4 datasets found
  1. i

    Occupational Wages Survey 2004 - Philippines

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • dev.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
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    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics (2019). Occupational Wages Survey 2004 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/2072
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics
    Time period covered
    2004
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    A. Objectives

    To generate statistics for wage and salary administration and for wage determination in collective bargaining negotiations.

    B. Uses of Data

    Inputs to wage, income, productivity and price policies, wage fixing and collective bargaining; occupational wage rates can be used to measure wage differentials, wage inequality in typical low wage and high wage occupations and for international comparability; industry data on basic pay and allowance can be used to measure wage differentials across industries, for investment decisions and as reference in periodic adjustments of minimum wages.

    C. Main Topics Covered

    Occupational wage rates Median basic pay and median allowances of time-rate workers on full-time basis

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage, 17 administrative egions

    Analysis unit

    Establishment

    Universe

    The survey covered non-agricultural establishments employing 20 or more workers except national postal activities, central banking, public administration and defense and compulsory social security, public education services, public medical, dental and other health services, activities of membership organizations, extra territorial organizations and bodies.

    Kind of data

    Census/enumeration data [cen]

    Sampling procedure

    Statistical unit: The statistical unit is the establishment. Each unit is classified to an industry that reflects its main economic activity---the activity that contributes the biggest or major portion of the gross income or revenues of the establishment.

    Survey universe/Sampling frame: The 2004 BLES Survey Sampling Frame (SSF2004) is a list frame of establishments that is a partial update of the 2003 BLES Sampling Frame based on the status of establishments reported in the 2003 BLES Integrated Survey (BITS) conducted nationwide.

    Reports on closures and retrenchments of establishments submitted to the Regional Offices of the Department of Labor and Employment in December 2003 and January 2004 were also considered in updating the 2004 frame.

    Sampling design: The OWS is a complete enumeration of non-agricultural establishments employing 50 persons or more. The design does not consider the region as a domain to allow for more industry coverage.

    Sample size: For 2004 OWS, number of establishments covered was 8,779 of which, 6,827 were eligible units.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.5.

    Sampling deviation

    While the OWS is a complete enumeration survey, not all of the fielded questionnaires are accomplished. Due to the inadequacy of the frame used, there are reports of permanent closures, nonlocation, duplicate listing and shifts in industry and employment outside the survey coverage. Establishments that fall in these categories are not eligible elements of the frame and their count is not considered in the estimation. In addition to non-response of establishments because of refusals, strikes or temporary closures, there are establishments whose questionnaires contain inconsistent item responses that are not included in the processing as these have not replied to the verification queries by the time output table generation commences. Such establishments are also considered as non-respondents.

    Respondents are post-stratified as to geographic, industry and employment size classifications. Non-respondents are retained in their classifications. Sample values of basic pay and allowances for the monitored occupations whose basis of payment is an hour or a day are converted into a standard monthly equivalent, assuming 313 working days and 8 hours per day. Daily rate x 26.08333; Hourly rate x 208.66667.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth] mixed method: self-accomplished, mailed, face-to-face

    Research instrument

    The questionnaire contains the following sections:

    Cover Page (Page 1) This contains the address box, contact particulars for assistance, spaces for changes in the name and location of sample establishment and head office information in case the questionnaire is endorsed to it and status codes of the establishment to be accomplished by BLES and its field personnel.

    Survey Information (Page 2) This contains the survey objective and uses of the data, scope of the survey, confidentiality clause, collection authority, authorized field personnel, coverage, periodicity and reference period, due date for accomplishment and expected date when the results of the 2006 OWS would be available.

    Part A: General Information (Page 3) This portion inquires on main economic activity, major products/goods or services and total employment.

    Part B: Employment and Wage Rates of Time Rate Workers on Full Time Basis (Pages 4-5) This section requires data on the number of time-rate workers on full-time basis by time unit and by basic pay and allowance intervals.

    Part C: Employment and Wage Rates of Time Rate Workers on Full Time Basis in Selected Occupations (Pages 6-9) This part inquires on the basic pay and allowance per time unit and corresponding number of workers in the two benchmark occupations and in the pre-determined occupations listed in the occupational sheet to be provided to the establishment where applicable.

    Part D: Certification (Page 10) This portion is provided for the respondent's name/signature, position, telephone no., fax no. and e-mail address and time spent in answering the questionnaire.

