Nigeria - Nigeria Living Standard Survey 2003, First round
Reference ID | NGA-NBS-NLSS-2003-v1.2 |
Year | 2003 - 2004 |
Country | Nigeria |
Producer(s) | National Bureau of Statistics - Federal Government of Nigeria |
Sponsor(s) | Federal Government of Nigeria - FGN - Funding World Bank - WB - Funding Department of International Development - DFID - Funding European Union - EU - Funding |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF Download DDI Download RDF |
Created on | Oct 18, 2010 |
Last modified | Nov 13, 2018 |
Page views | 1361291 |
Downloads | 72234 |
- Household Roaster fo
r each person - Introductory visit
- Other visit
- General Education
- Educational career
- Literacy and apprent
iceship - Health condition in
the past two weeks - Preventive, health,
vaccination - Postnatal care
- Fertility, prenatal
care, contraceptives - HIVAIDS
- Screeening questions
and list of occupat
ions in the past 12
months - Characteristics of m
ain occupation - Secondary occupation
in the last 12 mont
hs - Third Occupation in
the last 12 months - Fourth occupation in
the last 12 months - Employment search in
the past 12 months - Employment History
- Activity status and
employment search in
the last 7 days - Housekeeping
- Migration 1
- Agric assets, land a
nd livestock - Plot detail
- Harvest and disposal
of crop staple grai
n, field crops and c
ash crops - Harvest and disposal
, root fruits veg an
d crops harvested pi
ecemeal - Seasonality of sales
and purchase - Other agric income,
in cash or kind - Agric cost and expen
ses - Processing of agric
produce - Consumption of own p
roduce, day and mont
h of visit - Consumption of own p
roduction - Non food expenses on
less frequently pur
chased items - Non food expenses fr
equently purchased i
tems visits - Household Expenditur
e on Non-food freque
ntly purchased - Non food expenses fr
equently purchased i
tems - Non Farm enterprise,
First enterprise, e
xpenditure - Agic assets, equipme
nt - Assets of first non
farm enterprises - Miscellaneous income
and expenditure - Food expenses days a
nd month of visit - Household Expenditur
e on education - Household expenditur
e on food frequently
purchased - Household Expenditur
e on health - Housing respondent
- Identification of re
spondent for agric a
nd business question
s - Income transfer
- Introduction to tran
sfer payments made b
y household - Social capital and c
ommunity participati
on - Food Expenses
- Total Household Expe
nditure - Basic chracteristics
of non-farm enterpr
ise - Intro to Expenditure
, first enterprise - Non Farm enterprises
, second enterprise,
expenditure - Intro to non farm en
terprise, third ente
rprise, expenditure - Expenditure, Non far
m third enterprise - Assets of second non
farm enterprise - Revenue of Non Farm
enterprise - Credit
- Savings
- Assets and durable g
oods - Transfer payments ma
de by household - Introduction to inco
me transfer and misc
ellaneous income and
expenditure - Household income sch
edule
Secondary coping mechanism for poverty
(Seccop)
File: Social capital and community participation
File: Social capital and community participation
Overview
Type:
Continuous Format: numeric Width: 2 Decimals: 0 Range: 1-18 | Valid cases: 18249 Invalid: 909 Minimum: 1 Maximum: 18 |
Categories
Value | Category | Cases | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Piecework agricultural work | 397 | 2.2% |
2 | Other piecework | 1150 | 6.3% |
3 | Work on food for work program | 686 | 3.8% |
4 | Relief food supplies | 446 | 2.4% |
5 | Wild food | 369 | 2.0% |
6 | Subsitute meals with fruit | 1296 | 7.1% |
7 | Reducing number of meals | 3436 | 18.8% |
8 | Reducing other household items | 2960 | 16.2% |
9 | Informal borrowing from friendsi | 3019 | 16.5% |
10 | Formal borowing | 479 | 2.6% |
11 | Religious assistance | 912 | 5.0% |
12 | Ngo assistance | 93 | 0.5% |
13 | Pulling children out of school | 254 | 1.4% |
14 | Sale of assets | 843 | 4.6% |
15 | Petty vending | 284 | 1.6% |
16 | Asking from friends | 1482 | 8.1% |
17 | Public begging | 43 | 0.2% |
18 | Other | 100 | 0.5% |
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.
Questions and instructions
In times of need, people may need to cope in different ways. Among the
following ways, which were the three most important ways in which your
household coped?
ASK FOR THE THREE MOST IMPORTANT
Piecework on Farms Belonging to other Household Members….1
Other Piecework…………………………………………………………....................2
Working on Food-for-Work Program…………………………………............3
Relief Food, free Food from the Government………………………......4
Eating Wild Food Only………………………………………………….................5
Substituting Ordinary Meals with Mangoes, Pumpkin, Sweet
Potatoes etc……………………………………………………………….....................6
Reducing the number of Meals or Food In-take…………………….....7
Reducing other Household Items such as soap, tissue,
Detergent………………………………………………………………….......................8
Informal Borrowing, from friends, Neighbours…………………….....9
Formal Borrowing in Cash or Kind (e.g from Bank, Employers,
Finance Company etc)…………………………………………………..................10
Help from religious or Charitable Organizations………...…...…11
NGO charity (e.g Assistance from CARE International, World
Vision, Save the Children, Oxfarm, Hope Foundation,
PAM, PUSH etc)…………………………………………………….…................12
Pulling Children out of School……………………………………….......13
Sale of Assets, such as Cattle, Fridge, Car…………………..14
Petty Vending……………………………………………………………................15
Asking from Friends, Neighbours or Relatives………………..16
Begging from the Streets………………………………………..…….........17
Others (SPECIFY)………..……………………………………………..............18
following ways, which were the three most important ways in which your
household coped?
ASK FOR THE THREE MOST IMPORTANT
Piecework on Farms Belonging to other Household Members….1
Other Piecework…………………………………………………………....................2
Working on Food-for-Work Program…………………………………............3
Relief Food, free Food from the Government………………………......4
Eating Wild Food Only………………………………………………….................5
Substituting Ordinary Meals with Mangoes, Pumpkin, Sweet
Potatoes etc……………………………………………………………….....................6
Reducing the number of Meals or Food In-take…………………….....7
Reducing other Household Items such as soap, tissue,
Detergent………………………………………………………………….......................8
Informal Borrowing, from friends, Neighbours…………………….....9
Formal Borrowing in Cash or Kind (e.g from Bank, Employers,
Finance Company etc)…………………………………………………..................10
Help from religious or Charitable Organizations………...…...…11
NGO charity (e.g Assistance from CARE International, World
Vision, Save the Children, Oxfarm, Hope Foundation,
PAM, PUSH etc)…………………………………………………….…................12
Pulling Children out of School……………………………………….......13
Sale of Assets, such as Cattle, Fridge, Car…………………..14
Petty Vending……………………………………………………………................15
Asking from Friends, Neighbours or Relatives………………..16
Begging from the Streets………………………………………..…….........17
Others (SPECIFY)………..……………………………………………..............18