Summary information

Study title

Microcensus 2002, 4. quarter: Holiday Trips (SUF edition)

Creator

Statistics Austria (Statistik Austria)

Study number / PID

doi:10.11587/D0ODVA (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Microcensus

The Microcensus has been carried out since the 1970s and has been repeatedly adapted to changing circumstances over time. The last major reform took place in 2014.

Abstract

Full edition for scientific use. Microcensus surveys on the holiday habits of the Austrian population have been conducted every three years since 1969. The main focus of these surveys is to compare the demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the tourists (age, sex, social situation, etc.) with the characteristics of the holiday (travel destination, accommodation, etc.). The survey catalogue, fixed by the OECD, has changed only slightly over the years. It was adapted to the European guideline for tourism statistics and is now conducted annually in December, starting with the year 1996. The questions are mostly concerned with the Austrian's main holidays (a vacation with at minimum number of 4 overnight stays outside the residential area, according to international agreements). The exception are holidays (minimum duration 1 week) at a health resort paid by the health insurance or stays at a clinic to recover from severe illnesses or surgery. Business trips are also excluded. An important index is the so-called travel-intensity or net-travel-intensity. This is the percentage of persons who had gone on a main holiday at least once within the surveyed year. Starting with the year 1998, annual surveys on holidays with a minimum number of 4 overnight stays are conducted according to the Council's Directive. They are performed as a Microcensus special survey each December. The survey program has been extended to include detailed questions for 4 main holidays since the survey in 1998. In addition, there are estimations on more than 4 (max. 18) main holidays the tourist might have gone on. In addition, missing data is supplemented with an imputation programme.

Methodology

Data collection period

10/2002 - 12/2002

Country

Austria

Time dimension

Longitudinal: Trend/Repeated cross-section

Analysis unit

Household

Universe

Persons registered in the central register of residents living in private households

Sampling procedure

Probability: Stratified: Disproportional

Kind of data

Numeric

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview

Access

Publisher

The Austrian Social Science Data Archive

Publication year

2020

Terms of data access

For more Information please visit AUSSDA's web page

Related publications

Not available