Persons Employed at Home
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NAME OF ORGANISATION The Persons Employed at Home survey presents information on employees who work at home. Information on the number and characteristics of employees engaged in home-based work in collected. Structural change in the economy, changes to industrial relations practices and rapid technological change suggest that the incidence and variety of home-based employment are increasing. The survey monitors trends in work away from the employer's location and examines issues such as use of technology and conditions of employment. This survey is conducted as part of the Monthly Population Survey, which comprises the Labour Force Survey and, in most months, a supplementary survey topic.
SCOPE - Labour Force Survey The Labour Force Survey includes all persons aged 15 and over except: From July 1993 Jervis Bay Territory is also excluded from the scope of the survey. Before July 1993 it was included in estimates for the Australian Capital Territory.
SCOPE - Persons Employed at Home The scope for this survey was the same as that used for the Labour Force Survey except that it was restricted to employed persons. Students at boarding school, some patients in hospitals and sanatoriums and inmates of reformatories, gaols, etc. were also excluded.
From July 1997, all supplementary surveys excluded persons in remote and sparsely settled areas of Australia. The exclusion of these persons has only a minor effect on estimates for individual States or Territories.
COVERAGE - Labour Force Survey In the Labour Force Survey, coverage rules are applied which aim to ensure that each person is associated with only one dwelling, and hence has only one chance of selection. The chance of a person being enumerated at two separate dwellings in the one survey is considered to be negligible.
Persons who are away from their usual residence for six weeks or less at the time of interview are enumerated at their usual residence (relevant information may be obtained from other usual residents present at the time of the survey). Conceptual framework This survey provides details of employment conditions for those employees who work more hours from home than the employer's workplace in either their main or second job.
Persons employed at home includes persons who usually work more hours at home than elsewhere in the main or second job. Farmers, farm managers and farm hands and assistants, unpaid voluntary workers and persons who worked less than one hour per week were excluded. Main outputs Main findings from the survey, including tables and analysis are released in publication format and include the following:
EMPLOYED PERSONS Whether employed at home, time series Selected characteristics, time series Whether employed at home by age Whether employed at home by relationship in household
PERSONS EMPLOYED AT HOME Summary of characteristics and relationship in household Main reason began working at home, industry, occupation and birthplace Whether all hours usually worked at home and whether job at home was main job and number of hours usually worked at home
EMPLOYEES EMPLOYED AT HOME Summary of working conditions and industry Classifications Demographics: State, Area, Region, Sex, Marital Status, Relationship in Household, Period of Arrival and Age.
Country of Birth: The Standard Australian Classification of Countries (SACC).
Occupation: Australian Standard Classification of Occupations Second Edition (ASCO).
Industry: Australia and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification (ANZSIC).
Other concepts (summary) Not applicable Comments and/or Other Regions Not all data available for all areas. Frequency comments The survey was conducted in April 1989, March 1992 and September 1995. Similar data is now collected as part of the Locations of Work Survey (ABS Cat. No. 6275.0). Previous surveys on this topic were conducted in April 1989 and March 1992 Data availability comments This topic is collected as part of Locations of Work, Australia (ABS Cat. No. 6275.0) Document Selection These documents will be presented in a new window.
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