Title: Overview%20of%20European%20Data%20from%20Official%20Statistics
1Overview of European Data from Official
Statistics
- Roxane Silberman
- CNRS/Réseau Quetelet and DwB coordinator
- With the support of Cyril Jayet, Marie Cros,
Raphaëlle Fleureux, Alexandre Kych, Benoît
Tudoux (CNRS-RQ) - DwB WP3 and WP5 - CESSDA PPP WP10
- DwB training course Working with data from
Official Statistics particularly the European
Labour Force Survey
Bucharest, 2nd DwB Training Course, February
13-15, 2013
2Introduction
- Main course on SILC, Eurostat microdata
- Yet it is important to have a larger overview of
official microdata in Europe - European integrated microdata (Eurostat) come
from national microdata that are quite diverse - Raises a lot of methodological issues about
comparability ex. SILC - May be complemented
- by related microdata available at national level
more detailed, other variables, and sometimes on
a longer period - by other microdata available at European and
national levels - Provide a short and comprehensive overview of the
rich resources of official microdata in Europe - What is available at national and European level
- Relations between the different levels
- How and where to access these microdata
- While helping locating in this landscape the
SILC, related national microdata and
complementary sources on similar topics
3Outline
- Historical background for national and European
microdata and consequences - Overview of official microdata in Europe
- Integrated European microdata (Eurostat)
- SILC
- Other European microdata
- National microdata collected and harmonized in
European databases - Related topics to SILC
- Other national microdata
- Related topics to SILC
- How to to find information and metadata ?
- How access microdata across borders ?
- Eurostat access and other European microdata
access - Transnational access to national microdata
- Support by DwB
- Transnational access calls
- CIMES
4I. Historical backgrounds for national and
European microdata and consequences
- A vast, complex and moving perimeter
- Historical backgrounds for national microdata
- Historical backgrounds for European microdata
- Some consequences for research
5Official microdata a vast perimeter
- Different words (official, government, national
etc..) - In any cases, statistics provided by government
bodies - A larger perimeter than NSIs and Eurostat
- Microdata provided by
- National level
- National Statistical Institute
- National Statistical administrations coordinated
by the NSI fiscal data - Central banks
- Government agencies particularly those in charge
of Social security, health, pensions - Local authorities
- Number of government bodies producing and
providing data vary according to the organization
of the each statistical system and degree of
centralization - European level
- Eurostat
- European Central Bank
- European Commission and agencies
- Databases held by universities
-
6 complex and moving
- Perimeter may change according to the decision of
governments/NSIs - See France
- Customs statistical department went out and in
- Fiscal data recently included as a Statistical
department coordinated by INSEE - Cereq microdata on transition from school to work
went out - Household finance and consumption surveys (HFCS)
move to central banks coordinated by the BCE - Mixed status for some government agencies (social
security, unemployment ) - What about data to be certified by NSIs ?
- Under different legal framework (surveys,
administrative data, business data, fiscal data,
health data, financial data ) with consequences
for access - Perimeter does not necessarily cover similar data
in the different countries depending on role of
other producers (universities ) and historical
changes (Eastern countries recently joining the
EU)
7Different types of microdata
- Censuses or registers longitudinal samples from
censuses - Individual and households surveys birth
cohorts and panels - Business surveys
- Administrative data (frequently longitudinal
databases) - Combined datasets
- Administrative datasets
- More common in countries based on registers
- Now increasingly the case in all countries (yet
requiring a common identifier) - Administrative data and surveys
8Historical backgrounds for national microdata
- Statistical systems initially built at national
level - From diverse sources and bodies, piece by piece,
- Toward an increasing coordination role of the NSI
- Yet keeping traces from the construction even in
centralized statistical system where some bodies
still remain apart. - Important differences
- Surveys and registers countries
- Centralized vs decentralized/coordinated
- Political systems
- Regional autonomy (Spain)
- Federal system (Germany and the landers)
- UK and Scotland
- France and overseas departments
- National and local authorities gaining importance
9Main topics
- Similarities
- Households Demography, migration ,family,
employment, education, budget and income - More variety
- Housing, transportation, health, social networks,
opinions, social mobility - Business
- Wages, work organization, innovation
- Increasing number of administrative data combined
to lower the respondent burden (firms more