    Appropriate spaces are also provided to elicit comments on data provided for the 2006 OWS; results of the 2004 OWS; and presentation/packaging, particularly on the definition of terms, layout, font and color

    Part E: Survey Personnel (Page 10) This portion is for the particulars of the enumerators and area/regional supervisors and reviewers at the BLES and DOLE Regional Offices involved in the data collection and review of questionnaire entries.

    Part F: Industries With Selected Occupations (Page 11) The list of industries for occupational wage monitoring has been provided to guide the enumerators in determining the correct occupational sheet that should be furnished to the respondent.

    Results of the 2004 OWS (Page 12) The results of the 2004 OWS are found on page 12 of the questionnaire. These results can serve as a guide to the survey personnel in editing/review of the entries in the questionnaire.

    Note: Refer to questionnaire and List of Monitored Occupations.

    Cleaning operations

    Data are manually and electronically processed. Upon collection of accomplished questionnaires, enumerators perform field editing before leaving the establishments to ensure completeness, consistency and reasonableness of entries in accordance with the field operations manual. The forms are again checked for data consistency and completeness by their field supervisors.

    The BLES personnel undertake the final review, coding of information on classifications used, data entry and validation and scrutiny of aggregated results for coherence. Questionnaires with incomplete or inconsistent entries are returned to the establishments for verification, personally or through mail.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.10.

    Response rate

    The response rate in terms of eligible units was 82.1%.

    Sampling error estimates

    Estimates of the sampling errors are not computed.

    Data appraisal

    The survey results are checked for consistency with the results of previous OWS data and the minimum wage rates corresponding to the reference period of the survey.

    Average wage rates of unskilled workers by region is compared for proximity with the corresponding minimum wage rates during the survey reference period.

  2. i

    Occupational Wages Survey 2006 - Philippines

    • dev.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 25, 2019
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    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics (2019). Occupational Wages Survey 2006 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://dev.ihsn.org/nada/catalog/study/PHL_2006_OWS_v01_M
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 25, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics
    Time period covered
    2006 - 2007
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    A. Objectives

    To generate statistics for wage and salary administration and for wage determination in collective bargaining negotiations.

    B. Uses of Data

    Inputs to wage, income, productivity and price policies, wage fixing and collective bargaining; occupational wage rates can be used to measure wage differentials, wage inequality in typical low wage and high wage occupations and for international comparability; industry data on basic pay and allowance can be used to measure wage differentials across industries, for investment decisions and as reference in periodic adjustments of minimum wages.

    C. Main Topics Covered

    Occupational wage rates Median basic pay and median allowances of time-rate workers on full-time basis

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage, 17 administrative regions

    Analysis unit

    Establishment

    Universe

    The survey covered non-agricultural establishments employing 20 or more workers except national postal activities, central banking, public administration and defense and compulsory social security, public education services, public medical, dental and other health services, activities of membership organizations, extra territorial organizations and bodies.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    Statistical unit: The statistical unit is the establishment. Each unit is classified to an industry that reflects its main economic activity---the activity that contributes the biggest or major portion of the gross income or revenues of the establishment.

    Survey universe/Sampling frame: The 2006 BLES Survey Sampling Frame (SSF 2006) is an integrated list of establishments culled from the 2004 List of Establishments of the National Statistics Office, updated 2004 BLES Sampling Frame based on the status of establishments reported in the 2003/2004 BLES Integrated Survey (BITS). Reports on closures and retrenchments of establishments submitted to the Regional Offices of the Department of Labor and Employment were also considered in preparing the 2006 frame.

    Sampling design: The OWS is a sample survey of non-agricultural establishments employing 20 persons or more where the survey domain is the industry. Those establishments employing at least 200 persons are covered with certainty and the rest are sampled (stratified random sampling). The design does not consider the region as a domain to allow for more industry coverage.

    Sample size: For 2006 OWS, number of establishments covered was 7,630 of which, 6,432 were eligible units.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 2 Section 2.5.

    Sampling deviation

    Not all of the fielded questionnaires are accomplished. During data collection, there are reports of permanent closures, non-location, duplicate listing and shifts in industry and employment outside the survey coverage. Establishments that fall in these categories are not eligible elements (three consecutive survey rounds for "can not be located" establishments) of the frame and their count is not considered in the estimation. Non-respondents are made up of refusals, strikes or temporary closures, can not be located (less than three consecutive survey rounds) and those establishments whose questionnaires contain inconsistent item responses and have not replied to the verification queries by the time output table generation commences.

