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Report No. 536(65/21.1/1) Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 NSS 65 th (July 2008 -June 2009) Round National Sample Survey Office National Statistical Organisation Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation Government of India October 2010

Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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Page 1: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Report No. 536(65/21.1/1)

Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

NSS 65th

(July 2008 -June 2009)

Round

National Sample Survey Office National Statistical Organisation

Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation Government of India

October 2010

Page 2: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Preface

The National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) conducted an all- India survey of households in the 65th round of NSS during July 2008 - June 2009. The survey comprised enquiries on (i) domestic tourism (ii) housing condition (iii) condition of urban slums. The subject of domestic tourism was covered in the NSS household survey during the 65th Round on the request of Ministry of Tourism, Govt. of India. This has not been covered in any earlier NSS round as comprehensively as in the 65th round. In the 54th round (January-June 1998) of NSS, one of the subjects covered was tours involving overnight stay. The results of the 54th round enquiry on travel (which included commuting to work or for education as well as tours involving overnight stay) were published in NSS Report No.450.

This report, based on data collected in the 65th round, inter alia, presents the magnitude of domestic tourism activity as revealed by estimates of numbers of households and persons making overnight and same-day trips during a year. It studies the numbers of overnight and same-day trips per household and per person and provides key indicators on domestic tourism in cross classification of household and individual characteristics such as economic level, occupation, religion, social group, sex, age and activity status. It examines the pattern of trips undertaken in respect of trip features such as leading purpose, duration, type of main destination, number of places visited, and the expenditure related to trips by leading purpose of trip, by broad head of expenditure, etc. Estimates are provided separately for overnight trip and same-day trip and for rural and urban sectors at all-India or State/Union Territory level.

Chapter One of the report is introductory. Major definitions and concepts related to the survey are given in Chapter Two. Chapter Three contains the survey findings on (a) incidence and characteristics of trips (b) participation of various population groups in domestic tourism activity (c) visitor-trip characteristics and (d) occurrence of domestic tourism activity among households and persons in a one-year period. Findings on expenditure related to trips are presented in Chapter Four. Detailed statistical tables are presented in Appendix A. The sampling design and estimation procedure is explained in Appendix B, and a facsimile of the schedule of enquiry canvassed in the field is provided as Appendix C.

The Survey Design and Research Division (SDRD) of the NSSO undertook the development of the survey methodology and survey instruments, and the drafting and finalisation of the report. The field work was carried out by the Field Operations Division (FOD) of NSSO and the data processing and tabulation work by the Data Processing Division (DPD) of NSSO. The Coordination and Publication Division (CPD) coordinated various activities pertaining to the survey.

I am indebted to the members of the then Steering Committee of National Sample Survey, the Working Group for NSS 65th round and the National Statistical Commission for their valuable guidance at various stages of survey activities from designing of the questionnaire to the preparation of this report. I gratefully acknowledge the contribution of the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India, for publicity of the survey during field operations. I also express my thanks to various officers of different divisions of the NSSO involved in the preparation of this report.

I hope the report will be found useful by policy makers, academicians and researchers. New Delhi J. Dash October 2010 Director General & Chief Executive Officer National Sample Survey Office

Page 3: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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Page 5: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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Page 6: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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Page 7: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

i  NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 

 

Highlights

The results on ‘Domestic Tourism in India’ are based on data collected during July 2008 - June 2009 from 1,53,308 surveyed households in 8,109 sample villages and 4,719 urban blocks spread over all States and Union Territories of India. All estimates relate to a period of 365 days. The important indicators for studying domestic tourism in a demographic domain are derived through the concept of ‘trip’, which is devised as a unit of movement of members of a household as ‘domestic visitors’. NUMBER OF TRIPS MADE IN A YEAR

In a one-year period, 418 overnight trips were made per 100 Indian households (on an average, about 4 per household). The number of trips per 100 households was 440 for the rural population, perceptibly higher than for the urban population, for which it was 365.

The incidence of same-day trips, at 753 per 100 households in a year, was substantially higher than that of overnight trips. Rural households undertook same-day trips at the rate of 844 per 100 households, which was noticeably higher than 537 trips per 100 households, the rate for urban households.

The number of overnight trips made per 100 persons in the population was 210 in rural India and 207, that is, roughly the same level, in urban India.

The number of overnight trips per 100 persons was higher for males – 225 for the rural population and 220 for the urban – than for females – 194, rural, and 192, urban.

The number of same-day trips per 100 of population was 330 in rural India and 263 in urban India. In rural India it was 389 for males and 266 for females, and in urban India it was 297 among males and 226 among females.

With increase in age, the number of overnight as well as same-day trips per person rose gradually and then declined, being highest for the age-group 30-34 in rural India and highest for the age-group 40-44 in urban India. Among children under 15, however, the number of trips, both same day as well as overnight, per child was highest in the lowest age group 0-4 for rural as well as urban India.

There was not much variation among persons of different occupations or industries in number of overnight or same-day trips per 100 persons.

CHARACTERISTICS OF TRIPS

Overnight/ Same-day: For the rural population, slightly over one-third of all trips were overnight trips and nearly two-thirds were same-day trips. For the urban population, the proportion of overnight trips was a little higher – over 40%.

Trip size: For the rural population, every 100 overnight trips had 223 participating members, and every 100 same-day trips had 183. For the urban population, every 100 overnight trips had 232 participants, and every 100 same-day trips had 200 participants.

Page 8: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Highlights

ii NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 

Leading purpose (overnight trips): Trips whose purpose was ‘social’ (social visits) accounted for 75% of overnight trips of the rural population and 71% of overnight trips of the urban population. Trips with ‘religious and pilgrimage’ purposes accounted for about 9% of overnight trips for the rural population and 12% for the urban population. Trips for ‘health and medical’ purposes formed 7% of overnight trips of the rural population and about 3½% for the urban population of India. Trips for ‘holidaying, leisure and recreation’ accounted for 5% of overnight trips of urban people but only 2% for rural people.

Leading purpose (same-day trips): About 55% of same-day trips of the urban population and 38% for the rural population were made for ‘social’ visits. ‘Shopping’ was found to be the next leading purpose for undertaking same-day trips in rural India, accounting for 23% of such trips, but was less common in urban India, where its share was only about 7%. ‘Health and medical’ purposes, too, were much more common in rural India, accounting for 17% of same-day trips, and less common in urban India, where their share was about 8%.

Duration: The average number of nights spent on overnight trips was about 3 for the rural population and about 4 for the urban. However, the average duration of overnight trips undertaken by the urban population varied from 3.5 nights in the months of February and August to 5.6 in the month of July. In rural areas month-to-month variation was relatively low, the average duration varying from 2.7 nights in February to 3.4 nights in June.

Destination location: Travel within one’s own district accounted for about 66% of overnight visitor-trips of the rural population but only about 30% for the urban population. For the urban population, 49% of overnight visitor-trips were to a place outside one’s district but within one’s state; for the rural population, 28% of overnight visitor-trips were of this kind. 21% of urban and 6% of rural overnight visitor-trips involved travel beyond one’s state.

Number of places visited: For every 100 trips made to a destination outside one’s state, about 150 places were visited. For every 100 trips made to a destination outside one’s district but within one’s state, about 119 places were visited. For every 100 trips made to a destination within one’s district, about 104 places were visited.

VISITOR CHARACTERISTICS AND VISITOR-SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF TRIPS

Gender profile: Among every 1000 overnight visitors, 537 were males and 463 were females for the urban sector while 525 were males and 475 females for the rural sector. Among same-day visitors the male-female break-up did not differ much across sectors and was about 55:45.

Visitor purpose: The break-up of overnight or same-day visitor-trips by the purpose that led the visitor to make the trip did not differ appreciably from the break-up of overnight/ same-day trips by leading purpose.

Page 9: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Highlights

iii NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 

Mode of travel: Buses were the dominant mode of travel for overnight and same-day trips alike, accounting for two-thirds (67%) of overnight visitor-trips of the rural population, 57% of overnight visitor-trips by the urban population, and 57-61% of same-day visitor-trips of the rural and urban populations. About 21% of same-day visitor-trips, for both rural and urban sectors, were by own transport.

Trains were used as the major mode of travel for 27% of overnight visitor-trips by urban Indians; for rural Indians their share in overnight visitor-trips was 7%. Trains were also used in 9% of same-day visitor-trips by urban Indians but their share was only 2% for rural Indians.

Type of stay: In case of 85% of rural and 80% of urban overnight visitor-trips, the visitors stayed with friends and relatives for the major part of their stay.

OCCURRENCE OF DOMESTIC TOURISM ACTIVITY IN A ONE-YEAR PERIOD

About 77% of the population of both rural and urban sectors took part in at least one overnight trip during a one-year period. For same-day trips the proportion of population making at least one trip was about 76% in rural India and 70% in urban India.

Households in which at least one member had made an overnight trip during the past one year formed 92% of all households (about 93% in the rural sector and 90% in the urban sector).

As many as 96% of rural households, but only 86% of urban households, had at least one member who had taken part in a same-day trip during the past one year, the overall percentage for India being 93%.

The percentage of households with at least one member making an overnight trip during the past one year did not vary appreciably with household occupation, household social group or household religion. Nor was there any clear pattern of variation with household economic level.

EXPENDITURE ON TRIPS

At all-India level, average expenditure per overnight trip was Rs.821 for the rural population and Rs.1,636 for the urban population.

Overnight trips with ‘social’ leading purpose had a per-trip expenditure of Rs.466 (43% lower than the average trip considering all purposes) for the rural population and Rs.989 for the urban population (40% lower than average). Overnight trips for ‘health and medical’ purposes were four times as expensive as the average trip for both rural and urban populations. The urban population’s overnight trips for ‘holidaying, leisure and recreation’ were on the average more than three times as expensive, and its ‘business’ trips twice as expensive as the average trip considering all purposes. In both sectors, religious trips had a per-trip expenditure close to, but slightly higher than, the all-purposes average.

Page 10: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Highlights

iv NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 

Average expenditure per overnight visitor-trip was Rs.369 in rural India and Rs.715 in urban India.

Average expenditure per overnight visitor-trip made for ‘social’ reasons was only Rs.202 in rural India and Rs.418 in urban India. In urban India ‘religious and pilgrimage’ trips had an average expenditure per visitor-trip of Rs.699, lower than the all-purposes average.

In both rural and urban India, ‘social’ purpose trips accounted for about 43% of all overnight trip expenditure. Trips for ‘health and medical’ purposes had a share of 30% in overnight trip expenditure for the rural population and 15% for the urban. ‘Religious and pilgrimage’ trips had a share of about 11% in the rural sector and about 14% in the urban.

The share of transport in overnight trip expenditure was 20% in rural India but as much as 33% in urban India. The share of shopping was 30% in rural India and 25% in urban India. The share of recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related expenditure was as high as 32% in rural India but only 15% in urban India.

The share of food and drink in overnight trip expenditure was about 9-10% for both rural and urban India. The share of accommodation was 3% in rural India and about 6% (excluding payments made as part of a ‘package’) in urban India.

For same-day trips, shopping was the largest component of expenditure, accounting for 60% of expenditure in case of the rural population and 44% in case of the urban.

For ‘social’ overnight trips, shopping expenditure formed 51% of the total in rural India and about 38% in urban India. For the urban population, transport commanded the largest share of expenditure (around 43%) for both ‘social’ and ‘religious and pilgrimage’ trips. The share of recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related expenditure for the rural population was over 78% in ‘health and medical’ trips but under 10% in ‘religious’ trips and lower still in trips for ‘social’ visits.

Of the total expenditure by households on domestic tourism, expenditure on overnight trips accounted for 61% – 36% being incurred by rural and 25% by urban households. Same-day trips had a share of 39% in total expenditure, 30% incurred by rural and 9% by urban households. Thus, of the total domestic tourism expenditure, the share of the rural households was about two-thirds (66%).

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v NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

Contents Chapter Title Page no.

Highlights i

Contents v

Chapter One Introduction

1.1 The report in perspective 1.2 Background 1.3 Scope of the present survey 1.4 Outline of the survey 1.5 Sampling design 1.6 Contents of the report

1

1 1 2 3 3 3

Chapter Two Concepts and Definitions

2.1 Households 2.2 Monthly per capita consumer expenditure (MPCE) 2.3 Travel 2.4 Usual Place of Residence 2.5 Usual Environment 2.6 Trip 2.7 Visit 2.8 Tourism expenditure 2.9 Non-resident Indian (NRI) 2.10 Major states

6

6 6 7 7 7 7 10 12 12 12

Chapter Three Characteristics of Domestic Tourism

3.1 Incidence of trips per household 3.2 Trips: overnight and same-day 3.3 Leading purpose of trips 3.4 Month of visit 3.5 Trip duration 3.6 Package and non-package trips 3.7 Destination type 3.8 Number of places visited per overnight trip 3.9 Trip size and leading purpose 3.10 Overall incidence per person 3.11 The gender effect 3.12 The effect of age 3.13 Variation with occupation 3.14 Variation with industry 3.15 Distribution of visitors by activity status 3.16 Visitor purpose 3.17 Mode of travel 3.18 Major type of stay 3.19 Measures of occurrence 3.20 Occurrence among persons 3.21 Occurrence among households 3.22 Household occupation 3.23 Household social group

13

13 15 16 17 18 19 19 20 20 21 21 22 23 24 25 25 26 27 28 28 30 32 32

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vi NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

Chapter Title Page no.

Chapter Three..contd.

