Hi all, I have some data below where individuals are nested within households.
I know that, to isolate the number of unique households, I can simply do:
This tells me there are 31 unique households in my data. However, the question I really want to know the answer to is: "What percent of households have multiple individuals"? This would just be the inverse to what I did above if it were the case that all multi-individual households had only 2 individuals, but as you can see that is not the case with my data, some households have 3 or 4.
Does anyone have a concise way of figuring this out? Thanks.
I know that, to isolate the number of unique households, I can simply do:
Code:
by household, sort: gen nvals = _n == 1 tab nvals
Does anyone have a concise way of figuring this out? Thanks.
Code:
* Example generated by -dataex-. For more info, type help dataex clear input int(household individual) 432 111 433 112 145 113 145 114 145 115 145 116 603 117 439 118 440 119 441 120 442 121 443 122 444 123 784 124 785 125 447 126 448 127 449 128 449 129 449 130 452 131 453 132 454 133 455 134 455 135 457 136 134 137 459 138 460 139 460 140 643 141 345 142 465 143 674 144 658 145 255 146 468 147 336 148 end
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