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    Home / Data Portal / STATSSA / ZAF-STATSSA-DTS-2008-V1
StatsSA

Domestic Tourism Survey 2008

South Africa, 2008
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Reference ID
zaf-statssa-dts-2008-v1
Producer(s)
Statistics South Africa
Collections
Statistics South Africa
Metadata
Documentation in PDF DDI/XML JSON
Created on
May 30, 2012
Last modified
Mar 28, 2020
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  • Study Description
  • Data Description
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  • Related Publications
  • Identification
  • Version
  • Scope
  • Coverage
  • Producers and sponsors
  • Sampling
  • survey_instrument
  • Data Collection
  • Data appraisal
  • Data Access
  • Disclaimer and copyrights
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  • Metadata production
  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    zaf-statssa-dts-2008-v1

    Title

    Domestic Tourism Survey 2008

    Country
    Name
    South Africa
    Study type

    Other Household Survey [hh/oth]

    Series Information

    Statistics South Africa. Domestic Tourism Survey 2008 [dataset]. Version 1. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa [producer], 2009. Cape Town. DataFirst [distributor], 2012. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25828/86ad-en72

    Abstract

    Statistics South Africa collects data on foreign tourism from the South African Department of Home Affairs. Data on domestic tourism is also needed to measure its contribution to the national economy. The Domestic Tourism Survey (DTS) is aimed at addressing this need by collecting data on the travel behaviour and expenditure of South African residents travelling within and outside the borders of South Africa. This survey provides data on domestic tourism activity during the period February 2008 until the end of August 2008.

    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    The units of analysis in the Domestic Tourism Survey are households and individuals

    Version

    Version Description

    v1: Edited, anonymised dataset for licensed distribution

    Version Date

    2009

    Scope

    Notes

    The scope of the Domestic Tourism Survey 2012 includes: household characteristcs, education of household members, tourism employment, and day/overnight trips by the respondent and/or other household members. These include travel for business, recreation, entertainment, sports and nature based travel, religious and medical travel, type of transport used and expenditure on this type of travel.

    Topics
    Topic Vocabulary URI
    leisure, tourism and sport [13.4] CESSDA http://www.nesstar.org/rdf/common

    Coverage

    Geographic Coverage

    National coverage

    Geographic Unit

    The lowest level of geographic aggregation covered by the data is province.

    Universe

    The target population of the survey consists of all private households and residents in workers’ hostels in the nine provinces of South Africa. The survey does not cover other collective living quarters such as students’ hostels, oldage homes, hospitals, prisons and military barracks and is therefore only representative of non-institutionalised and non-military persons in South Africa.

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name
    Statistics South Africa

    Sampling

    Sampling Procedure

    The sample design for the DTS 2008 was based on a master sample (MS) which used a two-stage, a stratified design with probability-proportional-to-size (PPS) sampling of PSUs from within strata, and systematic sampling of dwelling units (DUs) from the sampled primary sampling units (PSUs). A self-weighting design at provincial level was used and MS stratification was divided into two levels. Primary stratification was defined by metropolitan and non-metropolitan geographic area type. During secondary stratification, the Census 2001 data were summarised at PSU level. The following variables were used for secondary stratification; household size, education, occupancy status, gender, industry and income. Census enumeration areas (EAs) as delineated for Census 2001 formed the basis of the PSUs. The following additional rules were used:
    • Where possible, PSU sizes were kept between 100 and 500 dwelling units (DUs);
    • EAs with fewer than 25 DUs were excluded;
    • EAs with between 26 and 99 DUs were pooled to form larger PSUs and the criteria used was same
    settlement type;
    • Virtual splits were applied to large PSUs: 500 to 999 split into two; 1 000 to 1 499 split into three; and
    1 500 plus split into four PSUs; and
    • Informal PSUs were segmented.
    A Randomised Probability Proportional to Size (RPPS) systematic sample of PSUs was drawn in each stratum, with the measure of size being the number of households in the PSU. Altogether approximately 3 080 PSUs were selected. In each selected PSU a systematic sample of dwelling units was drawn. The number of DUs selected per PSU varies from PSU to PSU and depends on the Inverse Sampling Ratios (ISR) of each PSU.

    Weighting

    Sampling weights for the data collected from the sampled households are constructed so that responses can be expanded appropriately to represent the entire population of South Africa. The weights are the result of calculations involving several factors, including design weights, adjustment for non-response, and benchmarking to known population estimates from the Demographic Analysis division of Stats SA. The final survey weights are constructed by calibrating the adjusted base weight to the known population counts at national and provincial levels (which are supplied by the Demographic Analysis division of Statistics SA), cross-classified by 5-year age groups (0-4, 5-9, 10-14, 55-59, 60-64, and 65 and over), gender and race. The provincial population estimates are cross-classifiedby broad age groups (0–14, 15–34, 35–64, and 65 years and over). The calibrated weights are constructed to ensure that all persons in a household have the same final weight (integrated weighting).

    survey_instrument

    Questionnaires

    The DTS 2008 questionnaire collected data on the following topics:

    Cover page Household information, response details, field staff information, result codes, etc.
    Flap: Demographic information (name, sex, age, population group, etc.) and basic tourism information
    Section 1: Information on trips taken by respondent and other household members in the past six months and barriers for not taking trips.
    Section 2: Day trip taken by the respondent in the past six months prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure
    Section 3: Day trip taken by other household members without the respondent in the past six months prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure.
    Section 4: Domestic overnight trips taken(inside South Africa), taken by the respondent in the past sixmonths, prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure.
    Section 5: Domestic overnight trips taken by the other household member in the past six months prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure.
    Section 6: Outbound overnight trips outside South Africa, taken by the respondent in the past six months, prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure.
    Section 7: Outbound overnight trips outside South Africa, taken by the respondent in the past six months, prior to the survey interview, destination, means of transport, purpose of trip, activities on the trip, and expenditure.
    Section 8: Column number of the responding person, and the language used during the interview.
    All sections: Comprehensive coverage of domestic and foreign trips undertaken

    Note: The DTS questionnaire had two sections for the domestic overnight trips taken by the respondent and other household members without the respondent. Thus section 4 (domestic overnight trips
    by the respondent) and section 5 (domestic overnight trips by other household members without the respondent). The purpose of this split was to collect as many domestic overnight trips as possible from the
    households.

    Data Collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End
    2008-02 2008-08

    Data appraisal

    Data Appraisal

    Caution must be exercised when interpreting the results of the DTS at low levels of dis-aggregation. Revisions to the DTS data sets based on the new population estimates involved benchmarking at national
    level in terms of age, sex and population group while at provincial level, benchmarking was by population group only. The sample and reporting are based on the provincial boundaries as defined in December 2005.

    Data Access

    Access authority
    Name Affiliation URL Email
    DataFirst University of Cape Town http://www.datafirst.uct.ac.za info@data1st.org
    Access conditions

    Public use files, available to all

    Citation requirements

    Statistics South Africa. Domestic Tourism Survey 2008 [dataset]. Version 1. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa [producer], 2009. Cape Town. DataFirst [distributor], 2012. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25828/86ad-en72

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    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.

    Copyright

    (c) 2010 , Statistics South Africa

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email URL
    DataFirst Helpdesk University of Cape Town support@data1st.org http://support.data1st.org/

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    ddi-zaf-datafirst-dts-2008-v1

    Producers
    Name Affiliation Role
    DataFirst University of Cape Town Metadata producer
    Date of Metadata Production

    2020-03-28

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Version 3

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