3.24 Household type 3.25 Household religion 3.26 Household economic level 3.27 Households visited by NRIs: impact of the NRI

visit(s)

32 33 33 34

Chapter Four Expenditure on Trips

4.1 Expenditure per overnight trip and leading purpose 4.2 Expenditure per overnight visitor- trip and leading

purpose 4.3 Break-up of overnight trip expenditure by leading

purpose 4.4 Break-up of trip expenditure by broad expenditure

head 4.5 Leading purpose and trip expenditure pattern for

overnight trips 4.6 Break-up of domestic tourism expenditure by kind

of trip and sector

35

35 36

37

38

40

42

Appendix A

Detailed Tables (list on pages A- i – A-vi) A-1 – A-237

Appendix B

Sample Design and Estimation Procedure B-1 – B-15

Appendix C

Schedule 21.1: Domestic Tourism in India C-1 – C-13

Appendix D

Projected Population D-1 – D-3

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Chapter One

Introduction

1.1 The report in perspective

1.1.1 An all-India household survey on domestic tourism during the period July 2008 to June 2009 was carried out by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO),National Statistical Organisation,Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation,Government of India, as part of the 65th round of National Sample Survey (NSS). The data were collected through a schedule of enquiry (Schedule 21.1).The aim, inter alia, was to provide estimates of the volume of domestic tourism in terms of number of visitors (i.e. persons performing trips), number of households undertaking domestic tourism activity and number of trips that contributed to domestic tourism in India. It was also intended to study domestic tourism activity by different population categories such as age, economic level, activity status, occupation and industry of work, etc.; characteristics of trips such as purpose, main destination, etc. and the expenditure incurred by the households in domestic tourism activity. Based on the data collected during the survey period (July 2008 - June 2009), estimates pertaining to domestic tourism in India along with various characteristics associated with these have been generated and presented in this report.

1.2 Background

1.2.1 Past Surveys: Domestic tourism has not been covered comprehensively in any earlier NSS round. In the 54th round (January-June 1998) of NSS, one of the subjects covered was tours involving overnight stay. The main household schedule of that round recorded details of journeys on tours involving overnight stay undertaken by household members during a specified period.

1.2.2 The results of the 54th round enquiry on travel (which included commuting to work or for education as well as tours involving overnight stay) were published in NSS Report No.450. The report, in its chapter on tours involving overnight stay, gave State-sector-wise estimates of rate of occurrence of such journeys per 100 households and per 1000 population in 60 days, distribution of journeys by mode of journey, distance travelled and purpose, and average number of travellers, average duration of a journey and average expenditure on a journey for each mode and purpose. Because of differences in the coverage of “tours involving overnight stay” as studied in the 54th round survey from the “overnight trips” of the 65th round survey, it is not possible to compare the estimates from the two surveys in this report.1

1.2.3 The present survey: Considering the significant impact of domestic tourism in the national economy, as per the proposal of the Ministry of Tourism , the then Steering Committee of NSSO decided to conduct an annual household survey on domestic tourism during NSS 65th round.

                                                            1 The two main differences between the 54th round concept of tour involving overnight stay and the concept of overnight trip adopted in the survey under study (65th round ) are: (i) movements within the regular routine of a person’s life (which included commuting) were excluded from the coverage of domestic tourism (that is, not considered trips) in the 65th round and (ii) expenditure on tours in the 54th round included only expenditure on passenger transport, whereas in the 65th round all expenditure related to the trip and made before, after, or during the trip were included.  

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1.3 Scope of the present survey

1.3.1 Items of enquiry: In the present survey on domestic tourism, a schedule of enquiry (Schedule 21.1) was used for collection of data from the sample households. Data were collected on household characteristics such as household size, principal industry, principal occupation, household type, religion, social group, household consumption expenditure, number of overnight trips and same-day trips undertaken by the household, visits, (if any) of NRIs to the household and their impact, renting out of some portion of the house to tourists during the last 365 days, and awareness, source of information, and impact of the “Incredible India” campaign by the Government of India or other tourism promotional campaigns.

1.3.2 Data were also collected for each household member on age, sex, marital status, educational level, usual principal activity status, industry (NIC) and occupation (NCO) of employed members, number of overnight trips completed during (a) last 30 days and (b) last 365 days and number of same-day trips completed by the member during (a) last 30 days and (b) last 365 days.

1.3.3 For each overnight trip and each same-day trip made during the last 30 days by one or more household members, two kinds of data were collected. One was trip characteristics, which included leading purpose of the trip, main destination, number of places visited, number of household members going on the trip along with month(s) of visit for the trip. The other was the characteristics corresponding to different trip members such as mode of travel, type of stay, and number of nights spent outside usual place of residence (including journey), the last item being collected for overnight trips only.

1.3.4 For the latest three overnight trips completed during the last 30 days, detailed data were collected on particulars of expenditure on different items under the broad heads of accommodation; food and drink; transport; shopping; recreation; religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities; and other expenditure, along with information on reimbursement/direct payment by any institution for such trips. For same-day trips, instead of separate break-ups of expenditure for the latest three different trips, the break-up of total expenditure incurred on all same-day trips completed during last 30 days was recorded.

1.3.5 Choice of reference period: For a subject such as domestic tourism, the choice of the length of the period for which data are to be sought is always a difficult one. Too short a period makes the data vulnerable to sampling fluctuations. On the other hand, a long reference period creates problems of recall lapse, especially when it is not only the number of trips made during the period but also various details of each trip undertaken that have to be studied. In this survey, a combination of reference periods was used in the sense that while number of trips made by each household member was recorded with a reference period of ‘last 365 days’ (and used to build up various measures of the level of tourism activity), the various characteristics of trips such as purpose, destination, mode of travel, etc., were, to minimize recall lapse, recorded only for trips completed within the ‘last 30 days’ by the members of the surveyed households. Details of expenditure relating to trips, as elaborated in the last paragraph, were also recorded with reference to the trips completed within the ‘last 30 days’ only.

1.3.6 Geographical coverage: The survey covered the whole of the Indian Union except (i) interior villages of Nagaland situated beyond five kilometres of the bus route and (ii) villages in Andaman and Nicobar Islands which remain inaccessible throughout the year.

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1.4 Outline of the survey

1.4.1 Period of survey and work programme: The fieldwork of the 65th round of NSSO started from 1st July 2008 and continued till 30th June 2009. As usual, the survey period of this round was divided into four sub-rounds, each with a duration of three months. An equal number of sample villages/blocks (first-stage units or FSUs), as far as possible, was allotted for survey in each of these four sub-rounds.

1.4.2 Method of data collection: The survey used the recall-based interview method using a schedule for data collection from a sample of randomly selected households. The sample design based on which selection of households was made is briefly stated in the following sub-section.

1.4.3 Central and State samples: As is usual, the Governments of different States and UTs participated in the survey by canvassing Schedule 21.1 in a separately drawn sample of villages and blocks called the State sample, as distinct from the Central sample surveyed by NSSO officials. For Leh (Ladakh) and Kargil districts of Jammu & Kashmir there were no separate sample first-stage units for the ‘Central sample’. For these two districts, the villages and blocks drawn as ‘State sample’ were themselves used for drawing the Central sample of households.

1.5 Sampling design

1.5.1 A stratified multi-stage design was adopted for the 65th round survey. The first-stage units (FSUs) were the 2001 census villages (panchayat wards in case of Kerala) in the rural sector and Urban Frame Survey (UFS) blocks in the urban sector. For towns with no UFS frame available, each town was treated as an FSU. The ultimate stage sampling units, in both sectors, were the households. In case of large FSUs, one intermediate stage of sampling was the division of the FSU into a number of parts and random selection of one part for survey. As regards the sample size, 12952 first stage units (FSUs) – 8,188 villages and 4,764 urban blocks – were allocated at all-India level for the Central sample. Of these, 8,109 villages and 4,719 urban blocks were actually surveyed.

1.5.2 For canvassing the detailed enquiry Schedule 21.1, a sample of 12 households ( second stage units) was planned to be surveyed from each selected village and urban block. In the Central sample, 1,53,308 households were actually surveyed – 97,074 in rural areas and 56,234 in urban areas. Statement 1.0 presents the number of villages and urban blocks allotted and finally surveyed for NSS 65th round besides the numbers of sample households and persons surveyed for Sch.21.1.

1.5.3 Details of sampling design and estimation procedure are given in Appendix B.

1.6 Contents of the Report

1.6.1 This report is based on central sample only. It presents and discusses estimates of various aspects of domestic tourism, along with their correlates, as obtained from the data collected on relevant items for the entire round. Estimates for overnight trips and same-day trips are provided separately for rural and urban sectors at all-India or State/Union Territory level. This report is based on the Central sample only.

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Statement 1.0 : Number of villages/blocks allotted and surveyed for NSS 65th Round Central sample), corresponding number of households and persons surveyed for Schedule 21.1

State/UT no. of villages (rural)

no. of blocks (urban)

no. of sample households

no. of sample persons

selected surveyed selected surveyed rural urban rural urban

Andhra Pradesh 488 487 272 272 5835 3261 23555 12635 Arunachal Pradesh 104 103 40 40 1212 480 5947 2109 Assam 376 375 88 88 4499 1056 22713 4231 Bihar 472 469 88 87 5621 1037 28674 4881 Chhattisgarh 152 149 64 64 1787 764 9258 3532 Delhi 16 16 272 269 189 3101 844 12215 Goa 16 16 24 24 192 288 880 1277 Gujarat 280 280 248 246 3343 2915 16666 13412 Haryana 144 144 96 96 1727 1142 8937 5378 Himachal Pradesh 160 160 32 32 1885 379 8488 1372 Jammu & Kashmir 176 127 88 63 1506 751 8596 3607 Jharkhand 184 184 88 88 2205 1041 11037 4824 Karnataka 304 303 240 240 3635 2870 16861 12121 Kerala 336 334 184 183 4000 2181 17084 8896 Madhya Pradesh 456 456 248 245 5454 2931 28424 13957 Maharashtra 520 519 520 516 6213 6134 29458 27552 Manipur 192 192 96 96 2304 1152 12339 5600 Meghalaya 128 127 48 48 1524 576 8019 2610 Mizoram 64 63 96 96 756 1152 3804 5719 Nagaland 80 79 32 32 948 384 4914 1721 Orissa 384 383 104 103 4590 1234 21007 4927 Punjab 160 158 128 128 1888 1535 9658 7102 Rajasthan 384 382 176 176 4571 2102 24463 10389 Sikkim 88 85 24 23 1016 276 4579 894 Tamil Nadu 400 399 392 392 4787 4702 18551 16998 Tripura 216 216 72 72 2592 864 11392 3094 Uttarakhand 72 72 40 40 864 479 4236 2339 Uttar Pradesh 1120 1119 448 445 13400 5308 76237 27214 West Bengal 632 631 376 376 7571 4489 33762 17423 A & N Islands 24 21 16 16 252 192 1140 776 Chandigarh 8 8 40 39 93 450 409 1691 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 16 16 16 16 191 192 1032 679 Daman & Diu 16 16 16 16 192 192 939 860 Lakshadweep 4 4 12 12 40 144 187 692 Puducherry 16 16 40 40 192 480 772 1902 all-India 8188 8109 4764 4719 97074 56234 474862 244629

Ref: Table 1 in Appendix A

1.6.2 The report contains four chapters, including the present introductory chapter. Chapter Two states in detail the concepts and definitions of terms used in the survey. Chapter Three discusses the various features of domestic tourism and Chapter Four, the expenditure related to domestic tourism. The detailed tables on which the findings of this survey are based are presented in Appendix A. The sample design and estimation procedure is explained in Appendix B. Appendix C is a copy of the schedule of enquiry through which the data were collected.

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1.6.3 The analysis has been done primarily at all-India level while the corresponding state level estimates of a few key parameters have been summarised in the state-level statements. By and large, ratios obtained from the survey are presented, while the aggregates of population/household are given as marginal row/column totals in the detailed Appendix tables.

1.6.4 The estimates, in this report, are generally presented as ratios. However, the estimates of aggregates are also given in the margin of the detailed tables in Appendix A2 . In order to facilitate the users to derive aggregates corresponding to projections of population made by the Office of the Registrar General of India (RGI) , projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 supplied by the RGI Office is given in Appendix D, along with those projected for 1st January 2009 using compound rate of growth. The projections have been given separately for male and female population of rural and urban sectors.

                                                            2 In the detailed tables, however, in some of the deeper classifications, some sample sizes may be small and this may have a bearing on the precision of the corresponding estimates.

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Chapter Two

Concepts and Definitions

2.0 Important concepts and definitions used in this survey as given in the instructions to field staff conducting the survey are stated below. 2.1 Household: A group of persons who normally lived together and took food from a common kitchen constituted a household. The adverb “normally” meant that the temporary visitors and guests (whose total period of stay in the household was expected to be less than 6 months) were excluded but the temporary stay-aways (whose total period of absence from the household was expected to be less than 6 months) were included. Thus a child residing in a hostel for studies was excluded from the household of his/her parents, but a resident domestic servant or paying guest (but not just a tenant in the house) was included in the employer’s/host’s household. “Living together” was given more importance than “sharing food from a common kitchen” in drawing the boundaries of a household in case the two criteria were in conflict. However, in the special case of a person taking food with his family but sleeping elsewhere (say, in a shop or a different house) due to shortage of space, the household formed by such a person’s family members was taken to include the person also. Each inmate of a hotel, mess, boarding-lodging house, hostel, etc., was considered to be a single-member household except that a family living in a hotel (say) was considered one household only. The same principle was applicable for the residential staff of such establishments. The size of a household is the total number of persons in the household. 2.2 Monthly per capita consumer expenditure (MPCE): For a household, MPCE was the total consumer expenditure over all items divided by the household size and expressed on a per month (30 days) basis. 2.2.1 As it is difficult to collect reliable income data, the NSSO, collects data on consumption expenditure in its surveys. In the present survey on Domestic Tourism (Schedule 21.1), data on household consumer expenditure during the last 30 days was ascertained through five questions (see Appendix C), to facilitate the ordering of households in respective level of living for deeper synthesis of survey results. This helps in portraying the survey variables in the hierarchy of levels of living of the households classified as quintile classes of MPCE. 2.2.2 Quintile classes of MPCE: The population of any region or domain can be divided into five quintile classes of MPCE, where the 1st quintile of the distribution of MPCE means the level of MPCE below 20 per cent of the population lie, the second quintile, the level below which 40 per cent of the population lie, and so on. In this round quintiles were estimated separately for the distribution of MPCE in the rural and urban sector of each State/U.T and all-India. Some of the aspects of domestic tourism have been studied with respect to the level of living of the households which was proxied by monthly per capita consumer expenditure. This ordering of the households in respect of level of living has been derived as the distribution of the households in the quintile classes corresponding to the distribution of the population in the quintile classes.

