school attendance, place of school, usual occupation, kind of business or industry, class of worker, place of work, and some items on fertility. Moreover, there are additional questions on household characteristics: fuel for lighting and cooking, source of water supply for drinking and/or cooking and for laundry, and bathing, tenure status of the housing unit, acquisition of the housing unit, source of financing of the housing unit, monthly rental of the housing unit, tenure status of the lot, usual manner of garbage disposal, kind of toilet facility, and land ownership. It also asked questions on the language/dialect generally spoken at home, residence five years from now, and presence of household conveniences/devices, and access to internet.

CPH Form 4 -

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