    Respondents are post-stratified as to geographic, industry and employment size classifications. Non-respondents are retained in their classifications. Sample values of basic pay and allowances for the monitored occupations whose basis of payment is an hour or a day are converted into a standard monthly equivalent, assuming 313 working days and 8 hours per day. Daily rate x 26.08333; Hourly rate x 208.66667.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth] mixed method: self-accomplished, mailed, face-to-face

    Research instrument

    The questionnaire contains the following sections:

    Cover Page (Page 1) This contains the address box, contact particulars for assistance, spaces for changes in the name and location of sample establishment and head office information in case the questionnaire is endorsed to it and status codes of the establishment to be accomplished by BLES and its field personnel.

    Survey Information (Page 2) This contains the survey objective and uses of the data, scope of the survey, confidentiality clause, collection authority, authorized field personnel, coverage, periodicity and reference period, due date for accomplishment and expected date when the results of the 2006 OWS would be available.

    Part A: General Information (Page 3) This portion inquires on main economic activity, major products/goods or services and total employment.

    Part B: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full-Time Basis (Pages 4-5) This section requires data on the number of time-rate workers on full-time basis by time unit and by basic pay and allowance intervals.

    Part C: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full-Time Basis in Selected Occupations (Pages 6-9) This part inquires on the basic pay and allowance per time unit and corresponding number of workers in the two benchmark occupations and in the pre-determined occupations listed in the occupational sheet to be provided to the establishment where applicable.

    Part D: Certification (Page 10) This portion is provided for the respondent's name/signature, position, telephone no., fax no. and e-mail address and time spent in answering the questionnaire.

    Appropriate spaces are also provided to elicit comments on data provided for the 2006 OWS; results of the 2004 OWS; and presentation/packaging, particularly on the definition of terms, layout, font and color.

    Part E: Survey Personnel (Page 10) This portion is for the particulars of the enumerators and area/regional supervisors and reviewers at the BLES and DOLE Regional Offices involved in the data collection and review of questionnaire entries.

    Part F: Industries With Selected Occupations (Page 11) The list of industries for occupational wage monitoring has been provided to guide the enumerators in determining the correct occupational sheet that should be furnished to the respondent.

    Results of the 2004 OWS (Page 12) The results of the 2004 OWS are found on page 12 of the questionnaire. These results can serve as a guide to the survey personnel in editing/review of the entries in the questionnaire.

    Note: Refer to questionnaire and List of Monitored Occupations.

    Cleaning operations

    Data were manually and electronically processed. Upon collection of accomplished questionnaires, enumerators performed field editing before leaving the establishments to ensure completeness, consistency and reasonableness of entries in accordance with the Field Operations Manual. The forms were again checked for data consistency and completeness by their field supervisors.

    The BLES personnel undertaook the final review, coding of information on classifications used, data entry and validation and scrutiny of aggregated results for coherence. Questionnaires with incomplete or inconsistent entries were returned to the establishments for verification, personally or through mail.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.10.

    Response rate

    The response rate in terms of eligible units was 87.56%.

    Sampling error estimates

    Estimates of the sampling errors computed.

    Note: Refer to Coefficients of Variation.

    Data appraisal

    The survey results are checked for consistency with the results of previous OWS data and the minimum wage rates corresponding to the reference period of the survey.

    Average wage rates of unskilled workers by region is compared for proximity with the corresponding minimum wage rates during the survey reference period.

  3. i

    Occupational Wages Survey 2008 - Philippines

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • dev.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
    Share
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    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics (2019). Occupational Wages Survey 2008 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/2088
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics
    Time period covered
    2008 - 2009
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    A. Objectives

    To generate statistics for wage and salary administration and for wage determination in collective bargaining negotiations.

    B. Uses of Data

    Inputs to wage, income, productivity and price policies, wage fixing and collective bargaining; occupational wage rates can be used to measure wage differentials, wage inequality in typical low wage and high wage occupations and for international comparability; industry data on basic pay and allowance can be used to measure wage differentials across industries, for investment decisions and as reference in periodic adjustments of minimum wages.