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2.3 Travel: It is the movement of persons between different geographic boundaries, for any purpose and any duration. Those who travel are referred to as travelers. Travel can occur within a country (domestic travel) or involve more than one country (international travel). 2.4 Usual Place of Residence: The usual place of residence (UPR) of a person is the place (village/town) where the person had been staying continuously for at least six months immediately prior to the date of survey. Even if a person was not staying in the village/town continuously for six months immediately prior to the date of survey but was then staying there with intention to stay there continuously for six months then that place was taken as his/her UPR. 2.5 Usual Environment: The usual environment (UE) of an individual referred to the notional geographical space, extending beyond the UPR of an individual, within which he/she moved in the course of his/her regular routine of life. By the term movement of a person within his/her regular routine of life is meant the regular and frequent (nearly every day/ every week/every fortnight) movements of a person between his/her UPR and some place for the purpose of work or study, visiting homes of friends or relatives, shopping centers, religious places, centres of health care or any other facilities that might be at a substantial distance away but nevertheless were regularly and frequently visited. Such movements might be within his/her UPR or beyond it. 2.6 Trip 2.6.1 With reference to domestic tourism, the term trip related to those household members who were resident Indians. It refers to the movement - for a duration of not more than six months - by one or more household members traveling to a place outside their usual environment (which includes the usual place of residence(UPR)) and return to their UPR (a round trip) for purposes other than those of migration or getting employed or setting up of residence in that place and which is outside their regular routine of life. 2.6.2 Thus, all movements of persons commuting regularly and frequently (nearly every day/ every week/every fortnight) between their UPR and some fixed places for the purpose of work or study, visiting homes of friends or relatives, shopping centers, religious places, centres of health care or any other facilities that might be at a substantial distance away but nevertheless were regularly and frequently visited, were not considered as trips. Similarly, all movements of persons, whose nature of activities within their regular routine of life involved making movements outside their UPR to different places, like travelling salesmen, mobile hawkers, medical representatives, on-board staff of airlines/railways or of buses, hired taxis, etc were not considered as trips. 2.6.3 Exceptions for exclusion from the coverage of trip as mentioned above: All domestic movements performed by air except for the purpose of migration or getting employed or setting up of residence in that place were considered as trips even if such movements falls within the regular routine of life of the visitor. However, domestic movements performed by on-board aircraft crew as part of their duty were not considered as trips. 2.6.4 A trip might be made up of visits (i.e. stay for a purpose in a place visited during a trip –details in sub-section 2.7) to different places. A trip might be single-member or multi-member; in other words, a trip might be undertaken by one or more members of the sample household with or without members of other households participating. Member(s) of sample

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households participating in a trip were visitors (details in sub-section 2.7). A trip might be same-day or overnight. An overnight trip was of duration at least one night outside the usual environment. In case of a single night overnight trip, the night was spread over two consecutive dates implying that it had started before and ended after twelve midnight.  A same-day trip was a trip which did not cover even a single night i.e., the trip started and ended on the same day (0000 hrs to 2359 hrs). 2.6.5 A trip was uniquely specified by its set of destinations, its leading purpose and its starting and ending date (the last for overnight trips only).Some elaboration of various features associated with a trip, be it single or multi-member, is in order . 2.6.5.1 In case of a multi-member trip for which the set of destinations differed slightly from person to person (among those who undertook the trip) if the persons were together for most of the time (duration of the trip), they were considered to be on the same trip. But if two members of a household spent most of the time away from each other during the period since leaving their residence to returning to their residence, then they were considered to have been on two different trips even though their starting and returning dates were the same. 2.6.5.2 Main destination: The main destination of a trip was the place, visiting of which was central to the decision to undertake the trip. However, if no such place could be identified by the informant, the main destination was to be defined as the place where the visitors spent most of their time during the trip. If the visitors spent the same amount of time in two or more places during the trip, then the main destination is defined as the one among these places that was the farthest from the usual place of residence of the visitors. The main destination of a trip was same for all the members who undertook that trip. 2.6.5.3 Starting and ending dates: The starting (ending) month was the month of starting (completing) of the trip. In case of a multi-member trip for which one (or more) member(s) among those who went on a trip starting later - or returning earlier - than the others due to other engagements, if both the starting date and the ending date for this member were different from that of the rest of the members, then this member was considered to have undertaken a different trip from the rest. However, if at least one of these two dates was the same for this member as for the rest of the members, and the other date, too, did not differ from that of the rest of the members by more than 3 days, then such a member was considered to have gone on the same trip as the rest of the members. In these cases the earliest starting date (latest ending date) was used to determine the starting month (ending month). 2.6.5.4 Purpose of a trip: The purpose of a trip of a household member was that purpose but for which he/she would not have undertaken the trip. In the survey, these purposes were broadly categorized as: business; holidaying, leisure and recreation; social including visiting friends and relatives, attending marriages, etc.; religious and pilgrimage; education and training; health and medical ; shopping and others (e.g. volunteer work). 2.6.5.5 Leading purpose of a trip: The leading purpose of a trip as a whole was that purpose without which none of the household members in that trip would have undertaken the trip. There might be exceptional situations where no one purpose could be identified as the leading purpose. For example, there could be two or more purposes, say, pilgrimage and health, recorded for different trip members. In such a case, the leading purpose was identified

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as that purpose which the informant considered to be the most important for performing the trip. The leading purpose of a trip was the same for all the members who undertook that trip. 2.6.5.6 Type of a trip : a trip could be of two types – package or non-package. The term package trip as used in the survey is detailed below. 2.6.5.6.1 Package Trip: A package was a combination of transport and any one or more chargeable travel services (e.g., accommodation, meals/food, entertainment and/or sightseeing, etc.) and sold by tour operators through travel agencies or directly to final consumers as a single product for a single price. The components of a package tour might be pre-established or tailor-made, in which case, the visitor chooses a combination of services he/she wishes to acquire from a pre-established list of such services. If such a package was availed of for a major part of time in a trip, such a trip was considered as a package trip. 2.6.5.6.2 For the purpose of the survey, if the expenditure on transport and one or more chargeable travel services availed for some time during the trip did not cover the whole trip but covered only a minor time of the duration of the trip then such a trip was not considered as package trip although the trip has a package component. Therefore, a trip which was not a package trip could have both package and non-package components. Similarly, a package trip could also contain non-package component in addition to its package component, e.g., a visitor could avail himself of accommodation and other services in the package through some tour operator but made some special sight-seeing arrangements in some places of visit in the trip on his own. Thus, a package trip must have had a package component but not vice versa. 2.6.5.7 Mode of travel: Mode of travel refers to means of transport used by visitor(s) to travel in a trip. The travel relevant here was the travelling done to cover the distances to the destinations and not joyrides or movement for adventure, as in skiing or boating for pleasure, or walking inside a museum, fort or maze. One or more of the following means of transport were possible in a trip,viz.: on foot, bus, train(railways), ship/boat, air, own transport: bicycle, two-wheeler, rickshaw, auto rickshaw, car/jeep, tractor/truck, animal driven transport, transport equipment rental (hired transport): bicycle, two-wheeler, rickshaw, auto rickshaw, car/jeep, tractor/truck, animal driven transport and others . 2.6.5.7.1 Major mode of travel : The means of transport by which maximum distance was traveled was treated as ‘major’ mode of travel for that trip. In case more than one such mode was there (e.g. train, air) for which equal distance was traveled then that means which was more expensive was treated as ‘major’ mode of travel for that trip. 2.6.5.7.2 Minor mode of travel : The means of transport by which second maximum distance was traveled was treated as ‘minor’ mode of travel for that trip . 2.6.5.8 Type of stay: The type of stay refers to the accommodation used for stay by visitor(s) in a trip. Accommodation refers to the space, usually for paid lodging, where the visitor(s) spent some considerable time for spending night, taking rest, spending some leisure time, refreshing oneself, etc. during the trip. It could be: hotel, private guest house, Government guest house, dharamshala, rented house, friends and relatives or others including carriages / coaches.

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2.6.5.8.1 Major type of stay: The category of accommodation where the highest number of nights (for overnight trips) or maximum time (for same-day trips) was spent was treated as ‘major’ type of stay. In case more than one such category was there (e.g. hotel, Dharmashala) where same no. of nights (equal length of time) was spent then that type which was more expensive was treated as ‘major’ type of stay. 2.6.5.8.2 Minor type of stay: The category of accommodation where the second highest number of nights for overnight trips - or second highest length of time for same-day trips- was spent was treated as ‘minor’ type of stay. 2.6.5.7 No. of nights spent outside usual place of residence (including journey): This was the number of nights spent by the visitor outside his/her usual place of residence from starting of the trip to the completion of the trip, including the nights spent in transit. 2.6.5.9 No. of places visited during the trip: The ‘main destination’ was counted as a place of visit. If two or more places were reported to have been visited which were in the same town or in the same village, they were counted once only. 2.7 Visit: The term visit referred to the stay (overnight or same-day) for a purpose in a place visited during a trip. The stay need not be overnight to qualify as a visit. Entering a geographical boundary without stopping there for a purpose was considered as being in transit and did not qualify as a visit to that area. It may be noted that a trip might consist of visits to one or more places. 2.7.1 Visitor: A person performing a trip as elaborated above was termed a visitor in this survey. 2.7.2 Domestic Visitor: A domestic visitor was a household member, who had completed a ‘trip’. In other words, a domestic visitor was a person (household member), residing in the country, who traveled to a place within the country, outside his / her usual place of residence and not as a part of his/her regular routine of life, for duration of not more than six months at a time and completed the trip during the reference period and whose main purpose of visit was other than (a) getting engaged in employment or taking up an occupation in that place or (b) setting up of residence in that place or (c) migrating to that place. 2.7.3 Thus, from the purview of domestic visitors in the survey, the following were excluded: (i) persons commuting regularly and frequently (nearly every day, every week or every fortnight) between their usual place of residence and place of work or study, visiting frequently places within their current routine of life in the neighbouring areas(which might be outside their UPR), for instance, visiting homes of friends or relatives, shopping centres, religious places, centres of health care or any other facilities that might be at a distance but nevertheless were regularly and frequently visited (ii) persons arriving at a place, with or without a contract, to take up an occupation or to engage in employment in that place (iii) persons arriving at a place for setting up of residence in that place

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(iv) persons who traveled to work temporarily (i.e. less than six months) in institutions within the country (v) foreigners resident in India (vi) persons arriving at a place on migration or migrants. A migrant was a person whose place of enumeration was different from his/her last usual place of residence (UPR) (vii) persons, whose nature of activities within their regular routine of life involved making movements outside their UPR to different places, like travelling salesmen, mobile hawkers, medical representatives, on-board staff of airlines/ railways or buses, hired taxis etc. 2.7.4 On the other hand, the following were included in the purview of domestic visitors in the survey: (i) persons who completed a trip during the reference period and the duration of trip was not more than six months (ii) persons who were household members at the time of canvassing the schedule but were not household members at the time of actually completing a trip within the reference period (iii) persons on a trip for any of the following purposes: business; holidaying, leisure and recreation; social including visiting friends and relatives, attending marriages, etc.); religious and pilgrimage; education and training; health and medical; shopping; others (e.g. volunteer work) (iv) domestic component (not in transit) of the trip of a household member visiting a place outside the country 2.7.5 Domestic visitors were classified into two categories: domestic overnight visitors and domestic same-day visitors. In this survey, information was collected for both these categories in respect of those visitors who belong to the sample households. 2.7.5.1 Domestic Overnight Visitor: A domestic overnight visitor was a domestic visitor who spent at least one night in a trip during last 365 days. This means that the trip covered at least two calendar days, wholly or partly. 2.7.5.2 Domestic Same-day Visitor: A domestic same-day visitor was a domestic visitor who did not spend even a single night in any trip during last 365 days. This means that the trip started and ended on the same day (0000 hrs to 2359 hrs).

2.7.6 Domestic Tourism: It covered trips of household members within the territory of India, i.e of domestic visitors 1, either as a domestic trip or as part of an international trip.

                                                            1 An important clarification regarding usage of the term ‘visitor’ as used in this survey : In this survey, a household, say H-a, reporting a domestic visitor: overnight or same-day, was one whose at least one member made a trip: overnight or same-day, during last 365 days. However, any non-member (of household H-a) making a visit to household H-a is NOT a ‘visitor’ with respect to sample household H-a as per this survey. Further, the survey being on domestic tourism in India, the term visitor and domestic visitor are one and the same. Thus, throughout the remaining part of this report, the term visitor has been used.

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2.8 Tourism Expenditure

2.8.1 For the purpose of this survey, tourism expenditure included expenditure made not just during the trip but also the expenditure related to the trip even if made before or after the trip. It included all expenses related to the trip paid or payable by the household. It also included expenditure related to the trip, whether directly paid or reimbursed, by some institution like Government or other agencies on behalf of the selected household. All expenditure in connection with the trip except those used/intended to be used for productive purposes/enterprises was included. All expenditure made by a sample household (whose members were on a trip) on members of other households was included. But all expenditure made by other households for any trip undertaken by a sample household was excluded. 2.8.2 Tourism expenditure was classified as (a) package component and (b) non-package component, with the latter further sub-divided as: (i) accommodation (ii) food and drink (iii) transport (iv) recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health related activities (v) shopping and (vi) others. 2.8.3 Tourism expenditure included (i) monetary expenditure on goods and services paid or payable by the visitor out of his/her own pocket (ii) direct expenditure by the visitor reimbursed by some institution like Government or other agencies or expenses of the visitor directly paid by such institutions (iii) expenditure incurred on items of high unit values like cars, computers, etc. related to a trip if those are used for consumption purpose and not for productive purpose.

2.8.4 Tourism expenditure excluded (i) payment of taxes and duties not levied on products (goods and services) (ii) purchase of financial and non-financial assets, including land, real estate (iii) all transfers of cash or used goods such as donations to charities or to members of other households as these do not correspond to the purchase of consumption goods or services from these charities or individuals. Alms are also excluded. 2.9 Non-Resident Indian (NRI): Indian citizens (including officials of Indian diplomatic missions abroad ) who stay abroad for employment or for carrying on business or vocation or any other purpose indicating a period of stay abroad exceeding 6 months were considered as Non-Resident Indian (NRI) for the purpose of this survey. 2.10 Major states: This refers to the 17 States of India that had a population of 20 million or more according to the 2001 Census. Together these States accounted for 94.7% of India’s population in 2001. They are: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.

