Literal question
<svar v="PH00A420 PH00A421 PH00A422 PH00A423 PH00A424 PH00A425 PH00A428"><span class="h2">For Persons 10 Years Old and Over</span><br /></svar></p>
<p><svar a="all" v="PH00A425">P28. <span class="em">For whom or where did [respondent] work? </span>(Please see code book)<br /><div class="i1">_</div><br /></svar>
Interviewer instructions
<span class="h3">P28 Class of worker</span></p>
<p>The question P28 is to be asked for those who were engaged in an economic activity in the past 12 months: "For whom or where does/did _______ work?"</p>
<p>The response to this question should refer to the usual occupation recorded in P25.</p>
<p>Possible responses are categorized into seven (7) classes of workers:</p>
<p>1. Worked for private household (Domestic Services). If a person worked in a private household for pay, in cash or in kind. Examples are family drivers, gardener, <span class="lang">yaya</span>, household help and other persons in domestic service.</p>
<p>2. Worked for private business/enterprise/farm. All employees in private firms and farms are classified here.</p>
<p>Other examples of this class of workers are:</p>
<ul class="b1">
<li>Persons working in public works project on private contracts</li>
<li>Public transport drivers who do not own the vehicle but drive them on boundary basis</li>
<li>Dock hands or stevedores</li>
<li>Cargo handlers in public market, railroad stations or piers, etc.</li>
<li>Palay harvester getting fixed share of harvested palay, sacadas and other farm workers.</li>
</ul><p>3. Worked for government/government corporations. All government employees would be classified here. Examples of this class of workers are:</p>
<div class="i1">Employees in national and local government offices, agencies and corporation<br />Filipinos working in embassies, legation, chancelleries or consulates of foreign government in the Philippines<br />Filipinos working in international organizations of Sovereign States of Government like the United Nations, World Health Organization, etc.<br />Chaplains in the Armed Forces of the Philippines.</div><p>4. Self-employed without any paid employee. If a person worked for profit or fees in own business, farm, profession or trade without any paid employee. Examples include vendors, professionals with own offices/clinics, workers who worked purely on commission basis and who have no regular working hours.</p>
<p>5. Employer in own farm or business. If a person, working in his own business, farm, profession or trade had one or more regular paid employees, including paid family members (code 6 below). Some cases worth noting:</p>
<p>Domestic helpers, family drivers and other household helpers who assist in the family operated business, regardless of time spent in this activity, are NOT hired employees in the enterprise/business; hence a farm or business proprietor who is assisted purely by such domestic help is not considered an employer.</p>
<p>A retail store operator who is wholly assisted in the operation of his/her store by unpaid relatives living with him/her and who employs carpenters to construct a building for his store (with store operator supervising the work) is not an employer. However, if this operator is also the owner or partner of a firm with paid construction workers and staff, and the reported industry in P26 is building construction, then he is an employer.</p>
<p>6. Worked with pay on own family-operated farm or business.
<br />If a person worked in own family-operated farm or business and receives cash or a fixed share of the produce as payment for his services. Note that whenever there is a household member with this code, there should be a household member with code 5 for class of worker.</p>
<p>7. Worked without pay on own family-operated farm or business. If a member of the family worked without pay in a farm or business operated by another member living in the same household.