WSM_2009_AgC_v01_M
DDI_WSM_2009_AgC_v01_M
Development Data Group
2014-01-30
Nesstar Publisher
Version 1.0 (January 2014)
Agricultural Census 2009
AgC 2009
WSM_2009_AgC_v01_M
Samoa Bureau of Statistics
Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
Nesstar Publisher
Government of Samoa
Government of Australia
Economics Statistics Division
World Bank Microdata Library
Agricultural Census [ag/census]
The 2009 Agricultural Census was undertaken by the Samoa Bureau of Statistics in collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. The Census collected a large volume of information pertaining to the agricultural activities of households. Enumeration was carried out for 5 weeks in November/December 2009 by enumerators selected from the villages through interview and a basic test. The test included basic mathematical skills, knowledge of agricultural practices and map reading. This was to ensure that the enumerators are of high quality. The officers of the Samoa Bureau of Statistics and the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries were allocated to specified areas as supervisors.
Samoa
National
Census/enumeration data [cen]
For any census to be successfully carried out, good household lists and enumeration area maps are pre-requisites. A list of households in respect of each enumeration block in the country was prepared in 2005 for the 2006 Population Census. The updated household list from the 2006 Population Census was used as a frame for the Agricultural Census.
Face-to-face [f2f]
The Secretariat of Pacific community (SPC) provided technical assistance for data processing. The TA was delivered in two separate missions, first to implement data entry, and the second mission was to perform data editing and generate final tabulation for final report. Prior to the start of data entry, Siaumau Misela of Samoa Bureau of Statistics was invited to SPC in December 2009 for a two weeks attachment. Misela worked closely with the SPC data processing specialist in developing the data entry system using CSPro (Census and Survey Processing System). The first mission of the data processing specialist in January 2010 was to finalize and implement data entry. The second mission in October 2010 concentrated mainly on data editing, data recode and generating final tables. The data processing (manual and computer) was done in the Data Processing Section of the Samoa Bureau of Statistics. To facilitate the manual and machine processing of the forms, questionnaires from the same enumeration area were bound together in a batch / folio and assigned a batch id. This id consists of the District, Village and the enumeration area codes. These forms were subjected to manual data scrutiny and corrections. The data entry was implemented using ENTRY of CSPro, and BATCH EDIT for the validation of encoded data items. Data entry was run through a network, which link all data entry work station to a server. A team of 6 staff (1 permanent and 5 temporary) were assigned to do the data processing.
Fifty percent key verification was done on all the batches, and questionnaires with key verification error rate higher than the tolerance limit was subjected to 100 percent key verification. Additional checks were added in the validation program. Detected errors and inconsistencies were corrected in the batch files.
Economics Statistics Division
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.