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    Home / Central Data Catalog / DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-48RND-SCH18DOT1-VISIT2-1992
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Land and Livestock Holdings Survey: NSS 48th Round : January - December 1992:Visit-2

India
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Reference ID
DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-48Rnd-Sch18dot1-visit2-1992
Producer(s)
National Sample Survey Office
Collections
Land and Livestock Holding Surveys
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Jan 16, 2018
Last modified
Mar 25, 2019
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  • Study Description
  • Data Dictionary
  • Downloads
  • Get Microdata
  • Identification
  • Version
  • Scope
  • Coverage
  • Producers and sponsors
  • Sampling
  • Survey instrument
  • Data collection
  • Data Access
  • Disclaimer and copyrights
  • Contacts
  • Metadata production
  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-48Rnd-Sch18dot1-visit2-1992

    Title

    Land and Livestock Holdings Survey: NSS 48th Round : January - December 1992:Visit-2

    Country
    Name Country code
    India IND
    Study type

    Socio-Economic/Household Survey

    Series Information

    The survey on Land and Livestock Holdings carried out in the forty-eighth round (January-December 1992) of the National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO) is the fifth in the series of similar surveys conducted so far by the NSSO.

    The first survey on land holdings was taken up by the NSS in its eighth round (July '54-April ‘55) as part of the World Agricultural Census initiated by the Food & Agricultural Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations. In this survey, information on (agricultural) holdings was collected mainly to meet the requirements of the FAO. In addition, information on household ownership holdings was collected to provide the policy framers with the much needed data for formulating land reforms policy for the country. A similar survey was conducted again in the sixteenth (July '60 - August '61) and seventeenth (September '61 - July '62) rounds of the NSS as a part of the World Agricultural Census Programme of 1960.

    Since then, NSSO has been regularly conducting Land Holdings survey every ten years. The third Land Holdings survey, conducted in its twenty-sixth round (July '71 - June '72), was integrated with a survey on Debt and Investment at the instance of the Reserve Bank of India. The present enquiry, as well as the fourth survey of the series conducted in the thirty-seventh round (January - December '82), essentially repeat the twenty-sixth round survey with some modifications in item coverage and the method of data collection.

    Abstract

    The survey on Land and Livestock Holdings carried out in the forty-eighth round (January-December 1992) of the National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO) is the fifth in the series of similar surveys conducted so far by the NSSO. The objective of these surveys has been to generate the basic quantitative information on the agrarian structure of the country, which is relevant to land policy. A large part of the information is collected mainly along the lines suggested in World Agricultural Census Programme of the Food and Agricultural Organisation
    (FAO) and thus serves the purpose of international comparison as well.

    In the present Land and Livestock Holdings survey of the NSSO, two types of holdings, namely, household ownership holdings and operational holdings, are enumerated by interviewing the sample households. Data are collected on the size (in terms of area), type, utilisation, tenurial status and other related aspects of both types of holdings.

    The information for Land and Livestock holdings survey was collected from a sample of households by interview method. Each sample
    household was visited twice during the period of survey with a gap of four to eight months. Two different schedules of enquiry were canvassed in the two visits.

    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    Randomly selected households based on sampling procedure.

    Version

    Version Description

    V1.0; Re-organised anonymised dataset for public distribution.

    Version Date

    2012-08-15

    Scope

    Notes

    In the 48th round, information on various aspects of ownership and operational holdings was collected for both rural and urban areas.
    Particulars of land owned, land leased out, types and terms of lease formed the main body of information for the study of ownership holdings. Further, particulars of land leased in were also collected to ascertain the land possessed by the households. For the operational
    holdings, data on size, composition, tenurial form, land use, extent of irrigation by source, fragmentation of holding, drainage facilities and other related aspects of holdings were collected. Since livestock and agricultural machinery form the basic resources for agricultural operations, an inventory of these assets owned by the households on the date of survey was also obtained.

    In the land holdings part of the survey, data collected on ownership and operational holdings. Particulars of land owned and land leased-out by terms of lease and type of lessee, together with area of land owned by type of land, were collected plot wise for each ownership holding. Besides these, particulars of land leased-in was also collected from each sample household. As for the operational holdings, information on their size, composition, tenural form, land use, fragmentation, irrigation practices, drainage drain age facilities and agricultural activities were collected for each agricultural season as well as the agricultural year 1991-92. In the part relating to livestock holding, an inventory of livestock and agricultural machinery were taken from each sample household. In addition to the particulars of land and livestock holdings, information were also collected on exploitation of trees owned by the sample households.

