India - Household Consumer Expenditure, July 1987 - June 1988, NSS 43rd Round
Reference ID | DDI-IND-MOSPI-NSSO-43Rnd-Sch1.0-1987 |
Year | 1987 - 1988 |
Country | India |
Producer(s) | National Sample Survey Office - M/o Statistics and Programme Implementation(MOSPI),Government of India (GOI) |
Sponsor(s) | M/o Statistics & Programme Implementation, GOI - MOSPI - |
Collection(s) |
Created on
Jan 15, 2018
Last modified
Mar 26, 2019
Page views
198361
- Blocks 1,3 and 10 -
Household Characteri
stics - Block 4 - Person rec
ords - Block 5 - Monthly ho
usehold expenditure
on food and non food
items - Block 6pt1 - Monthly
household expenditu
re on clothing, bedd
ing etc - Block 6pt2 - Househo
ld expenditure on cl
othing, bedding etc - Block 7pt1 - Monthly
household expenditu
re on footwear - Block 7pt 2 - Househ
old expenditure on f
ootwear - Block 8 - Monthly ho
usehold expenditure
on misc goods and se
rvices - Block 9pt1 - Monthly
household expenditu
re for purchase of d
urables - Block 9pt2 - Househo
ld expenditure for p
urchase of durables
Variable Groups
Household size
(B3_1_q1)
File: Blocks 1,3 and 10 - Household Characteristics
File: Blocks 1,3 and 10 - Household Characteristics
Overview
Type:
Continuous Format: numeric Width: 2 Decimals: 0 | Valid cases: 128019 Invalid: 0 |
Household :
A group of persons normally living together and taking food from a common kitchen constitutes a household. The word "normally" means that temporary visitors are excluded but temporary stay-aways are included.Thus a son or daughter residing in a hostel for studies is excluded from the household of his/her parents, but a resident employee or resident domestic servant or paying guest (but not just a tenant in the house) is included in the employer/host's household. "Living together" is usually given more importance than "sharing food from a common kitchen" in drawing the boundaries of a household in case the two criteria are in conflict; however, in the special case of a person taking food with his family but sleeping elsewhere (say in a shop or a different house) due to space shortage, the household formed by such a person's family members is taken to include the person also. Each inmate of a mess, hotel, boarding and lodging house, hostel, etc. is considered as a single-member household except that a family living in a hotel (say) is considered as one household only; the same applies to residential staff of such establishments.
A group of persons normally living together and taking food from a common kitchen constitutes a household. The word "normally" means that temporary visitors are excluded but temporary stay-aways are included.Thus a son or daughter residing in a hostel for studies is excluded from the household of his/her parents, but a resident employee or resident domestic servant or paying guest (but not just a tenant in the house) is included in the employer/host's household. "Living together" is usually given more importance than "sharing food from a common kitchen" in drawing the boundaries of a household in case the two criteria are in conflict; however, in the special case of a person taking food with his family but sleeping elsewhere (say in a shop or a different house) due to space shortage, the household formed by such a person's family members is taken to include the person also. Each inmate of a mess, hotel, boarding and lodging house, hostel, etc. is considered as a single-member household except that a family living in a hotel (say) is considered as one household only; the same applies to residential staff of such establishments.
Questions and instructions
Total members in the household?
The size of the sample household i.e., the total number of persons normally residing together (i.e., under the same roof) and taking food from the same kitchen (including temporary stayaways and excluding temporary visitors) will be recorded against this item. This number will be same as the last serial number recorded in column 1 of block 4.