reluctant to answer) - Number of official datasets may vary depending
on - Registers or surveys systems
- Degree of centralisation
- Political changes Eastern countries
- Role of the universities (France vs Germany)
- Examples from first results of DwB WP5 short
list in Eastern countries in line with Eurostat
microdata, longer list in France, medium in
Germany
10Historical background European level
- Increasing harmonization process at international
level since WW2 led by international
organisations (UN, OECD) mostly by encouragement
and persuasion - European framework specific as there is a
political and legal framework - European Statistical System development started
with the CECA during the 50ies, progressively
developed during 30 years, new start and
developments since the 90ies towards more
integration - Harmonization process for variables,
classifications, methodology - Yet relying frequently on pre-existing national
microdata and on the subsidiarity principle - As a consequence,
- European integrated microdata are based on
national microdata from various sources (surveys,
registers, administrative basis) depending on
countries - Methodological problems (see Training course part
3 on SILC) - Dissemination under European bodies yet access to
national part under decision of countries - Not all integrated microdata include all
countries - Access still burdensome even if progress
expected in the future - Level of anonymization high due to differences in
countries size and in countries requirements - Yet access to national part may be possible at
national level. - May be more detailed and accessible in some
countries - May include other questions and variables
- May offer a wider historical perspective if
pre-existing in the countries (yet not for all
countries) - Yet the harmonization process may impact the
series and determine breaks in the series at
national level
11Some consequences for working with data
- At European level
- European microdata may gather data coming from
surveys or from registers - Some harmonised databases may include
government and non government microdata - At national level
- Depending on the degree of centralisation for
production and/or dissemination information and
access are more or less fragmented and may have
move from one body to another one - NSI unique or main provider (Netherlands) vs NSI
and Statistical departments and other government
bodies (France) - Recently the French Income survey moved from the
NSI to the Central Bank - Depending on the legal status access may be more
or less accessible for researchers - For comparative research projects requiring
access to national microdata - Researchers face silos for information and
access
12II. European and national microdata
-
- Three subsets from a European perspective
- European integrated microdata
- National microdata harmonized at European level
- Other national microdata for comparative research
13A. European integrated microdata
- Produced and provided at national level and
integrated and provided at European level by
European government bodies - To remind national part may differ at national
level and at European level - A part are pre-existing surveys integrating
harmonization requirements - Eurostat
- European Central Bank,
- European Commission and other European government
bodies - Others under EU regulations or recommendations of
Eurostat
14A.1 Eurostat microdata
- Labour Force Survey (LFS)
- European Community Household Panel (ECHP)
- Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (SILC)
- Adult Education Survey (AES)
- Community Innovation Survey (CIS)
- Structure of Earnings Survey (SES)
15Related national microdata for LFS and SILC
- LFS a wider historical perspective in some
cases - SILC different sources
- More variables in some cases
- Surveys and registers
16Labour Force Survey (LFS) at national level a
wider historical perspective
Countries Years CUF PUF SUF On-site access Remote Execution Remote Access
Czech 1995-2011
Estonia 1995-2011 X X X X
Finland 1969-2011 X X
France 1962-2010 X X X
Hungary 1992-2011 X X
Italy 2004-2011 X
Latvia 1996-2011 X
Lithuania 1998-2011 X X
Norway 1972-2011 X X
Poland 2000-2011
Portugal 1992-2011
Slovakia 2002-2011 X
Slovenia 1997-2011 X X
Spain 1964-2011 X X
Switzerland 1991-2011 X
UK 2002-2010 X X X X
17SILC and the Estonian Social Survey
- ESS is the Estonian branch of a pan-European
survey of income and living conditions called the
EU-SILC (). Statistics Estonia, however, has
added questions, which are of interest to the
domestic consumers of Estonia, to the
EU-commissioned survey, and attempts to have the
survey be a combination of Estonian and European
data requirements. - In 2004, four modules were added (). They were
all commissioned by Estonian domestic consumers.
The topics of the four modules concerned social
contacts family attitudes and political views
crime, violence and feeling of security and
ethnic integration. - In 2005, there were three modules in ESS one by
order of Eurostat and the other two by domestic
consumers. The topic of the Eurostat module was
Social origin() Estonian domestic modules were
entitled From school to work and Trade unions
and collective agreements.