    STRUCTURE OF THE SCHEDULE: As stated in the preceding paragraphs, the survey was conducted in two visits and some items of information were collected in only one of them. The schedules of enquiry for the two visits are structured accordingly. In all, the schedule consists of 19 blocks (including two sub-blocks). Of these, blocks 0 to 4 and 10 were common to the schedules for both the visits and had exactly the same formats. However, since block 10 was meant for recording some auxiliary information about operational holdings of an agricultural season, it had Kharif and Rabi seasons as the reference periods in visit one and two respectively. Blocks 5 and 9 also appear in the schedules for both the visits, but their formats were not the same. Of the remaining blocks, six appear only in the schedule for visit-1 and five (including two sub-blocks) in only that for visit-2.

    Coverage

    Geographic Coverage

    The forty-eighth round was planned to cover the whole of Indian Union excepting
    (i) Ladakh and Kargil districts of Jammu & Kashmir; (ii) 768 interior villages of Nagaland (out of a total of 1119 villages) located beyond 5 kms. of a bus route,
    (iii) 172 villages in Andaman & Nicobar Islands (out of a total of 520 villages) which are inaccessible throughout the year.
    However, the survey could not be conducted in six districts of Jammu & Kashmir viz., Anantnag, Pulwana, Srinagar, Badgam, Baramula and
    Kupwara, and in the district of Amritsar in Punjab due to unfavourable field conditions.

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    National Sample Survey Office M/o Statistcs and Programme Implementation(MOSPI),Government of India (GOI)
    Producers
    Name Affiliation Role
    Survey Design Reearch Division National Sample Survey Office Questionnaire Desgn, Sampling methodology,Survey Reports
    Field Operations Division National Sample Survey Office Field Work
    Data Processing Division National Sample Survey Office Data Processing
    Computer Centre M/o Statistcs and Programme Implementation(MOSPI),Government of India (GOI) Data processing & Dissemination
    Funding Agency/Sponsor
    Name Abbreviation
    M/o Statistics & Programme Implementation, GOI MOSPI
    Other Identifications/Acknowledgments
    Name Affiliation Role
    Governing council and Working Group GOI Finalisation of survey study and Questionnaire

    Sampling

    Sampling Procedure

    The sample design adopted for the survey was essentially a stratified two stage design, with census villages and urban blocks as first stage units (FSUs) for the rural and urban sectors respectively, and households as the second stage sampling units (SSUs) in both the sectors. The
    selection of villages was done with probability proportional to population (with replacement), mainly based on the 1981 census list of villages. The selection of urban blocks was done with equal probability without replacement based on Urban Frame Survey (UFS) conducted by the NSSO as an on-going activity.
    The details of sample design and estimation procedure adopted for the survey are given in chapter-2 of the Report 407 attached as external attachment.

    Deviations from the Sample Design

    There was no deviation from the original sample deviation.

    Response Rate

    In all 9052 villages were planned to be surveyed in this round. Of these, 4328 villages were allocated to the central sample - the part surveyed mainly by the NSSO field staff - and the rest to the state sample - the part surveyed by the state agencies. In the urban sector, the allocations for the central and state samples were 2484 and 3076 blocks respectively.
    The number of villages and urban blocks actually surveyed under the central sample was 4231 and 2420 respectively.
    Sample size - second stage units :Plan was to survey 8 households from each sample village and 9 households from each sample urban
    block. In the central sample, the actual number of households surveyed was 33289 in the rural sector and 20592 in the urban sector.

    Weighting

    Sample weights were calculated and included in each of the data files
    Variable 'Wgt_SS' refers to Multiplier for each Subsample.
    Variable 'Wgt_Combined' refers to Combined Multiplier.

