GHA_2006_FSS_v01_M
Financial Service Survey 2006
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Ghana | GHA |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
This is the first time the Financial Service Survey has been implemented in Ghana.
The purpose was to find out household's access to and use of available financial services.This was a follow-up to an earlier test of survey designs regarding household access to financial services. The underlying premise is that the identity of a respondent can affect the quality and completeness of the information provided, especially when that respondent is providing information about other household members. The survey will examine whether questions about specific products (e.g. credit cards, life insurance policies, savings clubs) elicit more complete information than questions asking whether a respondent uses services from a type of provider (e.g. commercial bank, credit union). To derive the data necessary for these tests, the Financial Service Survey incorporated an experimental design in which one of three versions of the survey instrument (questionnaire) was randomly administered to each household. Individual household members were also randomly selected to respond to some sections of the questionnaire.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Household, individual
v01: Final datasets and other documentation on the Financial Service Survey.
2008-07-31
This is the first time this Financial Service Survey has been implemented in the country.
The scope of the Financial Service Survey includes:
Household: Household listing and demograhpic information on household members.
Individuals: Access to and use of financial services (including savings, credit, loans, etc.) by household members, heads of household and randomly selected members, actions and attitudes towards access and use of various financial services including savings, credit, loans, insurance, pension funds, etc.
Topic | Vocabulary | URI |
---|---|---|
income, property and investment/saving [1.5] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
basic skills education [6.1] | CESSDA | http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common |
National coverage
The survey covered all adult household members (usual residents) aged 15 years and older.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) | Office of the President |
Name | Role |
---|---|
World Bank | Funding and technical support |
The most recently visited enumeration areas (EAs) for the Ghana Living Standards Survey Round 5 (GLSS5) were targeted for the survey. This is because the characteristics of these households may not have changed much, and they were more likely to recollect information they had already provided. All the 120 EAs visited in the 10th and 11th cycles of the GLSS5 were included in the survey, with an additional 34 EAs selected from the 60 EAs visited in the 9th cycle. Households within the 154 EAs were listed and 15 selected randomly from each EA yielding a total of 2,310 households.
Out of the 2,310 households selected for the survey, 2,292 were identified and successfully enumerated. This yielded a response rate of 99.2 percent.
Three types of questionnaires were used in the survey:
Start | End |
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2006-11-27 | 2006-12-21 |
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Ghana Statistical Service | Office of the President |
Interviewing was conducted by teams; each team being made up of a Supervisor and three interviewers. The role of the supervisor was: to meet community leaders to inform them about the purpose of the survey and solicit their cooperation, review the work of each enumerator and take corrective measures where necessary, assist in the resolution of any problems including uncooperative respondents. There were field coordinators who visited the teams to check samples of the completed questionnaires to ensure consistency and completeness.
Training: A 5-day residential training was organized for both supervisors and enumerators during which they were guided through the various sections of the questionnaires. The supervisors were personnel of the GSS who had been used to pre-test the questionnaires.
Field practice: As part of the training programme, trainees were made to administer the questionnaires in selected communities to give them a feel of how interviewing will be like during the actual field enumeration.
Written assessment: During the period of the training, written assessments were done to test the level of undertanding of the definitions and concepts that were to be employed in the data collection. Field personnel were selected for the main fieldwork based on their performance in the assessments and field practice.
Interviewing team: The interviewing team comprised a Supervisor, two interviewers, a data entry operator and a driver.
Interviewing language: The interviews were conducted in the language preferred by the respondent. In cases where the interviewer was not proficient in the respondent's language, an interpreter was used.
The GSS data editing occurs at three levels:
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Government Statistician | Ghana Statistical Service | http://www.statsghana.gov.gh | statservice@gmail.com |
Is signing of a confidentiality declaration required? | Confidentiality declaration text |
---|---|
yes | Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) requires all users to keep information and data strictly confidential. In this regard, before being granted access to datasets, all users have to formally agree to observe the following: 1. Not to make copies of any files or portions of files to which access has been granted except with the authorization by GSS 2. Not to willfully identify any individual or household or establishment in the dataset 3. To hold in strictest confidence, the identity of any individual or household or establishment that may be inadvertently revealed in any documents or discussion, or analysis. Such unintended identification revealed should be immediately brought to the attention of GSS. 4. Data obtained from GSS are protected by copyright law and therefore not for re-distribution or sale 5. Prospective clients or data users may indicate in an affidavit confidentiality of data they access. |
The Ghana Statistical Service as a public institution has the obligation to promote data dissemination to facilitate national development. Making mcrodata available will enable students and the academia to conduct research works, assist investors to take business decision, help the individual to evaluate and take appropriate decisions. It will also assist the government to formulate appropriate policies and programmes to facilitate national development. GSS' policy framework provides access to data through:
The following terms and conditions apply:
Before being granted access to the dataset, all users have to formally agree:
"Ghana Statistical Service, Financial Service Survey 2006 (FSS 2006), v01, provided by the National Data Archive. http://www.statsghana.gov.gh/nada/index.php/catalog/16"
The original collector of the data, Ghana Statistical Service, other producers and sponsors cited in this document bear no responsibility for use of the data, for interpretations and inferences based upon such uses.
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Government Statistician | Ghana Statistical Service | statservice@gmail.com | http://www.statsghana.gov.gh |
World Bank Microdata Library | microdata@worldbank.org |
DDI_GHA_2006_FSS_v01_M
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Ghana Statistical Service | Office of the President | Compiling, reviewing and archiving the survey |
Accelerated Data Program | International Household Survey Network | Review of the metadata |
2008-07-31
Version 02 (October 2013). Edited version based on Version 01 (July 2008) DDI that was done by Ghana Statistical Service and reviewed by Accelerated Data Program, International Household Survey Network.