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Chapter Three

Characteristics of Domestic Tourism

3.0.1 The present chapter elucidates various aspects of domestic tourism based on the information collected in the NSS 65th round, being confined to the framework of concepts and definitions adopted in the survey. In this framework, the activity of domestic tourism undertaken by the members of the households has two district features, viz. the trip and the visitor. As elaborated in Chapter Two, the trip, either same-day or overnight, was the ultimate unit to study the activity of domestic tourism and it related to the movement of one or more members of the household to a main destination with a leading purpose. The members of the households who happened to be the members of the trip are the visitors and the information profiling the visitors was also collected in the survey. The salient characteristics of domestic tourism activities presented in this chapter, accordingly, cover its intensity and variations over different categories of households, visitors and trips.

3.0.2 The chapter presents the average number of trips made during a year by households and persons in different States/UTs, and by persons of different ages, occupations and industries. The break-up of trips (occasionally, of visitor-trips) by various trip characteristics such as leading purpose, month of visit, and main destination type (within or outside district/state) and the distribution of visitors by activity status, are also examined. Further, the break-up of visitor-trips by important visitor-trip characteristics: purpose of visit, mode of transport, and major place of stay, are studied. In other words, questions such as “Which were the most common purposes for which people went on overnight trips?” “Which modes of transport were most commonly used for same-day trips?” are answered. Estimates of occurrence of domestic tourism activity are also presented in terms of percentages of persons and households reporting at least one overnight/same-day trip during a one-year period – in case of households, separately for different household occupations, social groups and religions.

3.0.3 The findings presented in this chapter are grouped into four sections: (a) incidence and characteristics of trips; (b) participation of various population groups; (c) visitor-trip characteristics; and (d) occurrence of domestic tourism activity among households and persons in a one-year period.

3.0.4 Two different reference periods – ‘last 30 days’ and ‘last 365 days’ preceding the date of survey - were used for collecting information related to trips. However, the aggregate estimates on trips and trip-related characteristics have been generated pertaining to a one-year period unless otherwise specified and the procedure thereof is explained in the Appendix B on ‘Sample Design and Estimation Procedure’. SECTION A: INCIDENCE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF TRIPS

3.1. Incidence of trips per household

3.1.1 As stated earlier, a trip was the basic unit to study the activity of domestic tourism and it corresponded to movement of the members of the households outside their usual place of residence (excluding the movements which were part of the usual routine of life) with distinctive leading purposes, destinations and other trip characteristics. Thus one of the important measures of intensity of domestic tourism is the number of trips during one year per household. On an average, four overnight trips in a year were undertaken by an Indian

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household, with trips made by rural households marginally higher in number than their urban counterpart (Statement 3.1). To be more precise, 418 overnight trips were undertaken per 100 households at all-India level – 440 trips per 100 households in rural areas and 365 in urban areas.

Statement 3.1: Average number of overnight and same-day trips * per 100 households: all-India

Kind of trip Average number of trips per 100 households

rural urban rural+urban Overnight 440 365 418 Same-day 844 537 753 Ref: Table 3, 53, 54 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.1.2 The incidence of same-day trips among Indian households, at eight in a year, was thus almost double that of overnight trips. The average number of same-day trips per 100 households during a year was noticeably higher in rural India (844) than in urban India (537). The all-India average was 753.

Statement 3.2: Average number of trips* per 100 households in different state /u.t.s

state/u.t. overnight same-day

rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

Andhra Pradesh 469 416 453 853 444 727 Arunachal Pradesh 332 171 297 576 259 508 Assam 223 258 227 504 510 505 Bihar 336 333 335 627 429 606 chhatisgarh 370 366 370 649 507 623 Delhi 166 237 232 546 645 638 Goa 295 322 308 665 804 734 Gujrat 422 370 402 794 557 700 Haryana 578 424 530 849 579 765 Himachal Pradesh 791 593 769 1569 925 1497 Jammu & Kashmir 904 601 836 1919 950 1700 Jharkhand 343 360 346 692 483 659 Karnataka 384 376 381 605 420 536 Kerala 444 446 445 1396 1021 1297 Madhya Pradesh 498 469 491 1099 684 996 Maharastra 453 269 371 781 364 596 Manipur 189 131 173 581 573 579 Meghalaya 279 178 260 505 318 469 Mizoram 232 188 212 238 144 196 Nagaland 317 293 310 649 565 625 Orissa 552 479 541 1394 895 1314 Punjab 504 417 470 1005 654 867 Rajasthan 541 447 516 823 490 734 sikkim 346 296 338 714 430 672 Tamil Nadu 334 328 331 765 556 668 Tripura 307 326 310 471 373 453 Uttarakhand 434 380 422 715 555 680 Uttar Pradesh 493 432 480 819 564 763 West Bengal 393 308 371 782 575 729 Andaman & N. Island 418 181 340 1014 582 872 Chandigarh 191 265 256 340 353 352 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 153 259 179 454 473 459 Daman & Diu 100 211 139 643 688 659 Lakshadeep 184 293 231 218 34 146 Puduchery 455 429 437 885 686 744 All-India 440 365 418 844 537 753 Ref: Tables 3,53,54 in Appendix-A *last 365 days

3.1.3 The intensity of domestic tourism activity was also compared over States and was found to show considerable variation. The State-wise incidence of average number of overnight as well as same trips per 100 households is presented above in Statement 3.2. Average number of overnight trips during a year per urban household in Jammu & Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh was almost double the all-India average. In these two States, this

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average was considerably higher in respect of rural households as well. As regards same-day trips, the incidence was significantly higher in Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala and Orissa, in both rural and urban areas. 3.2 Trips: overnight and same-day

3.2.1 For the rural population of India, slightly over one-third (34.3%) of all trips were overnight trips and nearly two-thirds (65.7%) were same-day trips (Statement 3.3). For the urban population, the proportion of overnight trips was somewhat higher (40.5%), the proportion of same-day trips being 59.5%.

Statement 3.3: Percentage of overnight and same-day trips* to total: all-India

Sector Percentage of trips

Overnight Same-day All Rural 34.3 65.7 100.0 Urban 40.5 59.5 100.0 Combined 35.7 64.3 100.0 Ref: Table 49 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.2.2 Statement 3.4 shows inter-State and sectoral variation in the proportion of overnight (and same-day) trips. The percentage of overnight trips for the rural population in every major State1 except Kerala (24%) and Orissa (28%) was at least 30%, the highest percentages being those of Haryana and Rajasthan (around 40%). As for the urban population of the major States, the proportion of overnight trips was again lowest in Kerala (30%), and was also below 35% in three other States – Assam, West Bengal and Orissa – the highest proportion of overnight trips being reported by Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan and Karnataka (47-48%). 3.2.3 The situation was almost reverse for same-day trips. Here, The percentage of same-day trips for the rural population in every major State except Haryana and Rajasthan (both around 60%) was at least 61%, the highest percentages being those of Kerala (76%) and Orissa (72%). As for the urban population of the major States, the proportion of same-day trips was lowest in Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan (about 52%), and above 65% in three other States – Assam, West Bengal and Orissa – the highest proportion being reported by Kerala (70%).

                                                            1 Major States are the 17 States of India that had a population of 20 million or more according to the 2001 Census. Together these States accounted for 94.7% of India’s population in 2001.

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Statement 3.4: Percentage of overnight and same-day trips* to total: States/UTs

state/ut

percentage of trips

rural urban rural+ urban

overnight same-day

all overnight same-day

all overnight same-day

all

Andhra Pradesh 35.5 64.5 100.0 48.4 51.6 100.0 38.4 61.6 100.0 Arunachal Pradesh 36.5 63.5 100.0 39.8 60.2 100.0 36.9 63.1 100.0 Assam 30.7 69.3 100.0 33.6 66.4 100.0 31.0 69.0 100.0 Bihar 34.9 65.1 100.0 43.7 56.3 100.0 35.6 64.4 100.0 Chhattisgarh 36.3 63.7 100.0 41.9 58.1 100.0 37.2 62.8 100.0 Delhi 23.3 76.7 100.0 26.9 73.1 100.0 26.7 73.3 100.0 Goa 30.7 69.3 100.0 28.6 71.4 100.0 29.6 70.4 100.0 Gujarat 34.7 65.3 100.0 39.9 60.1 100.0 36.5 63.5 100.0 Haryana 40.5 59.5 100.0 42.3 57.7 100.0 40.9 59.1 100.0 Himachal Pradesh 33.5 66.5 100.0 39.1 60.9 100.0 33.9 66.1 100.0 Jammu & Kashmir 32.0 68.0 100.0 38.8 61.2 100.0 33.0 67.0 100.0 Jharkhand 33.2 66.8 100.0 42.7 57.3 100.0 34.4 65.6 100.0 Karnataka 38.8 61.2 100.0 47.2 52.8 100.0 41.5 58.5 100.0 Kerala 24.1 75.9 100.0 30.4 69.6 100.0 25.5 74.5 100.0 Madhya Pradesh 31.2 68.8 100.0 40.7 59.3 100.0 33.0 67.0 100.0 Maharashtra 36.7 63.3 100.0 42.5 57.5 100.0 38.4 61.6 100.0 Manipur 24.6 75.4 100.0 18.6 81.4 100.0 23.0 77.0 100.0 Meghalaya 35.6 64.4 100.0 35.9 64.1 100.0 35.6 64.4 100.0 Mizoram 49.3 50.7 100.0 56.6 43.4 100.0 52.0 48.0 100.0 Nagaland 32.8 67.2 100.0 34.1 65.9 100.0 33.2 66.8 100.0 Orissa 28.4 71.6 100.0 34.9 65.1 100.0 29.1 70.9 100.0 Punjab 33.4 66.6 100.0 38.9 61.1 100.0 35.1 64.9 100.0 Rajasthan 39.7 60.3 100.0 47.7 52.3 100.0 41.3 58.7 100.0 Sikkim 32.6 67.4 100.0 40.7 59.3 100.0 33.5 66.5 100.0 Tamil Nadu 30.4 69.6 100.0 37.1 62.9 100.0 33.2 66.8 100.0 Tripura 39.4 60.6 100.0 46.6 53.4 100.0 40.6 59.4 100.0 Uttarakhand 37.8 62.2 100.0 40.6 59.4 100.0 38.3 61.7 100.0 Uttar Pradesh 37.6 62.4 100.0 43.3 56.7 100.0 38.6 61.4 100.0 West Bengal 33.5 66.5 100.0 34.8 65.2 100.0 33.7 66.3 100.0 A & N Islands 29.2 70.8 100.0 23.7 76.3 100.0 28.0 72.0 100.0 Chandigarh 35.9 64.1 100.0 42.9 57.1 100.0 42.1 57.9 100.0 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 25.2 74.8 100.0 35.4 64.6 100.0 28.1 71.9 100.0 Daman & Diu 13.5 86.5 100.0 23.4 76.6 100.0 17.4 82.6 100.0 Lakshadweep 45.7 54.3 100.0 89.6 10.4 100.0 61.3 38.7 100.0 Puducherry 33.9 66.1 100.0 38.5 61.5 100.0 37.0 63.0 100.0 all-India 34.3 65.7 100.0 40.5 59.5 100.0 35.7 64.3 100.0 Ref: Table 49 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.3 Leading purpose of trips

3.3.1 In the survey, for each reported trip, a distinct leading purpose was identified. The leading purpose of a trip was understood as the purpose in the absence of which the trip would not have been undertaken. It was recognized that if the individual purposes of different participants differed, there might be trips without a leading purpose in the above sense. Thus two members on a trip might have had different purposes each strong enough to make the trip possible even if the other person dropped out of the trip. In such cases the most important purpose among the purposes of the individual participants, as perceived by the informant, was identified as the leading purpose of the trip. The all-India break-up of overnight and same-day trips by leading purpose is shown in Statement 3.5.

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Statement 3.5: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day trips *by leading purpose

leading purpose percentage of trips with the purpose among

overnight trips same-day trips

rural urban rural +urban rural urban rural +urban

business 2.3 3.4 2.7 5.2 7.6 5.5 holidaying, leisure and

recreation 1.9 5.0

2.8 2.4 5.4 2.8 social 75.0 71.3 74.0 37.9 54.6 40.3 religious & pilgrimage 8.8 12.4 9.8 5.9 11.0 6.7 education & training 0.9 1.3 1.0 0.9 1.5 1.0 health & medical 7.3 3.5 6.2 16.9 8.4 15.7 shopping 0.5 0.2 0.4 23.2 6.6 20.9 others 3.3 2.8 3.2 7.6 4.8 7.2

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 50 & 54 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.3.2 Leading purpose: overnight trips: By far the most common leading purpose of overnight trips was social – this included visiting friends and relatives and attending marriages. The social purpose accounted for 75% of overnight trips made by the rural population and 71% of such trips made by the urban population. Religious trips and pilgrimages accounted for 12% of urban and 9% of rural Indians’ overnight trips. Overnight trips for health and medical purposes were more common in rural India, where they had a share of 7.3% compared to 3.5% in urban India. 5% of the overnight trips of the urban population and only 2% of those of rural population were reported to be for holidaying, leisure and recreation.

3.3.3 Leading purpose: same-day trips: Social visits were the leading purpose of 38% of the same-day trips of rural Indians and nearly 55% of those of urban Indians. Shopping – very rarely the purpose of an overnight trip – was the leading purpose of 23% of same-day trips by the rural population but less than 7% for the urban population. In both rural and urban India, many more same-day trips were made for health and medical reasons (17% rural, 8% urban) than overnight trips. Same-day trips were made for religious purposes slightly less often (6% rural, 11% urban) than overnight trips were.