    Survey instrument

    Questionnaires

    STRUCTURE OF THE SCHEDULE: As already stated , the survey was conducted in two visits and some items of information were collected in only one of them. The schedules of enquiry for the two visits were structured accordingly. In all, the schedule consisted of 19 blocks (including two sub-blocks). Of these, blocks 0 to 4 and 10 were common to the schedules for both the visits and had exactly the same formats. However, since block 10 is meant for recording some auxiliary information about operational holdings of an agricultural season, it had Kharif and Rabi seasons as the reference periods in visit one and two respectively. Blocks 5 and 9 also appeared in the schedules for both the visits, but their formats were not the same. Of the remaining blocks, six appeared only in the schedule for visit-1 and five (including two sub-blocks) in only that for visit-2. The detailed structures of the visit-1 and visit-2 schedules, along with the reference periods are indicated below:-


    Block block heading appearing in reference
    no. the schedule for date/period

    (1) (2) (3) (4)


    0 - descriptive identification of sample household visit 1 & 2 -
    1 - identification of sample household visit 1 & 2 -
    2 - particulars of field operation visit 1 & 2 -
    3 - remarks by investigator visit 1 & 2 -
    4 - remarks by supervisory officer(s) visit 1 & 2 -
    5 - household characteristics visit 1 & 2(different formats) various
    5.1 -particulars of partitioned households visit 2 only Rabi
    6 - household members & their activity particulars visit 1 only various
    7 - particulars of area owned(other than homestead visit 1 only date of survey
    land) and particulars of area leased out by the
    household as on the date ofsurvey
    8 - particulars of area leased in/otherwise possessed visit 1 only date of survey
    (other than homestead land) by the household.
    9 - particulars of plots possessed by operational visit 1 Kharif
    holding during major part of Kharif/Rabi visit 2 Rabi
    (different formats)
    9.1 - particulars of plots included in operational visit 2 only Rabi
    holding of Kharif but not in rabi
    10 - some gereral information of operational holdings visit 1 Kharif
    for Kharif/rabi visit 2 Rabi
    11 - number of cattle and buffaloes owned visit 1 only date of survey
    12 - number of other livestock & poultry owned visit 1 only date of survey
    13 - particulars of agricultural machinery and visit 1 only date of survey
    implements owned on the date of survey
    14 - particulars of plots possessed by operational visit 2 only agr. year
    holding no..during major part of 1991-92
    15 - some general information of operational holdings visit 2 only agr. year
    for agri-cultural year 1991-92
    16 - ownership and exploitation of trees visit 2 only date of survey & 365 days
    preceding the date of survey.


    Data collection

    Mode of data collection
    • Face-to-face [f2f]
    Data Collectors
    Name Affiliation Abbreviation
    Field Operations Division of Naional Sample Survey Office Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation NSSO(FOD)
    Data Collection Notes

    The survey period for the forty-eighth round survey was the calendar year 1992. In order to reduce recall error, particulars relating to the entire agricultural year were collected by visiting each sample household twice during the survey period. The first visits to the sample households were made during January to August, while the second visits were made during September to December. The longer period for the first visit reflected the higher workload for the field staff during this visit compared to the second visit.

    The information on holdings operated during the Kharif season of the agricultural year 1991-92 was collected in first visit, while that on holdings operated during the Rabi season was collected in the second visit. In addition, particulars of operational holdings with the agricultural year 1991-92 as the reference period were also collected in the second visit.

    Data Access

    Access authority
    Name Affiliation URL Email
    Computer Centre M/O Statistics and Programme Implementation http://mospi.nic.in/Mospi_New/site/home.aspx nssodata@gmail.com
    Access conditions

    Validated unit level data relating to various survey rounds are available on CD-ROMS which can be obtained from the Deputy Director General, Computer Centre, M/O Statistics and PI, East Block No. 10 R.K. Puram, New Delhi-110066 by remitting the price along with packaging and postal charges as well as giving an undertaking duly signed in a specified format.The amount is to be remitted by way of demand draft drawn in favour of Pay & Accounts Officer, Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation, payable at New Delhi.

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation URL
    ADG, SDRD , NSSO M/O Statistics & PI, G/O India http://mospi.gov.in/
    DDG, Computer Centre Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation http://mospi.nic.in/Mospi_New/site/home.aspx

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-48Rnd-Sch18dot1-visit2-1992

    Producers
    Name Abbreviation Affiliation Role
    Computer Centre MOSPI, CC M/O Statistics & Programme Implementation Documentation of the study
    Date of Metadata Production

    2012-08-25

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Version 1.0 (Aug 2012)

    Back to Catalog
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