18SILC and French EPCV and SRCV
- SILC (SRCV) starts in 2004, but
- Living conditions 1978-1979, 86-87 93-94
- European Community Household Panel (1994-2001)
- Permanent Living Conditions Survey EPCV
(1996-2004) - The current French SRCV system took over from the
former permanent survey of living conditions
(EPCV) system in 2004 it reprises some questions
from the EPCV to produce social indicators
considered indispensable for the specific needs
of the French statistical institute but not
required within the European framework.
19A diversity of situations
- The Belgian datasets are much more detailed than
the delivered files to Eurostat - SILC datasets from Eurostat do not contain Swiss
data (2007 - 2010). - The Great Britain component of the EU-SILC
dataset is collected by the Office for National
Statistics (ONS) as part of the General Lifestyle
Survey (GLF) (held at the Archive under Special
Licence access conditions - see GN 33403). - The Northern Ireland component is collected by
the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research
Agency (NISRA) as part of the Living Conditions
Survey (LCS) (not currently held at the Archive).
20A Danish example of register THE REGISTER FOR
HEALTH AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS
- The purpose of the register is to provide
Statistics Denmark, the Ministry of Health and
the National Board of Health with readily
available information from public registers on
the state of health of the Danish population and
relevant socio-economic background conditions.
Another purpose is to provide data for research
in social medicine. - The register was established in cooperation
between the three authorities - The collection of data for the register began in
1994, starting with data from registers with
information available from 1977 onwards The
National Register of Patients, the Register of
Population Statistics and the Employment
Classification Module. - This was followed in 1995 by the inclusion of
data from the following registers - the Register of Causes of Death, the Register of
Health Insurance Statistics and the Register of
Coherent Social Statistics. - In 1997 a final agreement was made defining the
contents of the register, including data from
three more registers - The Integrated Database for Labour Market
Research, the Educational Classification Module
and the Register of Building and Dwelling
Statistics. - At the time, specification was made for the
future inclusion of data on medical births,
voluntary abortions and deformations in birth. -
21A.2 European Central Bank microdata
- Household Finance and Consumption Survey
- Every 3 years
- First deliverable in 2013
- No pre-existing national survey in some countries
while older waves in others - France
- Every 6 years and oldest waves
- Questionnaire 112 pages in France vs 65 pages for
the European survey, yet some variables collected
at European level not in the French survey - Adaptation of the survey was needed (break in the
serie) - Moved from the NSI to the Central Bank (with
consequence for researcher access)
22A.3 Other European government microdata
- The European Commission, the Directorate-General
for Economic and Financial Affairs (DG ECFIN) - Business and Consumer Surveys
- EUROFOUND
- Surveys on working conditions
23- The Business and Consumer Surveys
- The European Commission, the Directorate-General
for Economic and Financial Affairs (DG ECFIN) - manages a network of national institutes to
conduct a harmonised EU programme of 6 business
and consumer tendency surveys
(quarterly or monthly from 1985, 1995 for
services). - Industry
- Services
- Consumers
- Retail trade
- Building
- Investment
- and some others
24- EUROFOUND and surveys on working conditions
- The European Foundation for the Improvement of
Living and Working Conditions - An autonomous EU agency
- Set up by the Council Regulation (EEC) No.
