Last modified by Helena on 2025/07/31 14:18

From version 3.11
edited by Helena
on 2025/06/17 11:41
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 3.12
edited by Helena
on 2025/06/17 11:42
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Content
... ... @@ -161,9 +161,10 @@
161 161  
162 162  = Data requirements =
163 163  
164 -1. For the measurement of the income-generating capacity of different jobs, there should be consistency between the data on employment in a given job and the data on income generated by that job. Data should therefore be collected on: (i) the characteristics of the job (industry, occupation, employment status), type of enterprise (individual enterprise, partnership, corporation, etc.), employment size and sector (e.g. informal or formal sector, public or private sector); (ii) the volume of labour input in the job (duration of employment and time worked); and (iii) the amount of income generated by that job.
165 -1. In order to analyse the relationship between employment and the well-being of individuals, data are needed for each person: (i) separately on the main and any additional jobs carried out during the reference period; (ii) the income derived from each of these jobs; (iii) the socio-economic characteristics of individuals: age, sex, education and skill level, etc.; and (iv) any spells of unemployment or periods of being out of the labour force that an individual may have experienced during the given reference period.
164 +40. For the measurement of the income-generating capacity of different jobs, there should be consistency between the data on employment in a given job and the data on income generated by that job. Data should therefore be collected on: (i) the characteristics of the job (industry, occupation, employment status), type of enterprise (individual enterprise, partnership, corporation, etc.), employment size and sector (e.g. informal or formal sector, public or private sector); (ii) the volume of labour input in the job (duration of employment and time worked); and (iii) the amount of income generated by that job.
166 166  
166 +41. In order to analyse the relationship between employment and the well-being of individuals, data are needed for each person: (i) separately on the main and any additional jobs carried out during the reference period; (ii) the income derived from each of these jobs; (iii) the socio-economic characteristics of individuals: age, sex, education and skill level, etc.; and (iv) any spells of unemployment or periods of being out of the labour force that an individual may have experienced during the given reference period.
167 +
167 167  = Measurement of working time in employment =
168 168  
169 169  1. One of the requirements of the measurement of employment-related income is that the part of the income directly generated by a job be related to the working time which has gone into that job. Income and employment data should therefore refer, or be convertible, to the same period.