Syrian Arab Republic
1.Title of the survey:
Labour Force Sample Survey.
2.Organization responsible for the survey:
Central Bureau of Statistics.
3.Coverage of the survey:
(a) Geographical:
The whole country.
(b) Persons covered:
All persons aged 10 years and over residing in the country,
excluding non-sedentary and institutional
populations, non-residents citizens, temporarily absent persons,
persons residing abroad, and members of the armed forces.
4.Periodicity of the survey:
Since 1984, the survey is conducted every two years, in April (see
also under History of the survey).
5.Reference period:
The week prior to the interview.
6.Topics covered:
The survey provides information on employment, unemployment, hours
of work, wages and income, employment in the
informal sector, duration of employment and
unemployment, discouraged and occasional workers,
industry, occupation, status in employment, level of
education and usual activity.
7.Concepts and definitions:
(a) Employment:
The employed are all persons aged 10 years and over who, during the
reference week, performed paid work for at least three days,
including persons with a job who were temporarily not at
work due to specific reasons.
Included are:
- full- and part-time workers seeking other work during the reference
week;
- full- and part-time students working full- or part-time;
- participants in employment promotion schemes;
- paid and unpaid family workers, provided the latter have worked
at least three hours a day during the reference week;
- private domestic servants;
- seasonal workers awaiting agricultural or other seasonal work;
- members of producers' co-operatives;
- persons with a job but temporarily absent due to illness or injury;
vacation or annual leave; maternity or paternity leave; educational
leave; absence without leave; bad weather; labour-management dispute;
mechanical breakdown; or other reduction in economic activity;
- persons on temporary or indefinite lay-off without pay.
Excluded from the employed and considered as out of the labour force
are:
- persons who performed any work for pay or profit during the
reference week, while being subject to compulsory
schooling or retired and receiving a pension;
- paid and unpaid apprentices and trainees;
- persons only engaged in own housework;
- persons doing unpaid community or social work.
(b) Underemployment:
This topic is not covered by the survey.
(c) Unemployment:
The unemployed are persons aged 10 years and over who, during the
reference week, are without work and available for work. They include
persons with previous work experience, as well as persons seeking their
first job during the reference week.
Included are:
- persons without a job and currently available for work, who have
made arrangements to start a new job on a date subsequent to the
reference week (no time limit is set for the new job to begin);
- persons who performed some work for pay or profit during the
reference week but were then registered as jobseekers at an employment
office or receiving unemployment benefits;
- full- and part-time students seeking full- or part-time work.
Persons without work and currently available for work who are not
seeking work during the reference period are excluded from the
unemployed.
(d) Hours of work:
They relate to hours actually worked in main and secondary jobs during
the reference week, including overtime.
(e) Informal sector:
The definition is not available.
(f) Usual activity:
It is measured for main and secondary jobs over
the year preceding the interview.
8.Classifications used:
Employed persons
and unemployed persons with previous work experience are
classified by industry, occupation and status in employment. All
persons aged 10 years and over covered by the survey are classified
by level of education.
(a) Industry:
Coding is done to 10 groups which are linked to the International
Standard Industrial Classification of all Economic Activities
(ISIC-1968) major divisions (1-digit level).
(b) Occupation:
The classification used is the Occupational Classification Guide.
Coding is done to 10 groups. A link has been established with the
International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO-1968)
at the major group (1-digit) level.
(c) Status in employment:
Data are classified according to the following four status categories:
- Employer,
- Own-account worker,
- Employee,
- Unpaid worker (unpaid family worker or other unpaid worker).
(d) Level of education/qualifications:
Coding is done to seven groups:
- Illiterate,
- Literate,
- Primary school,
- Preparatory school,
- Secondary school,
- Intermediate institute,
- University and over.
9.Sample size and design:
(a) The sample frame:
It is based on the results of the latest Population Census and updated
with the enumerators' reports.
(b) The sample:
Clustered sampling was adopted to select the basic sample; then
clusters are selected by systematic random sampling. The ultimate
sampling unit is the household.
The yearly sample size is approximately 16,200 households.
(c) Rotation:
Not applicable. Selected households are interviewed
only once and the sample is renewed for each biennial survey.
10.Field work:
(a) Data collection:
Interviews are conducted by permanent staff members of the Central
Bureau of Statistics. The field work lasts about two weeks; since
1984, it takes place in April.
(b) Substitution of ultimate sampling units:
A reserve sample is used to replace units that cannot be reached.
11.Quality controls:
During field work, specialized supervisors control the enumerator's
work. Then during the processing stage,
quality controls are carried out
by computer programme.
12.Weighting the sample:
The sample estimates are expanded to the level of the total population
by using a ratio corresponding to
the inverse of the sampling fraction, based on the size of
the population in each region covered by the survey.
13.Sampling errors:
The standard error of estimates is approximately 2 per cent for
employment and 1 per cent for unemployment.
14.Adjustments:
(a) Population not covered:
No adjustment is made.
(b) Under/overcoverage:
No adjustment is made.
(c) Non-response:
The global non-response rate is 3 per cent.
No adjustment is made.
15.Seasonal adjustment:
No adjustment is made for seasonal variations.
16.Non-sampling errors:
Not available.
17.History of the survey:
The Labour Force Sample Survey started in 1961 on an annual basis,
and was conducted within one week
in September of each year. No survey was carried out between 1979
and 1982 because of the 1981 Population Census. In 1983 there were two
surveys, one in January and the other in July. Since 1984 the survey
has been carried out every two years, in April.
In 1984 the survey results were revised in accordance with the
preliminary results of the 1981 Population Census.
18.Documentation:
Office du Premier Ministre, Bureau central de
Statistiques: "Results of Labour Force Surveys" (biennial)
(Damas); published about a year after each survey.
The survey results can also be made
available on request, in machine readable
form (diskette and magnetic tape).