1365/75 of 26 May 1975 - Contributes to the planning and design of better
living and working conditions - Governing board
- 3 representatives per country, for 28 countries
(EU27 and Norway) - The ministry in charge of labour
- The employers
- The unions
- 3 representatives for the European Commission
- The DG Employment
- The DG Health and consumer protection
- The DG Research end innovation
- Based in Dublin with a Brussels Liaison Office
25- 3 surveys combining companies and employees
surveys - The European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS)
1990, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2010 - Working conditions and the quality of work and
employment - The European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS)
2003, 2007, 2010 - A broad range of indicators of quality of life,
both objective and subjective - The European Company Survey (ECS) 2004, 2009,
2013 - Workplace practices based on the views of both
managers and employee representatives - The exemple of the EWCS surveys
- Year 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
- Number of workers 12500 15800 21500 30000 44000
- Number of countries EC12 EU15 EU1512 EU274 EU27
7 - A questionnaire development expert group
Eurofound's Governing Board, other EU bodies (EU
Commission, Eurostat, European Agency for Safety
and Health at Work), international organisations
(OECD, ILO), national statistical institutes and
leading European experts in the field - Implemented by INRA Europe then Gallup Europe,
with national fieldwork partners - Datasets available for download at the ESDS (UKDA)
26A. 4 Others microdata under EU regulations or
Eurostat recommendations for harmonization
- Household budget surveys (HBS)
- Eurostat recommendations about methodology and
harmonization - Information and Communication technologies
surveys (TIC) - Regulation n808/2004 and updated regulation
1006/2009 linked with the European roadmap for
the TIC
27B. National microdata harmonized at European
level
- IECM (IPUMs international)
- Censuses
- MTUS
- Time Use Survey
- LIS (Luxembourg Income Study)
- Household Budget Survey
- Collected and a posteriori harmonized by
Universities Archives (MTUS, LIS, IECM) - More detailed microdata often accessible at
national level
28B.1 IECM/IPUMS and national dissemination of
European censuses
29- More censuses microdata available at national
level - The case of the 2001 census
- The example of 2 European countries
- United Kingdom
- France (new census, yearly since 2006, the
example of 2008)
30- United Kingdom
- Samples of anonymized records (SARs)
- The Individual Licensed SAR
- 3Â (1Â 800Â 000Â people)
- UK 9 government office regions for England, and
Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland - Available from CCSR (a charge may apply), also
available from IPUMS - The Special Licence Household SAR (SL-HSAR)
- 1Â (245Â 000Â households)
- England and Wales
- Available from the UK Data Archive
- The Small Area Microdata (SAM)
- 5Â (2Â 900Â 000Â people)
- 500 Local authorities
- Available from CCSR (a charge may apply)
- The Controlled Access Microdata Sample(s) (CAMS)
- Both the individual and household SARs files
- Available in much greater detail
31- France Available as PUF from Insee website
- The standard files (PUF)
- The dwelling file
- The individual file by regions
- Available from IECM/IPUMS
- The individual file by constituencies
- The individual file by place of work
- 3 standard (PUF) individual files for residential
mobility - They differ for confidentiality reason,
- Place of residence at the census time and
previous residence (also abroad). - For departments, great communes or all communes
- The individual file for travel to work mobility
- From commune to commune)
- The individual file for school mobility
- From commune to commune
-
32- France Available for researchers via Data
Archive - The SUF files
- For the last Census available for the end of
2012. - 2 to 3 files
- An individual file with a complete set of
variables, at the region level - A family file.
- An individual file of the annual census survey,
at the region level. - Available from the Réseau Quetelet
- The Secure Access Center to Data (CASD, Centre
dAccès Sécurisé aux Données, GENES-Réseau
Quetelet) - All the microdata census files (and others )
- Available in the most detailed form
- Secure remote access
33B.2 LIS is a cross-national data center, located
in Luxembourg. LIS is home to the Luxembourg
Income Study Database (LIS) and the Luxembourg
Wealth Study (LWS)Database.