3.4 Month of visit

3.4.1 Taking the ‘month of visit’ as the ending month (in case the starting and ending months are different), the percentage distribution of trips over months of the year is shown in Statement 3.6. It may be noted that the estimates are based on information on trips made by sample household members in the 30 days preceding the day the household was interviewed. Since exactly equal numbers of households were not interviewed in every month of the survey year, the numbers of trips recorded as made in January, February, etc. depend not only on the real intensity of tourism activity during these months but also on the numbers of households surveyed during these months and in the succeeding months (e.g. trips made in January may be recorded by interviews taking place in January or in February). Under the circumstances, it may not be appropriate to read too much into the month-to-month differences in percentage of trips, which are not very large except that the figures for June for both sectors, and the figures for July in the urban sector, are noticeably low compared to, say, the figures for May or August.2 By and large, it is seen that 7-10% of trips were made in most                                                             2 It was mentioned that January (2009) trips would be recorded by interviews made in January or February (2009). The case of June is a little different. June trips would be recorded by interviews made in July 2008 (June 2008 trips) and by interviews made in June 2009 (June 2009 trips). Because of the logistics of launching of surveys, however, it is often the case that the survey work is not in full swing before the second half of July. This would affect the estimates of not only June but also July, as July trips have to be recorded by interviews in July and August.

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months of the year. The low percentage shares of June (and also July for the urban sector) are offset by above-average shares in the months immediately following.

Statement 3.6: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day trips by month of visit

month@

percentage of trips made in the month

overnight trips same-day trips

rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

January 7.7 8.6 7.9 8.1 8.7 8.2 February 8.0 6.6 7.6 8.0 7.8 8.0 March 7.1 7.1 7.1 7.5 7.8 7.5 April 8.9 8.5 8.8 8.4 9.4 8.5 May 11.8 10.0 11.3 8.8 9.5 8.9 June 5.5 2.6 4.7 5.8 3.6 5.5 July 10.0 3.5 8.1 11.2 2.5 10.0 August 9.7 14.3 11.0 9.5 12.7 9.9 September 6.2 10.5 7.5 7.0 11.9 7.7 October 9.4 10.9 9.8 9.3 8.8 9.2 November 8.5 8.2 8.4 9.1 8.8 9.1 December 6.9 9.1 7.6 7.3 8.4 7.5

All (incl. n.r.) 100.00 100.00 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 52 & 55 in Appendix A @ending month for overnight trip

3.5 Trip duration

3.5.1 Statement 3.7 gives the average duration of overnight trips in number of nights, separately for trips ending in different months. The duration of each reported trip was ascertained by the survey in terms of the number of nights spent. On an average, the duration of a trip was 3.1 nights for rural households and 4.2 nights for urban households. The average duration of trips is seen to have greater variability over months in the urban sector, where it varied from 3.5 in February and August to 5.6 in July. In the rural sector it was highest in June at 3.4 and within 2.7 to 3.3 in all other months.

Statement 3.7: Average duration of overnight trips* (no. of nights spent)

month@ Average duration of overnight trips (no. of nights spent) rural urban rural+ urban

January 3.1 3.8 3.4 February 2.7 3.5 2.9 March 2.9 3.6 3.1 April 3.0 4.6 3.4 May 3.2 4.2 3.5 June 3.4 4.7 3.6 July 2.9 5.6 3.2 August 3.1 3.5 3.2 September 3.1 5.0 3.9 October 3.3 5.1 3.9 November 2.9 3.6 3.1 December 3.1 3.9 3.4 all 3.1 4.2 3.4

Ref: Tables 52 in Appendix A @ending month *last 365 days

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3.6 Package and non-package trips

3.6.1 Among the characteristics of trips identified was whether or not it was a package trip. A package trip was one (see Chapter Two, paragraph 2.6.5.6.1) in which a package was availed of for the major part of the duration of the trip. A package was a combination of transport and any one or more chargeable travel services – e.g., accommodation, meals/food, entertainment, sightseeing – and sold by tour operators through travel agencies or directly to final consumers as a single product for a single price. (The components of a package tour might be pre-established or tailor-made.) The survey revealed only a marginal presence of package trips in domestic travel habits of Indian households.3 Statement 3.8 shows that only 1.3% of overnight trips for the urban population and 0.8% for the rural were package trips. Among same-day trips, only 0.7% of trips by the urban population and 0.3% of those by the rural population were of the package type.

Statement 3.8: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day trips by type of trip

type of trip

percentage of trips of the type among

overnight trips same-day trips

rural urban rural+ urban rural urban rural+ urban

package 0.8 1.3 0.9 0.3 0.7 0.4 non-package 99.2 98.7 99.1 99.7 99.3 99.6

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 50 & 54 in Appendix A

3.7 Destination type

3.7.1 For each trip, a main destination was identified and classified according to whether it was within the district to which the household residence belonged, or outside the district but within the same State, or outside the State. This would enable the study of the relative frequencies of trips by these three destination types. One may also study the relative frequencies of visitor-trips by destination type (counting each trip as many times as the number of participating members) and so get an idea of the relative volumes of visitor movements of these three kinds. This, in fact, has been done in Statement 3.9. 3.7.2 Destination type: overnight trips: About 21% of urban, but only 6% of rural overnight visitor-trips involved travel to a different state from their place of residence. In the majority (66%) of overnight visitor-trips of the rural population, the visitors remained within their district, while in 28%, they travelled beyond their district to a place within their state. Among overnight visitor-trips of the urban population, it was journeys beyond one’s district (within the state) that were more common (49%), with only about 30% that were limited within the boundaries of the visitors’ district. 3.7.3 Destination type: same-day trips: Travel within one’s state accounted for nearly 99% of rural and about 96% of urban same-day visitor-trips. About 33% of urban but only 9% of rural same-day visitor-trips involved travel beyond the boundaries of the visitors’ district, remaining within their state. The majority of same-day visitor-trips – nearly 90% in rural and 63% in urban India – kept the visitors within the district of their residence.

                                                            3 It should be noted, however, that many non-package trips might have had a package component.

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Statement 3.9: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitor-trips* by main

destination type

destination type percentage to total no. of

overnight visitor-trips percentage to total no. of same-

day visitor-trips

rural urban rural+ urban rural urban rural+ urban

within district 65.7 29.6 54.9 89.5 62.8 85.3 outside district but within state 28.2 49.3 34.5 9.1 32.8 12.9 outside state 6.0 20.9 10.5 1.1 4.4 1.6

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 41 & 46 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.8 Number of places visited per overnight trip

3.8.1 Another parameter of interest in the activity of domestic tourism is the number of places visited per trip. This indicator is more relevant for overnight trips. The estimated average number of places (towns or villages) visited per overnight trip was studied by sector of location of the visitor household and main destination type; the results are shown in Statement 3.10. The estimates show negligible variation over sectors. It is seen that for every 100 trips made to a main destination outside the visitor household’s state, about 150 places were visited. For every 100 trips to outside-district but within-state destinations, about 118 places were visited (about 6 places visited for every 5 trips), while trips within one’s district rarely saw more than one place visited.

Statement 3.10: Average no. of places visited per 100 overnight trips* by main destination type

destination type average no. of places visited per 100 overnight trip

rural urban rural+ urban

within district 104 105 104 outside district but within state 119 118 119 outside state 150 152 151 Ref: Table 53 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.9 Trip size and leading purpose

3.9.1 A trip would comprise one or a group of members of a household. Hence, in studying the characteristics of trips, it is also worthwhile to look into the question of how many persons travelled together on a trip. In other words, it is relevant to examine the average trip size in terms of the average number of household members per trip. The number of household members participating in a trip reported by a household could vary from 1 to the size of the household. Statement 3.11 gives an idea of the average trip size by presenting the average number of visitors per 100 trips, separately for same-day and overnight trips, and separately for overnight trips with different leading purposes. In rural areas, every 100 overnight trips had 223 participating members (2.2 per trip) and every 100 same-day trips had 183 members (1.8 per trip). In urban areas, every 100 overnight trips had 232 participants (2.3 per trip) and every 100 same-day trips had 200 participants (2.0 per trip).

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Statement 3.11: Average number of visitors per 100 trips*

trip category leading purpose rural urban rural+ urban

overnight

business 129 126 128 holidaying, leisure and recreation 208 216 213 social 230 236 232 religious & pilgrimage 228 275 245 education & training 130 134 132 health & medical 215 206 213 shopping 141 135 140 other 184 158 177

all (including n.r.) 223 232 225 same-day all 183 200 Note: Figures derived from Tables 56 & 58 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.9.2 As expected, average size of the group travelling on an overnight trip varied noticeably with the leading purpose of the trip. Business trips and trips for education and training had the smallest number of members travelling together (about 130 per 100 trips for both rural and urban areas) and shopping trips, too, had only 135-140 members per 100 trips. On the other hand, about 230 members (2.3 per trip) travelled in every 100 social or religious trips of rural households and every 100 social trips of urban households, and as many as 275 members (2.75 per trip) travelled in every 100 religious trips of urban households.

SECTION B: PARTICIPATION OF VARIOUS POPULATION GROUPS

3.10.0 As stated earlier, the trips recorded for a sample household were movements in which members of the household had participated. Various characteristics of each household member such as age, occupation, etc. were also recorded as part of the survey. This personwise information enables the study of participation in domestic tourism activity by different population categories.

3.10 Overall incidence per person

3.10.1 A distinction evident in the incidence of trips undertaken in a year by persons in rural and urban areas is that the incidence was appreciably higher for rural persons in case of same-day trips but of the same order for both sectors in case of overnight trips. The average number of overnight trips made by a person (Statement 3.12) was estimated as 2.10 for rural Indians and 2.07 for urban Indians. The average number of same-day trips was considerably higher, especially in rural India (3.30) and also in urban India (2.63). 3.11 The gender effect

3.11.1 Statement 3.12 also brings out male-female differences in number of trips per person. For overnight trips the average for females, in both sectors, was below the average for males by about 30 per 100 persons. Male-female differences were wider for same-day trips, with rural females making 266 same-day trips per 100 persons while rural males made 389 (46% more). Urban females made 226 same-day trips per 100 persons while urban males made 297 (31% more).

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Statement 3.12: Average number of same-day and overnight trips* per 100 persons of

each sex: all-India

Kind of trip

Average number of trips per 100 persons

Rural Urban

male female all male female all

Overnight 225 194 210 220 192 207 Same-day 389 266 330 297 226 263 Ref: Tables 30, 35, 40 & 45 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.11.2 Gender profile of visitors: As an overnight/ same-day visitor is understood as a person who made at least one overnight/ same-day trip during the reference period of ‘last 365 days’, the population of overnight or same-day visitors can be identified and various characteristics studied. One matter of interest here would be the gender profile of visitors, shown by their male-female break-up. This is given in Statement 3.13. Thus, among every 1000 overnight urban visitors, 537 were males and 463, and the proportion of males was slightly lower among rural overnight visitors, but higher for same-day visitors – both rural and urban –among whom the male-female ratio was about 55 to 45 in the urban sector and slightly lower in the rural sector.

Statement 3.13: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitors by gender of visitor

Gender Overnight visitors Same-day visitors

Rural Urban Rural Urban

male 52.5 53.7 54.5 55.1 female 47.5 46.3 45.5 44.9 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 30 and 35 in Appendix A

3.12 The effect of age

3.12.1 Statement 3.14 shows the variation with age in average number of trips made by a person. In all,18 age-groups are considered, all of width 5 years except the last. For both overnight and same-day trips, the average number of trips per person is seen to rise gradually up to a certain age-group and then decline, the decline being steeper for overnight trips. The average number of both overnight and same-day trips made by children was higher than the average number of trips made by the aged. Younger children made more trips than older ones, presumably because they could not be left alone by their parents; thus the average number of trips falls instead of rising as one moves up the age range from 0-4 to 10-14. This was true for rural as well as urban India. In rural India the average number of trips, both overnight and same-day, was highest in the age-group 30-34; in urban India it was highest in the age-group 40-44. An interesting phenomenon regarding trips made by the elderly was revealed in this study. In case of overnight trips, persons of age 60 years and above had a lower average per year than the all-ages average both in rural and urban sectors. However, in case of same-day trips of the rural population, even elderly persons in the age group 65-69 made more trips per year than the rural all-ages average of 3.30 per person. In urban areas, the age-group 60-64 was the oldest group to surpass the all-ages average of 2.63 same-day trips per year.

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Statement 3.14: Average no. of trips per person* for different age-groups

age-group

average no. of trips

overnight same-day

rural urban rural+ urban rural urban rural+ urban

0-4 1.99 1.94 1.98 2.22 1.96 2.16 5-9 1.83 1.90 1.85 2.03 1.91 2.01

10-14 1.64 1.78 1.67 2.05 1.93 2.02 15-19 1.74 1.78 1.75 2.70 2.09 2.53 20-24 2.22 2.03 2.16 3.50 2.56 3.22 25-29 2.52 2.28 2.45 4.16 2.98 3.81 30-34 2.66 2.31 2.55 4.75 3.21 4.28 35-39 2.56 2.34 2.50 4.57 3.35 4.22 40-44 2.55 2.46 2.52 4.66 3.52 4.33 45-49 2.43 2.37 2.41 4.54 3.39 4.21 50-54 2.28 2.25 2.27 4.16 3.23 3.90 55-59 2.12 2.13 2.13 3.91 3.03 3.66 60-64 1.96 1.89 1.94 3.54 2.65 3.31 65-69 1.76 1.81 1.78 3.38 2.48 3.14 70-74 1.45 1.44 1.45 2.89 2.05 2.67 75-79 1.27 1.45 1.33 2.66 1.89 2.43 80-84 1.16 1.19 1.16 2.06 1.26 1.85

above 84 0.84 0.80 0.83 1.40 0.89 1.25 all 2.10 2.07 2.09 3.30 2.63 3.12

Ref: Tables 30 & 35 in Appendix A *in last 365 days

3.13 Variation with occupation

3.13.1 Statement 3.15 shows variation with occupation in the average number of overnight and same-day trips in a one-year period, with nine occupational categories of households considered.4 It is seen that for all the categories listed, the average number of trips, whether overnight or same-day, was higher than the average (“all” row) for the population of the sector (rural/urban) as a whole, implying that the persons with no occupation made fewer trips on the average than the working or gainfully employed population. This is not surprising in view of the fact that the aged, as well as children of the 5-14 age-group, who would form a sizeable proportion of those without any occupation, made fewer trips on the average than the rest of the population (see previous paragraph). Among the gainfully employed, the professionals and associate professionals made trips more frequently than the rest, and so did clerks. Skilled agricultural and fishery workers had the highest average number of same-day trips (4.21) in urban India, but did not enjoy this distinction in case of overnight trips or the rural sector.