    C. Main Topics Covered

    Occupational wage rates Median basic pay and median allowances of time-rate workers on full-time basis

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage, 17 administrative regions

    Analysis unit

    Establishment

    Universe

    The survey covered non-agricultural establishments employing 20 or more workers except national postal activities, central banking, public administration and defense and compulsory social security, public education services, public medical, dental and other health services, activities of membership organizations, extra territorial organizations and bodies.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    Statistical unit: The statistical unit is the establishment. Each unit is classified to an industry that reflects its main economic activity---the activity that contributes the biggest or major portion of the gross income or revenues of the establishment.

    Survey universe/Sampling frame: The 2008 BLES Survey Sampling Frame (SSF 2008) is an integrated list of establishments culled from the 2006 List of Establishments of the National Statistics Office; and updated 2006 BLES Sampling Frame based on the status of establishments reported in the 2006 BLES Integrated Survey (BITS) and 2006 Occupational Wages Survey. Lists of Establishments from the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industries (PCCI) were also considered in preparing the 2008 frame.

    Sampling design: The OWS is a sample survey of non-agricultural establishments employing 20 persons or more where the survey domain is the industry. Those establishments employing at least 200 persons are covered with certainty and the rest are sampled (stratified random sampling). The design does not consider the region as a domain to allow for more industry coverage.

    Sample size: For 2008 OWS, number of establishments covered was 6,460 of which, 5,176 were eligible units.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 2 Section 2.5.

    Sampling deviation

    Not all of the fielded questionnaires are accomplished. During data collection, there are reports of permanent closures, non-location, duplicate listing and shifts in industry and employment outside the survey coverage. Establishments that fall in these categories are not eligible elements (three consecutive survey rounds for "can not be located" establishments) of the frame and their count is not considered in the estimation. Non-respondents are made up of refusals, strikes or temporary closures, can not be located (less than three consecutive survey rounds) and those establishments whose questionnaires contain inconsistent item responses and have not replied to the verification queries by the time output table generation commences.

    Respondents are post-stratified as to geographic, industry and employment size classifications. Non-respondents are retained in their classifications. Sample values of basic pay and allowances for the monitored occupations whose basis of payment is an hour or a day are converted into a standard monthly equivalent, assuming 313 working days and 8 hours per day. Daily rate x 26.08333; Hourly rate x 208.66667.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth] mixed method: self-accomplished, mailed, face-to-face

    Research instrument

    The questionnaire contains the following sections:

    Cover Page (Page 1) This contains the address box, contact particulars for assistance, spaces for changes in the name and location of sample establishment and head office information in case the questionnaire is endorsed to it and status codes of the establishment to be accomplished by BLES and its field personnel.

    Survey Information (Page 2) This contains the survey objective and uses of the data, scope of the survey, confidentiality clause, collection authority, authorized field personnel, coverage, periodicity and reference period, due date for accomplishment and expected date when the results of the 2006 OWS would be available.

    Part A: General Information (Page 3) This portion inquires on main economic activity, major products/goods or services and total employment.

    Part B: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full-Time Basis (Pages 4-5) This section requires data on the number of time-rate workers on full-time basis by time unit and by basic pay and allowance intervals.

    Part C: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full-Time Basis in Selected Occupations (Pages 6-9) This part inquires on the basic pay and allowance per time unit and corresponding number of workers in the two benchmark occupations and in the pre-determined occupations listed in the occupational sheet to be provided to the establishment where applicable.

    Part D: Certification (Page 10) This portion is provided for the respondent's name/signature, position, telephone no., fax no. and e-mail address and time spent in answering the questionnaire.

    Appropriate spaces are also provided to elicit comments on data provided for the 2008 OWS; results of the 2006 OWS; and presentation/packaging, particularly on the definition of terms, layout, font and color.

    Part E: Survey Personnel (Page 10) This portion is for the particulars of the enumerators and area/regional supervisors and reviewers at the BLES and DOLE Regional Offices involved in the data collection and review of questionnaire entries.

    Part F: Industries With Selected Occupations (Page 11) The list of industries for occupational wage monitoring has been provided to guide the enumerators in determining the correct occupational sheet that should be furnished to the respondent.

    Results of the 2006 OWS (Page 12) The results of the 2006 OWS are found on page 12 of the questionnaire. These results can serve as a guide to the survey personnel in editing/review of the entries in the questionnaire.