Pays Enquête Année Income Unit Data Collection
Cyprus LWS 2001 Primary Economy Unit Central Bank of Cyprus and University of Cyprus
Finland LWS 1998 Household Wealth Survey Statistics Finland
Germany LWS 2001 German Socio Economic Panel German Institute for Economic Research, DIW
Italy LWS 2002 Survey of Household Income and Wealth Bank of Italy
UK LWS 2000 British Household Panel Survey cross national equivalent files Institute for Social and Economics Research
UK LIS 1999 Family Resource Survey Department for Work and Pension , ONS, National Centre for Social Research
34Household Budget Survey
Countries Years CUF PUF SUF On-site access Remote Execution Remote Access
Czech 1999-2010 Â Â Â Â Â
Estonia 2000-2010 X Â Â Â Â
France 1972-2006 Â X Â Â xÂ
Hungary 1993-2011 Â X X Â Â
Italy 1953-2011 Â Â Â Â Â
Latvia 1996-2011 Â X Â Â X
Lithuania 2003-2008 Â X Â Â Â
Norway 1988 Â X X Â Â
Poland 1986-2010 Â Â Â Â Â
Slovakia 1994-2011 Â X Â Â Â
Slovenia 2001-2012 Â Â X Â Â
Spain 1998-2010 X Â X Â Â
Switzerland 2000-2005 Â X Â Â Â
35The Centre for Time Use Research collects Time
Use Surveys
France Time Use Survey INSEE
BELGIUM 1966 The Multinational Comparative Time-Budget Research Project Pierre Feldheim and Claude Javeau, Sociological Institute, Free University of Brussels
BULGARIA 1988 The 1988 Bulgarian National Time Use Survey Central Statistical Office, Institute of Sociology at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
FINLAND 1987-88 Time Use Survey Statistics Finland
HUNGARY 1965 The Multinational Comparative Time-Budget Research Project Sociological Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
ITALY 1979/80 Il Tempo della Citta. Una Ricerca Sull'uso del Tempo Quotidiano in una Metropoli University of Turin
UK 1961 The People's Activities BBC
UK 2005 Omnibus Survey, One Day Diary of Time Use Module The Office for National Statistics coordinated the study and collected the data. The Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Essex transferred the diaries into coded electronic data.
36Time Use Survey
Countries Years CUF PUF SUF On-site access Remote Execution Remote Access
Estonia 1999-2010Â Â X X
France  1966-1999  X  x
Italy  1988-2009  X X
Norway  1971-2010  X X
Portugal  1999   Â
Spain  2002-2009 X  X
37 Household Budget Surveys, Information and
Communication Technology Surveys and Time Use
Surveys
38C. A lot of other national OS usable for
comparative research
- Various surveys
- Related surveys on living conditions (other than
those related to the SILC) - Other examples
- Social mobility
- School leavers and transition from school to work
- Administrative microdata increasingly combined
and used by researchers - Examples
- Employers and employees
- Social security, pensions
39Other national surveys on living conditions
conditions
Country
Denmark The register for health and social conditions 1977-2012
Denmark Family allowance and child benefits 1957-2012
Estonia Estonian Social Survey 2004-2010
Estonia Household Budget Survey 2010
France Living conditions 78-79 86-87 93-94
France Permanent Living Conditions Survey (EPCV) 1996-2004
France The Statistical survey on income and living conditions (SRCV) 2004-2009
France Survey of users of accommodation and hot meal distribution services (Homeless people) 2001
United Kingdom General Lifestyle Survey (GLF) 2000-2008
United Kingdom Living Standards During Unemployment 1983-1984
United Kingdom English Housing Survey 2008-2011
Norway Norwegian Level of Living Study 1973-2007
Norway Study on housing conditions among low-income families 1995
Norway Welfare and level of living among the very frail elderly 2000
40Social mobility Richard Breen ed., 2004. Social
Mobility in Europe. Oxford University Press,
Oxford.
41Country Sources of data Years for which data are included Data Producer
Germany Zumabus 1976-7, 1979(2), 1980, 1982 ZUMA-GESIS data come from collections firms that carry out most of the academic social research in Germany
Germany German socio-economic panel 1986, 1999 DIW, German Institute for Economic Research
France Formation qualification professionnelle Insee surveys 1970, 1977, 1985, 1993 INSEE
Italy National survey on social mobility 1985 Universities of Bologna, Trento, and Trieste
Italy Italian Houselhold longitudinal survey 1997 Universities of Trento, Milano, and Bologna, Istituto Trentino di Cultura, Istat
Great Britain General household survey 1973, 1975-6, 1979-84, 1987-92 ONS
Poland Slomczyski 1989 1988 Polish Academy of Sciences
Hungary Social mobility and life history survey 1973, 1983, 1992 Hungarian Central Statistical Office
Sources Richard Breen. 2004. Social Mobility in
Europe. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
42Youth cohorts and transition from school to work
surveys
- Numerous surveys conducted in European countries
- Statistical Offices, France, Italy, Norway
- Ministry of education, employment, statistical
departments Denmark, Germany, France, Ireland,
Scotland - Government agencies (Unemployment, others)
Belgium, France - Universities, UK
- Source CEDEFOP, Christine Mainguet, La transition
du système éducatif vers la vie active (The
transition from school to work) Exploitation des
données statistiques nationales (Statistical
sources).