                                                            4 The “all” row of Statement 3.15 covers not only these nine categories but the entire population, including the residual category “persons with blank occupation (NCO) code”. This includes persons too young or too old to work, housewives, students, pensioners, rentiers, remittance receivers, beggars, prostitutes and other persons not gainfully employed. No estimate of average number of trips was generated for this heterogeneous category. The “all” estimate also takes into account those sample persons for whom the occupation code was not recorded.

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Statement 3.15: Average no. of trips per person* for different occupation groups

occupation average no. of

overnight trips same-day trips rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

legislators, senior officials and managers 2.74 2.56 2.62 5.29 3.65 4.23 professionals 3.10 2.69 2.85 6.69 4.04 5.10 associate professionals 3.16 2.64 2.88 6.76 3.87 5.20 clerks 2.87 2.55 2.64 5.82 3.71 4.36 service workers and shop & market sales

workers 2.50 2.35 2.42 5.24 3.46 4.31 skilled agricultural and fishery workers 2.57 2.59 2.57 4.57 4.21 4.56 craft and related trades workers 2.52 2.27 2.40 5.04 3.49 4.31 plant and machine operators and assemblers 2.73 2.55 2.64 5.67 3.50 4.58 elementary occupations 2.44 2.13 2.40 4.47 2.99 4.25 all 2.10 2.07 2.09 3.30 2.63 3.12 Ref: Tables 33 & 38 in Appendix A *in last 365 days

3.14 Variation with industry

3.14.1 Statement 3.16 shows variation with industry of employment (NIC industry group) in average number of overnight and same-day trips during a one-year period. As in case of occupation, “all” includes those with blank industry code, which applies to all those not gainfully employed. Again it is clear, from a comparison of the “all” row figures with the rows for specific industries, that, with the exception of persons employed by private households5, persons not gainfully employed in any industry made fewer trips on an average than the gainfully employed population. Variation over industry groups in number of trips per person was relatively low for overnight trips and a little more prominent in case of same-day trips, especially in the rural sector. Among the gainfully employed, there were no striking inter-industry differences in case of overnight trips. In rural India, those employed in “electricity, gas and water supply”, “financial intermediation”, “education”, “health and social work”, and “real estate, renting and business activities” had higher averages than other industry groups – 3 or more overnight trips in a year, and 6 or more same-day trips in a year. Statement 3.16: Average no. of trips per person * for different industry groups

industry average no. of

overnight trips same-day trips rural urban rural+ urban rural urban rural+ urban

agriculture, hunting and forestry 2.51 2.37 2.50 4.49 3.76 4.47 fishing 2.15 2.88 2.36 4.39 4.77 4.50 mining and quarrying 2.69 2.59 2.66 5.12 3.52 4.65 manufacturing 2.49 2.27 2.38 5.01 3.28 4.12 electricity, gas and water supply 3.69 2.86 3.27 6.87 4.16 5.49 construction 2.73 2.33 2.59 5.07 3.48 4.54 wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles,

motorcycles and personal and household goods 2.45 2.26 2.34 5.00 3.49 4.13 hotels and restaurants 2.59 2.58 2.58 5.60 3.36 4.27 transport, storage and communications 2.73 2.56 2.65 5.28 3.79 4.51 financial intermediation 3.43 2.76 2.93 10.00 3.92 5.43 real estate, renting and business activities 3.09 2.55 2.67 6.36 3.40 4.05 public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2.97 2.86 2.90 6.31 3.87 4.76 education 3.29 2.75 3.04 7.02 4.21 5.71 health and social work 3.10 2.60 2.81 6.24 3.61 4.73 other community, social and personal service activities 2.66 2.39 2.53 5.41 3.34 4.44 activities of private households as employers and

undifferentiated production activities of private households 1.68 1.68 1.68 4.16 2.10 2.79 extraterritorial organizations and bodies 0.15 0.63 0.58 0.73 1.38 1.32 all 2.10 2.07 2.09 3.30 2.63 3.12 Ref: Tables 34 & 39 in Appendix A *in last 365 days

                                                            5 The all-India sample included only 16 persons who were reported to be employed by extra-territorial organizations.

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3.15 Distribution of visitors by broad activity status

3.15.1 A related point of interest is the percentage break-up of visitors by broad activity status: that is, into the categories “employed”, “unemployed”, and “out of labour force”. Statement 3.17 shows this break-up for both overnight and same-day trips, and, side by side, the shares of these three categories in the entire population. It is seen that the percentage share of the “out of labour force” category in the number of overnight visitors for rural and urban India is about 2 to 3 percentage points lower than the share of this category in the entire population, and the share of the same category in the number of same-day visitors is about 7 percentage points lower than its share in the entire population. The share of the other major group, the employed, in overall population is, correspondingly, lower than its share in the number of overnight and same-day visitors. This finding is not surprising in view of the results presented above on number of trips by different age-groups and the fact that the “not in labour force” category would include large numbers of the aged and children too young to work. Statement 3.17: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitors by broad activity status

broad activity status

rural urban rural+ urban

percentage of visitors percentage of

population

percentage of visitors percentage of

population

percentage of visitors percentage of

population overnight same-day overnight same-day

overnight same-day

employed 42.1 45.5 38.5 35.4 38.0 33.2 40.3 43.5 37.1

unemployed 0.7 0.8 0.7 1.2 1.4 1.4 0.8 0.9 0.9

out of labour force 57.2 53.7 60.7 63.4 60.6 65.4 58.8 55.5 62.0

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 31& 36 in Appendix A

SECTION C: VISITOR-TRIP CHARACTERISTICS

3.16.0 The classification of trips by characteristics of trips such as leading purpose of trip and month of visit was studied in Section A of this chapter. Certain features of trips, however, differ not only from trip to trip but, for the same trip, may vary from one participant to another – and therefore were recorded separately by the survey for each trip for each participant. These include (major) mode of travel, major place of stay, and even purpose of the visitor (as distinct from leading purpose, which is fixed for a particular trip). These characteristics are termed visitor-trip characteristics as they may vary with each visitor-trip combination. It follows that the relative frequencies of reporting of each category of reported purpose, or reported mode of travel, should be counted in terms of number of visitor-trips, rather than in terms of number of trips or visitors. This is done in this section, where the relative prevalence of different purposes, modes of travel, etc., is discussed. 3.16 Visitor purpose

3.16.1 Visitor purpose: overnight trips: The estimated break-up of trips by leading purpose – the purpose in the absence of which the trip would not have been undertaken – has already been discussed in Section 3.3. The reason prompting some of the participants to make the trip may, however, differ from the leading purpose. Statement 3.18 shows the all-India percentage break-up of rural/urban visitors-trips6 by visitor purpose, separately for overnight and same-

                                                            6 Sometimes words such as “percentage of visitors” have been used in this section for simplicity; it should be remembered, however, that strictly speaking, it is “visitor-trips” that are being counted here, or, in other words, that a visitor is counted as many times as the number of trips he or she made.

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day trips. By far the commonest purpose reported by persons who made overnight trips was social. This purpose alone prompted 77% of rural and 73% of urban overnight visitors to make their trips. Religious purposes, including pilgrimages, accounted for 9% of rural and about 15% of urban visitors, health and medical purposes for 7% of rural and 3% of urban visitors, and holidaying, leisure and recreation for about 2% of rural and 5% of urban visitors.

Statement 3.18: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitor-trips by purpose of visit

purpose percentage to total no. of overnight visitor-

trips percentage to total no. of same-day

visitor-trips

rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

business 1.3 1.8 1.5 3.7 4.5 3.8 holidaying, leisure and recreation 1.7 4.7 2.6 2.6 5.6 3.1 social 77.3 72.8 76.0 39.8 55.6 42.3 religious & pilgrimage 9.0 14.8 10.7 8.4 14.8 9.4 education & training 0.5 0.8 0.6 0.7 1.1 0.8 health & medical 7.0 3.1 5.8 19.2 8.4 17.5 shopping 0.3 0.1 0.2 18.7 6.0 16.7 others 2.8 2.0 2.6 7.0 4.0 6.5

all 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 Ref: Tables 40& 45 in Appendix A

3.16.2 Visitor purpose: same-day trips: Statement 3.18 shows that for same-day visitors, the predominant purpose of trips was again social, but that the share of the social purpose was smaller, especially for the rural population (about 40%) and also for the urban (about 56%). For the rural population this was explained by the much larger shares of health and medical and shopping (about 19% each). The same two purposes together accounted for about 14% of the visitor-trips for the urban population. 3.16.3 Leading purpose and visitor purpose: Comparison of Statement 3.18 with Statement 3.5 does not reveal any striking differences in the break-up of trips by leading purpose from the break-up of visitor-trips by visitor purpose. For both overnight and same-day trips, the percentage of trips with leading purpose business is smaller than the percentage of visitor-trips where the visitor’s purpose is business. This is not surprising as (a) the average number of persons travelling together on a business trip is smaller (see paragraph 3.9.2) than the average number of persons travelling together on a social trip, and (b) a business trip may occasionally include one or more household members whose purpose of travel is health or shopping, but the converse would be relatively rare. 3.17 Mode of travel

3.17.1 As a typical trip involves more than one mode of transport, it needs to be clarified that it is the major mode reported for each visitor – in other words, the mode by which the visitor covered the longest distance – that is being referred to here. Statement 3.19 gives the percentage distribution of visitor-trips by mode of travel separately for overnight and same-day trips made by rural and urban Indians. 3.17.2 Buses were the dominant mode of travel for overnight and same-day trips alike, accounting for two-thirds (67%) of overnight trips7 by the rural population, 57% of trips by the urban population, and 57-61% of same-day trips by the rural and urban populations. Trains were used for 27% of overnight trips by urban Indians; for rural Indians their share in                                                             7 Strictly, visitor-trips; the word “trips” is used here for simplicity. 

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overnight trips was 7%. Trains were also used in 9% of same-day trips by urban Indians but their share was only 2% for rural Indians.

Statement 3.19: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitor-trips by mode of transport

mode of transport percentage to total no. of overnight visitor-

trips percentage to total no. of same-day visitor-

trips

rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

on foot 2.7 0.3 2.0 6.8 0.7 5.9 bus 67.4 57.0 64.3 57.5 60.8 58.0 train 7.4 27.3 13.4 1.7 8.7 2.8 ship/boat 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 air 0.0 0.3 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 own transport 11.5 9.7 11.0 20.9 20.8 20.9 transport-equipment rental 10.2 5.0 8.6 12.4 8.5 11.8 others 0.6 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.5 0.6

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 43& 47 in Appendix A

3.17.3 Rented transport8 had a larger share in rural areas than in urban: 10% for overnight trips (5% in urban areas) and over 12% for same-day trips (8.5% in urban areas). Three types of owned transport – bicycles, motorized two-wheelers and motor cars (including jeeps) – together accounted for 19% of same-day trips in both rural and urban India, with the share of the bicycle and the motor car, of course, differing substantially between the sectors. The motorized two-wheeler (owned) accounted for 7% of same-day trips in rural areas and nearly 9% in urban areas. Urban people used their own motorcars or jeeps for about 5% of overnight trips and about 9% of same-day trips. About 9% of same-day trips in rural India were made on bicycles. 3.18 Major type of stay

3.18.1 For a visitor on a trip, this refers to the type of accommodation : hotel, guest house, etc., where the visitor spent the greatest number of nights for overnight trips or maximum time for same-day trips. For same-day trips, the estimates (Statement 3.20) are not of great interest as the majority – 82% in rural areas and 74% in urban – did not stay anywhere on the trip,9 while most of those who did, stayed with friends and relatives. For overnight trips, an overwhelmingly large number of visitors (strictly, visitor-trips) – 85% in rural areas and 80% in urban areas – reported that their major type of stay was with friends and relatives. This is, of course, not surprising in view of the fact that 77% of trips of urban visitors and 73% of trips of rural visitors were for a social purpose (Section 3.16). It would appear from the estimates that friends and relatives provided accommodation not only when trips were for such purposes but, frequently, for other (for example, religious) purposes as well. Hotels were the major type of stay for an estimated 1.3% of rural and less than 5% of urban overnight visitors, and dharamshalas for about 3% of rural and 4% of urban overnight visitors.

                                                            8 Note that owned transport and transport rented for private use were classified separately in the schedule of enquiry. In Tables 43 and 47 in Appendix A, estimates are given separately for different forms of owned transport but not for different forms of rented transport. 9 Same-day trips are those that started and ended on the same day (0000 hours to 2359 hours).

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Statement 3.20: Percentage distribution of overnight and same-day visitor-trips by major place of stay

mode of stay percentage to total no. of overnight

visitor-trips percentage to total no. of same-day

visitor-trips rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

hotel 1.3 4.7 2.3 0.1 0.2 0.1 private guest house 0.6 1.1 0.8 0.1 0.2 0.2 govt guest house 0.3 0.4 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.1 dharamshala 3.3 4.4 3.6 0.1 0.4 0.2 rented house 0.5 0.3 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 friends & relatives 85.1 79.9 83.6 14.8 22.2 15.9 did not stay at all - - - 82.2 74.0 80.9 others including carriages/coaches 8.8 9.3 8.9 2.6 2.8 2.6

all 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ref: Tables 44 & 48 in Appendix A

SECTION D: OCCURRENCE OF DOMESTIC TOURISM ACTIVITY IN A ONE-YEAR PERIOD

3.19 Measures of occurrence

3.19.1 Instead of measuring the level of tourism activity in terms of number of trips per household or per person, an alternative way would be to measure the proportion of persons or households participating (at least once) in trips during a period such as one year. We may call this a measure of the occurrence of tourism activity among households or persons. 3.19.2 It may be observed that the choice of the period during which occurrence of tourism activity is to be observed in households or persons will affect the quality of the measure that is being proposed here. Too short a period will render the measure vulnerable to sampling fluctuations. If, on the other hand, too long a period is chosen, near-100% occurrence rates (nearly all households or persons reporting at least one trip) will be observed for every category of households and persons, which means the measure will be insensitive, failing to discriminate between states or between socio-economic categories in respect of level of tourism activity. In this survey, a period of ‘last 365 days’ was used to observe the occurrence of tourism activity, giving rise to estimates of occurrence during a one-year period.

