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    Home / Central Data Catalog / ECU_2010_PHC_V01_M_V03_A_IPUMS / variable [F2]
central

VII Censo de Población y VI de Vivienda 2010 - IPUMS Subset

Ecuador, 2010
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Reference ID
ECU_2010_PHC_v01_M_v03_A_IPUMS
Producer(s)
Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos, Minnesota Population Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
Sep 15, 2013
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • Study Description
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  • ECU2010-H-H
  • ECU2010-P-H

Occupation (3 digits, ISCO 08) (EC2010A_0473)

Data file: ECU2010-P-H

Overview

Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 288
End: 290
Width: 3
Range: 11 - 999
Format: Numeric

Questions and instructions

Literal question
For persons five years old and older
[Questions 27 to 33 were asked of all people five years and older.]


In the last week or the last week that he/she worked:
[Questions 29-33 were asked of people who reported some kind of work or looking for work in the last week.]



30. What does [the respondent] do or what is [the respondent] where he/she works or worked?

[Principal occupation] ____
For the use of INEC: Principal occupation _ _ _ _
Categories
Value Category
11 Commissioned armed forces officers
21 Non-commissioned armed forces officers
31 Armed forces occupations, other ranks
111 Legislators and senior officials
112 Managing directors and chief executives
121 Business services and administration managers
122 Sales, marketing, and development managers
131 Production managers in agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
132 Manufacturing, mining, construction, and distribution managers
133 Information and communications technology service managers
134 Professional services managers
141 Hotel and restaurant managers
142 Retail and wholesale trade managers
143 Other services managers
211 Physical and earth science professionals
212 Mathematicians, actuaries, and statisticians
213 Life science professionals
214 Engineering professionals (excluding electrotechnology)
215 Electrotechnology engineers
216 Architects, planners, surveyors, and designers
221 Medical doctors
222 Nursing and midwifery professionals
223 Traditional and complementary medicine professionals
224 Paramedical practitioners
225 Veterinarians
226 Other health professionals
231 University and higher education teachers
232 Vocational education teachers
233 Secondary education teachers
234 Primary school and early childhood teachers
235 Other teaching professionals
241 Finance professionals
242 Administration professionals
243 Sales, marketing, and public relations professionals
251 Software and applications developers and analysts
252 Database and network professionals
261 Legal professionals
262 Librarians, archivists, and curators
263 Social and religious professionals
264 Authors, journalists, and linguists
265 Creative and performing artists
311 Physical and engineering science technicians
312 Mining, manufacturing, and construction supervisors
313 Process control technicians
314 Life science technicians and related associate professionals
315 Ship and aircraft controllers and technicians
321 Medical and pharmaceutical technicians
322 Nursing and midwifery associate professionals
323 Traditional and complementary medicine associate professionals
324 Veterinary technicians and assistants
325 Other health associate professionals
331 Financial and mathematical associate professionals
332 Sales and purchasing agents and brokers
333 Business services agents
334 Administrative and specialised secretaries
335 Regulatory government associate professionals
341 Legal, social, and religious associate professionals
342 Sports and fitness workers
343 Artistic, cultural, and culinary associate professionals
351 Information and communications technology operations and user support technicians
352 Telecommunications and broadcasting technicians
411 General office clerks
412 Secretaries (general)
413 Keyboard operators
421 Tellers, money collectors, and related clerks
422 Client information workers
431 Numerical clerks
432 Material-recording and transport clerks
441 Other clerical support workers
511 Travel attendants, conductors, and guides
512 Cooks
513 Waiters and bartenders
514 Hairdressers, beauticians, and related workers
515 Building and housekeeping supervisors
516 Other personal services workers
521 Street and market salespersons
522 Shop salespersons
523 Cashiers and ticket clerks
524 Other sales workers
531 Child care workers and teachers' aides
532 Personal care workers in health services
541 Protective services workers
611 Market gardeners and crop growers
612 Animal producers
613 Mixed crop and animal producers
621 Forestry and related workers
622 Fishery workers, hunters, and trappers
631 Subsistence crop farmers
633 Subsistence mixed crop and livestock farmers
634 Subsistence fishers, hunters, trappers, and gatherers
711 Building frame and related trades workers
712 Building finishers and related trades workers
713 Painters, building structure cleaners, and related trades workers
721 Sheet and structural metal workers, moulders, and welders, and related workers
722 Blacksmiths, toolmakers, and related trades workers
723 Machinery mechanics and repairers
731 Handicraft workers
732 Printing trades workers
741 Electrical equipment installers and repairers
742 Electronics and telecommunications installers and repairers
751 Food processing and related trades workers
752 Wood treaters, cabinet-makers, and related trades workers
753 Garment and related trades workers
754 Other craft and related workers
811 Mining and mineral processing plant operators
812 Metal processing and finishing plant operators
813 Chemical and photographic products plant and machine operators
814 Rubber, plastic, and paper products machine operators
815 Textile, fur, and leather products machine operators
816 Food and related products machine operators
817 Wood processing and papermaking plant operators
818 Other stationary plant and machine operators
821 Assemblers
831 Locomotive engine drivers and related workers
832 Car, van, and motorcycle drivers
833 Heavy truck and bus drivers
834 Mobile plant operators
835 Ships' deck crews and related workers
911 Domestic, hotel, and office cleaners and helpers
912 Vehicle, window, laundry, and other hand cleaning workers
921 Agricultural, forestry, and fishery labourers
931 Mining and construction labourers
932 Manufacturing labourers
933 Transport and storage labourers
941 Food preparation assistants
951 Street and related service workers
952 Street vendors (excluding food)
961 Refuse workers
962 Other elementary workers
998 Unknown
999 NIU (not in universe)
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Interviewer instructions
[Section 4]




Step 14: Continue with section 4, information about the population / D: Economic characteristics (annex, pages 41-45)

[A copy of section 4D of the census questionnaire is omitted here.]

Tips:

Follow the sequential order of the questions.
Remember that the questions are for people 5 years old and older.
(A)The week of reference will be Sunday the 21st to Saturday the 27th of November.
Question 27 serves to identify people who did some activity for an income or not.
(B)Take into account the leaps of questions 27 and 28.
Question 29 is written literally, the activity of the business or company in which the interviewed person works or worked.
If the informant mentions having more than one job, you should register the one that he/she considers the principal one.
Question 30 is written very literally, what does the interviewed person do or what he/she did where he/she works/worked
Question 31 indicates the dependency relation that the person has in the place where he/she works.
Question 32 registers the total number of worked hours, at his/her principal work, in the past week or the last week that he/she worked.
In question 33, register if the activity that the person does is inside or outside the household.
If the person does more than one activity, as for example weave wool clothing in the household and leave to sell in the streets; for the registry of question 33 priority will be given to the production, therefore you will mark x in code 1 (within the home).





8. Economic characteristics




Occupation:
Understood by occupation are the different jobs that are carried out by persons in their work (or the one carried out in that occupation which the person carried out previously, if the person is unemployed), whatever be the branch of economic activity of the establishment where he/she works or the occupational position he/she holds.

Description

Definition
This variable indicates the person's occupation (3 digits, ISCO 08).
Universe
Persons age 5+ who are employed

concept

Concept
var_concept.title Vocabulary
Work: Occupation Variables -- PERSON IPUMS
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