43 Employers-Employees A guide to Linked
Employer-Employee Data Sources in the EU and
Beyond See Tanvi Desai, London School of
Economics, 2008
44Linked Employer-Employee Data sources, examples
of national surveys
Country National surveys Data producer Access notes
Czech Republic Information System on Average Earnings (ISAE) The Czech Ministry of Labour commissions the private agency TREXIMA Direct access is only available on-site at TREXIMA The Structure of Earnings Survey for the Czech Republic is derived from the ISAE there is no access to the Czech SES data at the national level.
Spain INE does not provide access to any other linked employer-employee or firm panel data resources than SES. The Banco de España conducts an annual survey of non-financial firms, the Central Balance Sheet Data. However, the microdata for this survey are only available to researchers affiliated with the Banco de España
Germany LIAB (Linked Employer-Employee Data of the IAB) IAB (Establishment Panel ) Data access is possible via on-site use and afterwards via remote data access also. The LIAB data is a linked employer-employee dataset constructed from the IAB Establishment Panel and the Federal Employment Agencies employment statistics.
Germany LIAB (Linked Employer-Employee Data of the IAB) DESTATIS (employment statistics) Data access is possible via on-site use and afterwards via remote data access also. The LIAB data is a linked employer-employee dataset constructed from the IAB Establishment Panel and the Federal Employment Agencies employment statistics.
France REPONSE (Relations Professionnelles et Negociations dEntreprise) DARES DARES
France COI (Changement Organisationnels et lInformatisation) DARES Réseau Quételet ,(SUF) The COI is used for Frances contribution to Eurostats ICT survey
France Enquête Familles at Employeurs INED
France DADS INSEE Réseau Quételet, (SUF)
Labour cost and structure of earnings survey (Ecmoss) INSEE Réseau Quételet, (SUF) The Structure of Earning Survey for France is a part of this survey
45The Impact of Social Security Contributions on
Earnings Evidence from administrative data in
France, Germany, Netherlands an UK. A. Bozio,
J. Grenet Research project 2011
46Country Data sources Years Data collection Provider
France DADS 1993- Fiscal and social administration, INSEE Reseau Quételet (CMH, GENES)
Germany Sample of Integrated Labour Market Biographies (SIAB) 1975-2008 IAB IAB
Germany Lohn- und Einkommensteuerstatstik faktisch anonymisierte Daten (FAST) 1992-2004 Fiscal administration DESTATIS DESTATIS
Germany Verdienststrukturerhebung (VSE) 1990-2006 DESTATIS DESTATIS
United Kingdom New Earnings Survey (NES) 1975-2003 ONS Secure data service, UKDA
United Kingdom Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) 2004- ONS Secure data service, UKDA
Annual Business Inquiry ONS Secure data service, UKDA
Bozio Antoine. The Impact of Social Security
Contributions on Earnings Evidence from
administrative data in France, Germany,
Netherlands an UK. Research proposal submitted
in September 2011 to the Open Research Area (ORA)
call
47V. National and European microdata where can I
find the information and metadata
- Sources
- National microdata dissemination
- Nesstar
- Microdata dissemination at European level
48Sources
- Sources of information NSI websites and
CessdaPPP - 1 National Statistical Institute selected per
country - These are general trends, there could be little
variations due to lack of information available
on the web or very recent changes
49Metadata dissemination for national microdata
NSIs and Archives
50Metadata dissemination at European level
- Each European body
- CESSDA only for some national microdata
(depending on Archives members) - No single point of access even at national level
- Some countries are opening portal for access to
official data (open data initiatives) yet mostly
for aggregate data - In some countries, archives gather metadata from
different government producers (yet not all)
51Looking for data Nesstar
- Nesstar A widely used tool
- Examples Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania,
Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Slovenia,
United-States, etc. - A unified way to look for data and metadata
(documentation describing the data) - Allows to browse into variables (instead of
looking into the questionnaire)
52(No Transcript)
53VI. National microdata where and how can I