3.20 Occurrence among persons

3.20.1 As explained above, one measure of the intensity of tourism activity is provided by the percentage of persons who made at least one trip (overnight/ same-day) during the last one year (or percentage of visitors). This percentage is occasionally referred to as TP(O) for overnight trips and TP(S) for same-day trips.

3.20.2 Statement 3.21 shows all-India levels of TP(S) and TP(O) for rural and urban areas separately and for the two sectors combined. It reveals that at the all-India level, the percentage of persons reporting at least one overnight trip in the last one year was around 77% and roughly the same for rural and urban areas. Further, the percentage of persons reporting at least one same-day trip during the last one year was 75.6% in rural areas but appreciably less – about 70% – in urban areas. The overall percentage – rural and urban considered together – was 74%.

Statement 3.21: Percentage of persons undertaking overnight and same-day trips*: all-India

Kind of trip Percentage of persons reporting trips

rural urban rural + urban Overnight 77.4 77.3 77.4 Same-day 75.6 70.3 74.2 Ref: Table 1 & 2 in Appendix A *last 365 days

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Statement 3.22: Percentage of persons undertaking overnight and same-day trips*: states/UTs

State/UT

Percentage of persons reporting trips

Overnight Same-day

rural urban rural + urban rural urban rural + urban

Andhra Pradesh 87.93 84.04 86.78 88.19 68.37 82.31 Arunachal Pradesh 38.04 30.83 36.55 40.50 28.61 38.03 Assam 50.65 59.05 51.48 63.44 71.28 64.21 Bihar 59.85 61.33 60.00 54.73 49.28 54.20 Chhattisgarh 84.28 84.20 84.27 82.33 79.23 81.81 Delhi 62.79 73.09 72.23 69.81 83.68 82.52 Goa 82.49 68.54 75.78 84.94 87.24 86.04 Gujarat 79.36 76.83 78.42 81.83 73.25 78.65 Haryana 82.05 79.72 81.39 77.12 71.79 75.61 Himachal Pradesh 89.80 88.56 89.70 91.89 89.47 91.68 Jammu & Kashmir 76.71 68.64 75.06 84.13 65.99 80.44 Jharkhand 76.77 79.22 77.13 68.92 65.84 68.47 Karnataka 78.97 85.73 81.25 80.69 79.89 80.42 Kerala 70.68 65.85 69.45 92.37 85.82 90.71 Madhya Pradesh 84.73 82.18 84.14 75.06 65.77 72.91 Maharashtra 80.12 71.64 76.55 76.41 55.45 67.60 Manipur 20.92 18.57 20.28 41.11 45.81 42.40 Meghalaya 45.54 43.03 45.12 69.39 56.21 67.17 Mizoram 26.29 21.95 24.35 23.38 16.08 20.11 Nagaland 39.84 45.29 41.29 57.30 52.65 56.07 Orissa 80.50 83.57 80.95 82.20 80.99 82.02 Punjab 83.20 82.27 82.87 88.26 75.75 83.86 Rajasthan 85.69 80.95 84.53 77.26 58.43 72.67 Sikkim 68.46 88.65 70.67 79.44 87.99 80.37 Tamil Nadu 81.75 83.97 82.74 89.84 89.47 89.68 Tripura 71.30 76.88 72.22 69.70 67.22 69.29 Uttarakhand 78.62 79.21 78.75 78.33 75.95 77.82 Uttar Pradesh 77.53 78.44 77.72 66.07 65.56 65.97 West Bengal 79.30 70.26 77.22 84.93 74.83 82.61 A & N Islands 72.00 58.68 67.66 92.27 77.53 87.47 Chandigarh 88.78 59.84 62.73 67.66 48.49 50.40 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 38.55 82.02 46.44 64.57 77.34 66.89 Daman & Diu 39.68 60.19 45.99 81.88 87.27 83.52 Lakshadweep 82.00 44.30 63.86 42.40 2.11 22.79 Puducherry 81.41 79.02 79.71 90.33 86.29 87.47 all-India 77.41 77.31 77.38 75.64 70.30 74.21 Ref: Tables 1 & 2 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.20.3 The propensity to engage in the activity of domestic tourism has considerable inter-State variation. This inter-State variation in TP(S) and TP(O) is shown in Statement 3.22 for both rural and urban sectors as well as for the entire area of each State. The main features are stated below. The percentage of population taking part in at least one overnight trip during the past one

year varied from 60% to 90% for all States and UTs except Assam (50%), five of the North-Eastern States (20-45%), and two UTs (see column 3 of the statement). For 20 States and UTs, the TP(O) was between 70% and 85%.

The percentage of population reporting at least one same-day trip varied between 64% and 83% for 22 States and UTs, and between 64% and 92% for all States and UTs except for 4 of the North-Eastern States, 2 UTs and Bihar (54%).

The absolute difference between same-day and overnight figures TP(S) and TP(O) (rural and urban sectors combined) was within 12 percentage points in nearly all major States, the exceptions being Assam and Kerala, where TP(S) exceeded TP(O) by about 21 and 13 respectively.

The absolute difference between rural and urban percentages of persons reporting at least one overnight trip was within 9 percentage points in all the major States.

The percentage of rural population reporting at least one same-day trip, which exceeded the urban percentage at all-India level by 5 (rural TP(S)=75.6, urban TP(S)=70.3), also

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exceeded the urban percentage by 10 in West Bengal, 12.5 in Punjab, 19 in Rajasthan, 20 in Andhra Pradesh, and 21 in Maharashtra.

In the North-Eastern region, with the exception of Sikkim and Tripura, all the TP(S) and TP(O) values – rural and urban – were low, especially in Mizoram (26 or less), Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh (below 46), and Nagaland (57 or less), suggesting that poor communication facilities remained a significant barrier to domestic tourism.

3.21 Occurrence among households

3.21.1 Like percentage of persons reporting trips, the percentage of households where at least one member made a trip (overnight/ same-day) during the last one year provides a measure of the intensity of tourism activity. This percentage is occasionally referred to as TH(O) for overnight trips and TH(S) for same-day trips.

Statement 3.23: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day trips* : all-India

Kind of trip Percentage of households reporting trips

rural urban rural+urban

Overnight 92.6 89.9 91.8 Same-day 96.0 85.7 92.9 Ref: Tables 2 & 4 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.21.2 Statement 3.23 shows all-India levels of TH(S) and TH(O) for rural and urban areas separately and for the two sectors combined. It is seen from the statement that at all-India level, the percentage of households reporting at least one trip in the last one year was 92.9% for same-day trips (TH(S)=92.9) and only slightly less, 91.8%, for overnight trips (TH(O)=91.8). In urban areas, the percentage of households reporting overnight trips (89.9%) was larger than the percentage reporting same-day trips (85.7%), but the reverse was true for rural areas, where same-day trips were reported by a larger number of households (as many as 96%) than overnight trips (92.6%). Both overnight and same-day trips were reported by a larger proportion of rural households than urban households. Compared with the figures of percentages of households reporting trips, the estimates of percentages of persons making trips (Statement 3.18) are lower, but not as low as they would have been if, in most households, only one or two household members went on trips.

3.21.3 The values for TH(S) and TH(O) for both rural and urban sectors as well as for the entire area of each State is shown in Statement 3.24. The main features are stated below.

Apart from Assam (81%), Kerala (83%) and Bihar (85%), all major States10 had 90% or more households reporting at least one overnight trip (TH(O)≥90) during a one-year period (see column 3 of the statement). There were only 6 States/UTs with TH(O)<80, of which 4 were North-Eastern States and 2 were UTs.

All major States had at least 84% households reporting at least one same-day trip in a one-year period, and except for Maharashtra, Punjab and Bihar, all had TH(S)>90.

The absolute difference between TH(S) and TH(O) (rural and urban sectors combined) was less than 5 in all the major States except Assam and Tamil Nadu, where TH(S) exceeded TH(O) by about 11 and 6 respectively.

                                                            10 Major States are the 17 States of India that had a population of 20 million or more according to the 2001 Census. Together these States accounted for 94.7% of India’s population in 2001.

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The absolute difference between rural and urban percentages of households reporting at least one overnight trip did not exceed 6 in any major State except West Bengal and Maharashtra, where the rural-urban difference was 12 and 9 respectively.

The percentage of rural households reporting at least one same-day trip, which exceeded the urban percentage at all-India level by 10 (rural TH(S)=96.0, urban TH(S)=85.7), also exceeded the urban percentage by 23 in Maharashtra, 15-17 in Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh and Punjab, and 11-12 in Gujarat and West Bengal.

Statement 3.24: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day trips*: States/UTs

State/UT

Percentage of households reporting trips

Overnight Same-day

rural urban rural+urban rural urban rural+urban

Andhra Pradesh 94.6 93.2 94.2 98.0 82.0 93.1 Arunachal Pradesh 70.3 61.5 68.5 71.8 55.3 68.2 Assam 79.8 88.6 80.8 91.3 93.8 91.6 Bihar 84.5 87.4 84.8 89.7 84.5 89.2 Chhattisgarh 92.5 91.9 92.4 94.0 90.7 93.4 Delhi 85.0 86.6 86.5 99.9 89.9 90.7 Goa 89.2 78.0 83.6 96.7 90.8 93.7 Gujarat 93.4 90.0 92.1 98.9 86.9 94.1 Haryana 95.7 89.7 93.8 94.3 86.6 91.9 Himachal Pradesh 99.8 86.0 98.3 96.6 98.1 96.8 Jammu & Kashmir 93.9 87.7 92.5 98.7 84.1 95.4 Jharkhand 92.6 92.5 92.6 92.8 83.2 91.2 Karnataka 88.6 94.9 90.9 96.9 90.2 94.4 Kerala 84.4 80.1 83.3 98.4 93.9 97.2 Madhya Pradesh 97.3 94.7 96.7 97.5 88.0 95.2 Maharashtra 94.5 85.1 90.3 94.5 71.2 84.1 Manipur 60.7 57.8 59.9 83.5 93.2 86.3 Meghalaya 77.1 70.3 75.8 93.0 78.9 90.3 Mizoram 65.1 59.3 62.5 62.5 46.9 55.5 Nagaland 82.2 89.8 84.4 96.8 97.1 96.9 Orissa 95.9 94.9 95.7 97.4 96.5 97.2 Punjab 90.5 90.0 90.3 94.7 79.6 88.8 Rajasthan 98.4 97.1 98.1 98.8 82.2 94.4 Sikkim 93.9 100.0 94.8 99.5 100.0 99.6 Tamil Nadu 90.6 91.6 91.1 97.8 96.5 97.2 Tripura 94.1 93.0 93.9 93.8 86.8 92.6 Uttarakhand 94.6 94.2 94.5 94.2 91.6 93.6 Uttar Pradesh 96.3 94.1 95.8 96.6 89.3 95.0 West Bengal 93.3 81.4 90.2 97.5 85.9 94.5 A & N Islands 86.9 75.7 83.2 97.4 87.1 94.1 Chandigarh 99.7 78.1 80.7 71.0 59.5 60.9 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 64.7 92.2 71.6 93.3 93.1 93.1 Daman & Diu 45.7 70.3 54.2 100.0 94.6 98.1 Lakshadweep 100.0 87.8 96.0 90.2 9.8 59.4 Puducherry 90.6 88.3 89.0 95.5 92.2 93.2 all-India 92.6 89.9 91.8 96.0 85.7 92.9 Ref: Tables 2 & 3 in Appendix A *last 365 days

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3.22 Household occupation

3.22.1 Statement 3.25 shows the variation in the all-India rural and urban percentages of households reporting overnight and same-day trips over nine occupational categories of households. Except for the fact that overnight trips were reported somewhat more frequently by households that were “associate professionals” by occupation (in rural areas, 97.4% such households reported at least one overnight trip in the last one year compared to 92.6% for all rural households), deviations of more than 3 percentage points from the all-occupations average were rare, for overnight as well as same-day trips.

Statement 3.25: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day trips* by household occupation

occupation Percentage of households reporting trips

Rural Urban Overnight Same-day Both Overnight Same-day Both

legislators, senior officials and managers 92.6 96.0 91.0 90.7 87.9 83.0 professionals 92.6 96.0 91.0 90.9 87.6 82.7 associate professionals 97.4 96.0 95.9 93.0 88.7 83.6 clerks 92.6 96.0 91.0 91.5 87.3 84.0 service workers and shop & market sales workers 90.7 94.0 89.2 89.9 85.7 80.8 skilled agricultural and fishery workers 94.3 97.0 93.3 89.9 93.5 88.6 craft and related trades workers 92.6 96.0 91.0 88.8 86.2 80.8 plant and machine operators and assemblers 95.9 99.4 94.3 91.1 86.8 81.9 elementary occupations 91.5 96.3 90.5 87.6 82.5 77.7 all 92.6 96.0 91.0 89.9 85.7 80.8

Ref: Table 3 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.23 Household social group

3.23.1 Statement 3.26 shows variation over social groups in the all-India rural and urban percentages of households reporting overnight and same-day trips during a one-year period. It is seen that the only notable variation is in the TH(S) values for urban India, which are: 90 for OBC, 85 for SC, 83 for Others, and 77 for ST. In case of overnight trips, too, the highest figure for urban India is reported by the OBC group, though the variation between groups is much less. For rural India, in case of both overnight and same-day trips, the percentages for the different social groups deviate only very slightly from the all-groups average.

Statement 3.26: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day trips* by social group

Social group Percentage of households reporting

overnight trips same-day trips rural urban rural + urban rural urban rural + urban

ST 90.9 89.3 90.8 95.3 77.3 93.3 SC 92.8 89.6 92.2 95.8 85.2 93.6 OBC 92.8 91.3 92.4 96.3 90.1 94.6 Others 92.9 88.9 91.0 96.0 82.8 90.2 all 92.6 89.9 91.8 96.0 85.7 92.9 Ref: Table 5 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.24 Household type

3.24.1 Statement 3.27 shows variation over household (occupational) types in the all-India rural and urban percentages of households reporting overnight and same-day trips during a one-year period. There are no striking variations in the percentages. In case of same-day trips, the percentages for the four household types in urban India range from 82 for “others” to 89 for the self-employed. For overnight trips, and also for same-day trips in rural India, the variation among household types is still less pronounced.

