Ghana - Enterprise Survey 2007
Reference ID | GHA_2007_ES_v01_M_WB |
Year | 2007 |
Country | Ghana |
Producer(s) | World Bank |
Sponsor(s) | World Bank - - |
Created on
Feb 13, 2013
Last modified
Dec 05, 2013
Page views
357572
main market
(e1)
File: Ghana-2007--full data-1
File: Ghana-2007--full data-1
Overview
Type:
Discrete Format: numeric Width: 2 Decimals: 0 Range: -9-3 | Valid cases: 292 Invalid: 324 |
Questions and instructions
For 2006, considering this establishment’s main product line:
What was its main market?
What was its main market?
Value | Category | Cases | |
---|---|---|---|
-9 | don't know | 0 | 0.0% |
-8 | refused to answer | 0 | 0.0% |
-7 | not applicable | 0 | 0.0% |
-6 | still in process | 0 | 0.0% |
-5 | application denied | 0 | 0.0% |
-4 | skipped | 0 | 0.0% |
-3 | not provided | 0 | 0.0% |
1 | local | 185 | 63.4% |
2 | national | 92 | 31.5% |
3 | international | 15 | 5.1% |
Sysmiss | 324 |
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
The purpose of this question is to get the establishment to define what it considers to be its main market.
The main product is defined by the output that generates the highest proportion of sales. The establishment's main market is defined by the market that generates the most sales for the main product as defined above.
It could be the case that an establishment's main product is sold in smaller proportions in a greater number of markets and that the main product is never the greatest total annual share of revenue in any one market. For example, 51 percent of revenue comes from selling nails, but that is distributed equally in the local, national, and international markets, 33 percent in each. Bolts make up 49 percent of total annual revenues. However, half of the revenue for bolts comes from selling in the international market and half in the local market.
It is clear that bolts sell more in its respective market with respect to nails, but does not generate as much revenue as nails do for the establishment. In such a case, nails should be used as the main product. Whenever local, national and international markets have equal shares choose the national market and do not follow the skip pattern.
The main product is defined by the output that generates the highest proportion of sales. The establishment's main market is defined by the market that generates the most sales for the main product as defined above.
It could be the case that an establishment's main product is sold in smaller proportions in a greater number of markets and that the main product is never the greatest total annual share of revenue in any one market. For example, 51 percent of revenue comes from selling nails, but that is distributed equally in the local, national, and international markets, 33 percent in each. Bolts make up 49 percent of total annual revenues. However, half of the revenue for bolts comes from selling in the international market and half in the local market.
It is clear that bolts sell more in its respective market with respect to nails, but does not generate as much revenue as nails do for the establishment. In such a case, nails should be used as the main product. Whenever local, national and international markets have equal shares choose the national market and do not follow the skip pattern.