access the data
- Access
- Types of access
- Data providers for official statistics in the
European countries - Transnational access
- Eurostat access and other European microdata
access - Transnational access to national microdata
-
54Types of access
- From highly anonymized to highly detailed
microdata - Campus files
- Public use files
- Scientific Use files
- Confidential, highly detailed, sensitive
microdata - On site, remote execution, remote access
- Terminology issues
- Different types of accreditation procedures,
application forms, criteria for each type and for
each country/producer/provider - Transnational access not always possible due to
differences in legal frameworks and/or
interpretation of the laws
55Eurostat and other European bodies
- Eurostat still burdensome
- Yet now free of charge
- Network contracts
- New regulation expected for access to
confidential microdata, - Yet new procedures for accreditation (2 steps)
- Currently access on site
- Remote access network in project (DARA ESSnet)
- European Central Bank in progress
- LIS remote execution
- IPUMS and IECM free and easy, yet highly
anonymized
56Transnational access to OS in Europe
- Some European mapping about type of access
- Transnational access for PUFs, SUFs, and
confidential data available in safe centers
and/or via remote access. - Sources of information NSI websites DwB
Bucharest Eastern countries workshop
information collected within DwB Wp3 and
CessdaPPP) - 1 National Statistical Institute selected per
country (does not include the NSAs and other
government bodies) - These are general trends, there could be little
variations due to lack of information available
on the web or very recent changes
57Transnational access to Public Use Files
In some countries the number of PUF is (very)
limited.
58Transnational access to Scientific Use Files
59Data archives / dissemination
60Transnational access to confidential data
61Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (SILC)
Countries Years CUF PUF SUF On-site access Remote Execution Remote Access
Austria 2003-2007 Â X X X Â
Czech 2005-2010 Â Â Â Â Â
Estonia 2004-2010 X X X Â X
Finland 1967-2011 Â X X Â Â
France 2004-2009 Â X Â Â XÂ
Germany 2005-2008 Â Â X X Â
Ireland     Â
Italy 2005-2010 Â X X Â Â
Latvia 2005-2011 Â X Â Â X
Lithuania 2005-2010 X X Â Â Â
Poland 2005-2010 Â Â Â Â Â
Portugal 2004-2009 Â Â Â Â Â
Slovakia 2006-2011 Â X Â Â Â
Slovenia   X  Â
Spain 2004-2011 Â X X Â Â
Switzerland 2007-2009 Â X Â Â Â
62Structure of Earning Survey, Eurostat access
63Structure of Earning Survey, National availability
64Structure of Earnings Survey (SES)
Countries Years CUF PUF SUF On-site access Remote Execution Remote Access
Finland 1995-2009 Â Â X X X Â
France 1966-2006 Â Â X Â Â XÂ
Germany 1990-2006 X X X X X Â
Italy 2001-2009 Â Â X X Â Â
Poland 1996-2010 Â Â Â Â Â Â
Slovenia    X  Â
Switzerland 1994-2008 Â Â X Â Â Â
UK 1997-2011 Â Â X X Â Â
65- Combining datasets from different countries to
perform micro-based cross-country statistical
analysis is not currently possible (would require
the different datasets to be stored in a single
location and accessed within a common user
interface). - Cross-country analysis can only be performed
using cell aggregated values from the original
datasets (e.g. by gender, year of birth, year of
observation, etc.). The level of aggregation
depends on each country's disclosure rules - International comparison projects have to be
carefully planned - Currently, the researcher team should include
researchers from each country covered by the
study
66VII. Finding and accessing national microdata in
Europe DwB support
- Support by DwB and future ESC
67DwB Future perspective and current activities
- Future perspective
- A European Service Centre for Official Statistics
ESC-OS as a single point of access linked to the
CESSDA Portal - That could offer a range of services metadata,
training, support for accreditation - A pilot for a European Remote Access Network for
access to confidential OS - A standard for a European research accreditation
- Current activities
- Support transnational access to highly detailed
microdata - DwB regular calls)
- CIMES Centralising and Integrating Metadata from
European Statistics
68CIMES Centralising and Integrating Metadata from
European Statistics
69Thanks for Listening
- Contact roxane.silberman_at_ens.fr
- Website http//www.dwbproject.org/