    Note: Refer to questionnaire and List of Monitored Occupations.

    Cleaning operations

    Data were manually and electronically processed. Upon collection of accomplished questionnaires, enumerators performed field editing before leaving the establishments to ensure completeness, consistency and reasonableness of entries in accordance with the Field Operations Manual. The forms were again checked for data consistency and completeness by their field supervisors.

    The BLES personnel undertook the final review, coding of information on classifications used, data entry and validation and scrutiny of aggregated results for coherence. Questionnaires with incomplete or inconsistent entries were returned to the establishments for verification, personally or through mail.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.10.

    Response rate

    The response rate in terms of eligible units was 78.4%.

    Sampling error estimates

    Estimates of the sampling errors will be computed and posted in BLES website.

    Data appraisal

    The survey results are checked for consistency with the results of previous OWS data and the minimum wage rates corresponding to the reference period of the survey.

    Average wage rates of unskilled workers by region is compared for proximity with the corresponding minimum wage rates during the survey reference period.

  4. i

    Occupational Wages Survey 2002 - Philippines

    • dev.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 25, 2019
    Share
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    Link copied
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    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics (2019). Occupational Wages Survey 2002 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://dev.ihsn.org/nada/catalog/study/PHL_2002_OWS_v01_M
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 25, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics
    Time period covered
    2002 - 2003
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    A. Objective To generate statistics for wage and salary administration and for wage determination in collective bargaining negotiations.

    B. Uses of Data Inputs to wage, income, productivity and price policies, wage fixing and collective bargaining; occupational wage rates can be used to measure wage differentials, wage inequality in typical low wage and high wage occupations and for international comparability; industry data on basic pay and allowance can be used to measure wage differentials across industries, for investment decisions and as reference in periodic adjustments of minimum wages.

    C. Main Topics Covered Occupational wage rates Median basic pay and median allowances of time-rate workers on full-time basis

    Geographic coverage

    National Capital Region

    Analysis unit

    Establishment

    Universe

    The survey covered non-agricultural establishments employing 50 or more workers except national postal activities, central banking, public administration and defense and compulsory social security, public education services, public medical, dental and other health services, activities of membership organizations, extra territorial organizations and bodies.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    Statistical unit: The statistical unit is the establishment. Each unit is classified to an industry that reflects its main economic activity---the activity that contributes the biggest or major portion of the gross income or revenues of the establishment.

    Survey universe/Sampling frame: The sampling frame used for the survey was taken from the List of Establishments of the National Statistics Office. On a partial basis, this is regularly updated based on the responses to other surveys of the BLES, establishment reports on retrenchments and closures submitted to the Regional Offices of the Department of Labor and Employment and other establishment lists.

    Sampling design: The OWS is a complete enumeration survey of non-agricultural establishments employing 50 persons or more in the National Capital Region.

    Sample size: For OWS 2002, number of establishments covered was 5,954 of which, 3,974 were eligible units.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual

    Sampling deviation

    Not all of the fielded questionnaires are accomplished. During data collection, there are reports of permanent closures, non-location, duplicate listing and shifts in industry and employment outside the survey coverage. Establishments that fall in these categories are not eligible elements (three consecutive survey rounds for "can not be located" establishments) of the frame and their count is not considered in the estimation. Non-respondents are made up of refusals, strikes or temporary closures, can not be located (less than three consecutive survey rounds) and those establishments whose questionnaires contain inconsistent item responses and have not replied to the verification queries by the time output table generation commences.

    Respondents are post-stratified as to geographic, industry and employment size classifications. Non-respondents are retained in their classifications. Sample values of basic pay and allowances for the monitored occupations whose basis of payment is an hour or a day are converted into a standard monthly equivalent, assuming 313 working days and 8 hours per day. Daily rate x 26.08333; Hourly rate x 208.66667.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth] mixed method: self-accomplished, mailed, face-to-face

    Research instrument

    The 2002 OWS questionnaire is made up of the following sections:

    Cover page (Page 1) This contains the address box for the establishment and other particulars.

    Survey Information (Page 2) This section provides information on the purpose of the survey, coverage, reference period, collection authority, authorized field personnel, confidentiality clause, due date, availability of results and assistance available.

    Part A: General Information (Page 3) This part inquires on the main economic activity, major product/s, goods or services, total employment, ownership (with foreign equity or wholly Filipino), spread of operations (whether establishment is a multinational), market orientation (for manufacturing only, engaged in export or domestic market only), presence of a union and existence of a collective bargaining agreement in the establishment.

    Part B: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full Time Basis (Pages 4 - 5) It inquires data on the distribution of time-rate workers on full-time basis by time unit (hourly, daily, monthly) and basic pay and allowance intervals;

    Part C: Employment and Wage Rates of Time-Rate Workers on Full-Time Basis in Selected Occupations (Pages 6 - 11) For each occupation covered, the establishment is asked to report the time unit of work (hourly, daily, monthly), corresponding basic pay per worker and number of workers. Similar data are also asked for workers in the occupation that are given regular allowances. The total number of workers disaggregated by sex in each monitored occupation is likewise requested

    Part D: Key and Representative Occupations in the Establishment (Page 12) This asks for the occupations and corresponding employment of those considered as unique to the industry/sector to which the establishment belongs, employs the most number of works, historically important in the wage structure or emerging/has a high growth potential.

    Survey Results (Pages 13 - 14) Selected statistical tables from the previous two (2) survey rounds are provided for information of the respondents.

    Part E: Certification of Respondent (Page 15) This box is provided for the respondent’s comments or suggestions (on the data it provided for the survey, results of previous survey rounds and improvements on the design/contents of the questionnaire) and for the name and signature, position, and telephone/fax numbers and e-mail address of the person responsible for filling out the form.

    Part F: Survey Personnel (Page 15) This portion is allocated for the names of personnel involved in collection, editing and review of each questionnaire and dates when the activities were completed.

    Part G: Industries with Selected Occupations (Page 16) This lists the selected 43 industries whose occupational wage rates and employment are being monitored.

    Note: Refer to Questionnaire.

    Cleaning operations

    Data are manually and electronically processed. Upon collection of accomplished questionnaires, enumerators perform field editing before leaving the establishments to ensure completeness, consistency and reasonableness of entries in accordance with the field operations manual. The forms are again checked for data consistency and completeness by their field supervisors.

    The BLES personnel undertake the final review, coding of information on classifications used, data entry and validation and scrutiny of aggregated results for coherence. Questionnaires with incomplete or inconsistent entries are returned to the establishments for verification, personally or through mail.

    Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.10.

    Response rate

    The response rate in terms of eligible units was 78.7%.

    Data appraisal

    The survey results are checked for consistency with the results of previous OWS data and the minimum wage rates corresponding to the reference period of the survey.

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Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics (2019). Occupational Wages Survey 2004 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/2072

Occupational Wages Survey 2004 - Philippines

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Mar 29, 2019
Dataset authored and provided by
Bureau of Labor and Employment Statistics
Time period covered
2004
Area covered
Philippines
Description

Abstract

A. Objectives

To generate statistics for wage and salary administration and for wage determination in collective bargaining negotiations.

B. Uses of Data

Inputs to wage, income, productivity and price policies, wage fixing and collective bargaining; occupational wage rates can be used to measure wage differentials, wage inequality in typical low wage and high wage occupations and for international comparability; industry data on basic pay and allowance can be used to measure wage differentials across industries, for investment decisions and as reference in periodic adjustments of minimum wages.

C. Main Topics Covered

Occupational wage rates Median basic pay and median allowances of time-rate workers on full-time basis

Geographic coverage

National coverage, 17 administrative egions

Analysis unit

Establishment

Universe

The survey covered non-agricultural establishments employing 20 or more workers except national postal activities, central banking, public administration and defense and compulsory social security, public education services, public medical, dental and other health services, activities of membership organizations, extra territorial organizations and bodies.

Kind of data

Census/enumeration data [cen]

Sampling procedure

Statistical unit: The statistical unit is the establishment. Each unit is classified to an industry that reflects its main economic activity---the activity that contributes the biggest or major portion of the gross income or revenues of the establishment.

Survey universe/Sampling frame: The 2004 BLES Survey Sampling Frame (SSF2004) is a list frame of establishments that is a partial update of the 2003 BLES Sampling Frame based on the status of establishments reported in the 2003 BLES Integrated Survey (BITS) conducted nationwide.

Reports on closures and retrenchments of establishments submitted to the Regional Offices of the Department of Labor and Employment in December 2003 and January 2004 were also considered in updating the 2004 frame.

Sampling design: The OWS is a complete enumeration of non-agricultural establishments employing 50 persons or more. The design does not consider the region as a domain to allow for more industry coverage.

Sample size: For 2004 OWS, number of establishments covered was 8,779 of which, 6,827 were eligible units.

Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.5.

Sampling deviation

While the OWS is a complete enumeration survey, not all of the fielded questionnaires are accomplished. Due to the inadequacy of the frame used, there are reports of permanent closures, nonlocation, duplicate listing and shifts in industry and employment outside the survey coverage. Establishments that fall in these categories are not eligible elements of the frame and their count is not considered in the estimation. In addition to non-response of establishments because of refusals, strikes or temporary closures, there are establishments whose questionnaires contain inconsistent item responses that are not included in the processing as these have not replied to the verification queries by the time output table generation commences. Such establishments are also considered as non-respondents.

Respondents are post-stratified as to geographic, industry and employment size classifications. Non-respondents are retained in their classifications. Sample values of basic pay and allowances for the monitored occupations whose basis of payment is an hour or a day are converted into a standard monthly equivalent, assuming 313 working days and 8 hours per day. Daily rate x 26.08333; Hourly rate x 208.66667.

Mode of data collection

Other [oth] mixed method: self-accomplished, mailed, face-to-face

Research instrument

The questionnaire contains the following sections:

Cover Page (Page 1) This contains the address box, contact particulars for assistance, spaces for changes in the name and location of sample establishment and head office information in case the questionnaire is endorsed to it and status codes of the establishment to be accomplished by BLES and its field personnel.

Survey Information (Page 2) This contains the survey objective and uses of the data, scope of the survey, confidentiality clause, collection authority, authorized field personnel, coverage, periodicity and reference period, due date for accomplishment and expected date when the results of the 2006 OWS would be available.

Part A: General Information (Page 3) This portion inquires on main economic activity, major products/goods or services and total employment.

Part B: Employment and Wage Rates of Time Rate Workers on Full Time Basis (Pages 4-5) This section requires data on the number of time-rate workers on full-time basis by time unit and by basic pay and allowance intervals.

Part C: Employment and Wage Rates of Time Rate Workers on Full Time Basis in Selected Occupations (Pages 6-9) This part inquires on the basic pay and allowance per time unit and corresponding number of workers in the two benchmark occupations and in the pre-determined occupations listed in the occupational sheet to be provided to the establishment where applicable.

Part D: Certification (Page 10) This portion is provided for the respondent's name/signature, position, telephone no., fax no. and e-mail address and time spent in answering the questionnaire.

Appropriate spaces are also provided to elicit comments on data provided for the 2006 OWS; results of the 2004 OWS; and presentation/packaging, particularly on the definition of terms, layout, font and color

Part E: Survey Personnel (Page 10) This portion is for the particulars of the enumerators and area/regional supervisors and reviewers at the BLES and DOLE Regional Offices involved in the data collection and review of questionnaire entries.

Part F: Industries With Selected Occupations (Page 11) The list of industries for occupational wage monitoring has been provided to guide the enumerators in determining the correct occupational sheet that should be furnished to the respondent.

Results of the 2004 OWS (Page 12) The results of the 2004 OWS are found on page 12 of the questionnaire. These results can serve as a guide to the survey personnel in editing/review of the entries in the questionnaire.

Note: Refer to questionnaire and List of Monitored Occupations.

Cleaning operations

Data are manually and electronically processed. Upon collection of accomplished questionnaires, enumerators perform field editing before leaving the establishments to ensure completeness, consistency and reasonableness of entries in accordance with the field operations manual. The forms are again checked for data consistency and completeness by their field supervisors.

The BLES personnel undertake the final review, coding of information on classifications used, data entry and validation and scrutiny of aggregated results for coherence. Questionnaires with incomplete or inconsistent entries are returned to the establishments for verification, personally or through mail.

Note: Refer to Field Operations Manual Chapter 1 Section 1.10.

Response rate

The response rate in terms of eligible units was 82.1%.

Sampling error estimates

Estimates of the sampling errors are not computed.

Data appraisal

The survey results are checked for consistency with the results of previous OWS data and the minimum wage rates corresponding to the reference period of the survey.

Average wage rates of unskilled workers by region is compared for proximity with the corresponding minimum wage rates during the survey reference period.

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