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Statement 3.27: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day

trips* by household type

Household type

Percentage of households reporting

Overnight trips

Same-day trips

Rural Self-employed in non-agriculture 92.4 96.2 Agricultural labour 90.8 95.8 Other labour 92.6 97.5 Self-employed in agriculture 94.5 96.9 others 91.0 92.3 all 92.6 96.0

Urban Self-employed 90.7 89.3 Regular wage/salaried 89.7 83.1 Casual labour 87.9 87.0 others 90.0 82.4 all 89.9 85.7

Ref: Tables 15 (R&U) in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.25 Household religion

3.25.1 Statement 3.28 shows the variation in TH(O) and TH(S) among households of different religions. The estimates for “Jains”, “others” and “Buddhists” are based on 418,1216 and 1753 sample households respectively at the all-India level. Estimated percentages of households reporting trips, for all other religions, are above 80. Apart from the fact that only about 82% of Christian households in rural areas reported overnight trips compared to the all-religions average of 92.6%, there was little variation worthy of note among these religions. The percentage for individual religions rarely differed by more than 3 percentage points from the all-religions average, though divergences were somewhat greater in case of same-day trips by urban households. In rural areas, the largest two religious groups, Hindus and Muslims, had higher percentages reporting both overnight and same-day trips than other religions.

Statement 3.28: Percentage of households reporting overnight and same-day trips* by religion

Religion

Percentage of households reporting

overnight trips same-day trips

rural urban rural + urban rural urban rural + urban

Hinduism 93.2 90.6 92.5 96.2 85.6 93.2 Islam 90.3 86.8 89.1 95.4 85.8 92.1 Christianity 81.9 85.7 83.5 93.9 88.9 91.9 Sikhism 89.4 94.3 90.9 93.2 91.3 92.6 Jainism 85.6 94.1 92.1 93.0 92.5 92.6 Buddhism 88.4 84.3 86.9 89.7 68.2 81.6 Others (incl.

Zoroastrianism) 89.0 70.7 84.7 89.4 60.4 82.6 all 92.6 89.9 91.8 96.0 85.7 93.0 Ref: Table 10 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.26 Household economic level

3.26.1 Statement 3.29 examines whether the all-India percentages of rural and urban households reporting overnight and same-day trips vary with the MPCE level of the households. For this purpose rural households are classified into five ranges (quintile classes) of MPCE so that each range contains one-fifth of the rural population of India. A similar classification is made of urban households. Some variation over MPCE levels is noticed in the percentages of urban households reporting same-day trips, with the second quintile (20th

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to 40th percentiles) showing a figure of 90.8%, 5 percentage points higher than the all-classes percentage, and the topmost quintile showing a figure of 81.7%, which is 4 percentage points lower than the all-classes percentage. Apart from this, however, deviations of even 2 percentage points from the overall percentage are rare.

Statement 3.29: Percentage distribution of households reporting overnight and same-day trips* over quintile classes of MPCE

Quintile class of MPCE (%)

Percentage of households in the class among

hhs reporting overnight trips hhs reporting same-day trips

Rural Urban Rural Urban

0-20 91.0 88.1 94.5 88.2 20-40 93.2 89.6 95.3 90.8 40-60 92.7 89.0 96.3 86.8 60-80 92.5 90.2 96.3 83.7 80-100 93.0 91.6 97.0 81.7 all 92.6 89.9 96.0 85.7 Ref: Tables 20 in Appendix A *last 365 days

3.27 Households visited by NRIs11: impact of the NRI visit(s)

3.27.1 Statement 3.30 summarises the responses of households that had been visited by any NRI during the past one year to the question: What was the impact of the NRI visit (that is, on tourism activity of the household members)? The majority of households (nearly 60% in rural areas and 53% in urban) visited by NRI(s) reported “no impact”. One in eight of the rural households and about one in six of the urban households reported, however, that the visit had resulted in their making at least one trip themselves. 11% of the rural households and 13% of the urban households were willing but unable to make a trip due to other constraints.

Statement 3.30: Households visited by NRIs: Percentage distribution by impact of NRI visit

Impact Percentage of households

rural urban rural + urban

Resulted in one or more trip 12.5 15.9 13.7 Planning to make 5.5 12.4 7.9 Willing but unable to make a trip due to other constraints 11.1 13.3 11.9 No impact 59.7 53.2 57.5 Cannot say 11.1 5.2 9.1 total 100.0 100.0 100.0 % of households visited by NRIs 1.6 2.0 1.8 Ref: Table 4 in Appendix A

                                                            11 Non-Resident Indians 

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Chapter Four

 

Expenditure on Trips 4.0.1 This chapter deals with expenditure incurred in connection with overnight and same-day trips. As explained in Chapter Two, all expenditure incurred by the surveyed households on or in connection with a trip made by any of their members, or members of other households, was recorded as expenditure on the trip provided it was not incurred for productive purposes. Estimates were generated for average expenditure per trip and per overnight visitor-trip by sector and State/UT of the reporting households, as well as separately for each leading purpose; only all-India estimates for a one-year period days are discussed here. The break-up of overnight and same-day trip expenditure over broad expenditure heads is also examined. For overnight trips, it is further investigated how the expenditure pattern varies with the leading purpose of a trip. 4.1 Expenditure per overnight trip and leading purpose

4.1.1 At all-India level, the average expenditure per overnight trip was estimated1 as Rs.821 for the rural population and Rs.1636 (very nearly double) for the urban population (Statement 4.1).2 4.1.2 It may be recalled (Chapter Three, Section 3.3) that there was a preponderance of social purposes among the factors giving rise to domestic tourism activity in the country with the leading purpose of 75% of overnight trips for the rural sector and 71% for the urban being reported as social. Next came religious trips and pilgrimages, with a share of 9% for the rural and over 12% for the urban sector. The share of medical and health was small in the urban sector (3.5%) compared to the rural (7%). In the urban sector, holidaying, leisure and recreation commanded a share of 5% and business of over 3%. No other purpose had a share of 3% or more in either sector. 4.1.3 Statement 4.1 shows that for both the rural and the urban population, trips with social leading purpose had a considerably lower-than-average expenditure per trip – 43% lower than the overall (all-purposes) average for the rural population and 40% lower for the urban. Average expenditure on such trips was only Rs.466 for the rural sector and Rs.989 for the urban sector and was the lowest among all the purposes used for classification of trips by leading purpose. One may recall, in this connection, that the major place of stay of the visitor in 85% of visitor-trips for the rural population and 80% for the urban was with friends and relatives (Chapter Three, Section 3.18) – this suggests that visitors stayed with friends and relatives in the overwhelming majority of social visits and helps to understand how expenditure on such visits remained low.

                                                            1 Relative Standard Error(RSE) of the average expenditure per overnight trip was 4.15 for rural India and 8.58 for urban India. The state-wise RSEs are presented in Statement 4.6 at the end of this Chapter. 2 For same-day trips, data on expenditure was not collected separately trip-wise, hence the expenditure per trip could not be separated by leading purpose or any other trip characteristic.

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Statement 4.1: Average expenditure per overnight trip by leading purpose

leading purpose

average expenditure per trip (Rs.)

rural urban rural+urban

business 1194 3586 2002 holidaying, leisure and recreation 1214 5287 3174 social 466 989 596 religious & pilgrimage 997 1919 1301 education & training 996 1995 1337 health & medical 3416 6956 3918 shopping 3086 5491 3365 others 1912 1676 1857

all 821 1636 1038 Ref: Table 56 in Appendix A

4.1.4 On the other hand, trips for health and medical purposes were the most expensive in both rural and urban sectors – expenditure on such trips being, on the average, more than four times as high as the all-purpose average for both rural and urban populations. The urban population’s trips for holidaying, leisure and recreation were on the average more than three times as expensive, and its business trips twice as expensive, as the overall average. 4.1.5 In both sectors, religious trips were only slightly more expensive than average, about 21% more for the rural sector and 17% more for the urban. 4.2 Expenditure per overnight visitor-trip and leading purpose

Statement 4.2: Average expenditure per overnight visitor-trip by leading purpose

leading purpose average expenditure per visitor-trip (rs.)

rural urban rural+urban

business 923 2845 1561 holidaying, leisure and recreation 584 2444 1497 social 202 418 257 religious & pilgrimage 437 699 534 education & training 765 1485 1016 health & medical 1588 3375 1832 shopping 2185 4066 2395 others 1038 1061 1043

all 369 715 460 Ref: Table 56 in Appendix A

4.2.1 Statement 4.2 gives average trip expenditure per overnight visitor, separately for trips with different leading purposes. The estimates of expenditure per visitor-trip are smaller than the estimates of per-trip expenditure – the expenditure on a trip, in general, gets spread over more than one participant. The estimates, in fact, differ from the corresponding estimates in Statement 4.1 by factors equal to the average number of visitors per trip, for each purpose and each sector. At all-India level, the average expenditure per overnight visitor-trip was estimated as Rs.369 for the rural population and Rs.715 for the urban population.

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4.2.2 Had trips with different leading purposes had the same average number of visitors per trip, the estimates in Statement 4.2 would, for each sector, be exactly proportional to those in Statement 4.1. But average number of persons per trip varies with leading purpose: a business trip is likely to have fewer participants than a trip whose leading purpose is holidaying (Chapter Three, Statement 3.11). This explains why average expenditure per visitor-trip, for trips with leading purpose “business”, was only 21-23% lower than average expenditure per trip, while for trips with leading purpose “holidaying, leisure and recreation”, expenditure per visitor was less than half of average expenditure per trip – the expenditure was shared by a larger number of visitors. 4.2.3 Expenditure on social trips was low compared to the overall average in terms of expenditure per visitor-trip, just as it was low in terms of expenditure per trip. It was, in fact, on the average 45% lower than the overall average for the rural sector and 42% lower for the urban sector. Finally, urban average expenditure per visitor-trip for religious trips (Rs.699) was substantially lower than expenditure per trip (Rs.1919), indicating a large number of visitors per trip (see Statement 3.11 for the exact average of trip size). Thus, for religious trips in urban sector, expenditure per visitor-trip became lower than the overall average, whereas expenditure per religious trip was, as seen in paragraph 4.1.5, 17% higher than the overall average. 4.3 Break-up of overnight trip expenditure by leading purpose

Statement 4.3: Percentage break-up of expenditure on overnight trips by leading purpose

leading purpose percentage share in total expenditure

on overnight trips

rural urban rural+urban

business 3.39 7.43 5.06 holidaying, leisure and recreation 2.77 15.98 8.21 social 42.47 42.58 42.51 religious & pilgrimage 10.64 14.40 12.19 education & training 1.09 1.62 1.31 health & medical 30.28 14.53 23.79 shopping 1.70 0.57 1.24 others 7.61 2.88 5.66

all 100.00 100.00 100.00 Ref: Table 56 in Appendix A

4.3.1 Statement 4.3 gives the break-up of estimated expenditure on overnight trips by leading purpose of trip, separately for the rural and urban populations. It was seen above (paragraph 4.1.3) that among trips with different leading purposes, expenditure per overnight trip, for both rural and urban travellers, was the lowest for social (leading purpose) trips. As such, the share of social trips was, in both sectors, only 42-43% (Statement 4.3), even though such trips accounted for 75% of all overnight trips for the rural population and 71% for the urban. 4.3.2 Trips with health and medical purposes, which were seen earlier (paragraph 4.1.4) to be on the average four times as expensive as the all-trips average, are seen to account for 30% of all expenditure on overnight trips for the rural population and 15% for the urban. It may be recalled (see Chapter Three, Statement 3.5) that such trips accounted for 7.3% of the rural population’s overnight trips and 3.5% of those of the urban population.

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4.3.3 Religious and pilgrimage trips, which accounted for about 9% of all overnight trips of the rural population and about 12% in case of the urban population (Chapter Three, Statement 3.5), had a share of about 11% in overnight trip expenditure for the rural sector and about 14% for the urban sector. 4.4 Break-up of trip expenditure by broad expenditure head

4.4.1 Package component of trips: Trip expenditure in general has several components present in varying combinations: transport, food, accommodation, shopping, sight-seeing, etc. As is the practice in tourism activity, some of these components become commercially available in the form of a package.3 Visitors who avail themselves of such packages, for a whole trip or for part of it, cannot report the exact break-up of their total trip expenditure over the heads transport, food, accommodation, etc., but only the total expenditure incurred on the package component and the break-up of the remainder (non-package component). This imposes a constraint on the generation of estimates of the break-up of trip expenditure by its components. 4.4.2 Statement 4.4 gives the percentage break-up of overnight and same-day trip expenditure by five broad heads – (1) accommodation, (2) food and drink, (3) transport, (4) shopping and (5) recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities – and a residual category. (See also Fig. 4.1.) Apart from these, expenditure incurred as a package – the “package” component mentioned above – was made a separate category for the purpose of deriving the percentage break-up. For overnight trips, the share of the package component was 7% for the urban sector and about 1.5% for the rural sector. For same-day trips it was 0.9% for the urban sector and less than 0.2% for the rural sector.

                                                            3 A trip with a package component need, not, however, be a package trip (Chapter Three, Section 3.6). A package trip is one in which a package is availed of for the major part of the trip. (See also Chapter Two, paragraph 2.6.5.6.1.)

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40 NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

 

4.5 Leading purpose and trip expenditure pattern for overnight trips

4.5.1 One may reasonably surmise that overnight trips with different leading purposes will not exhibit a uniform pattern of expenditure. To examine this possibility, the break-up of total expenditure has been shown separately in Statement 4.5 (R&U) for trips with different leading purposes, for both the rural and the urban sector. 4.5.2 Rural: For social trips – the most common variety – shopping expenditure formed 51% of total expenditure. It is notable that the share of shopping for social trips was higher than average; for trips of all other purposes except business and, of course, shopping trips (trips with leading purpose shopping), the share of shopping was lower than, or close to, the all-purposes average of 30%. The share of accommodation in expenditure on social trips was only 0.38% whereas for all other purposes (except shopping and health and medical purpose trips), it was 5% or more. The share of food and drink in social trips was also low (8%) compared to trips with other purposes except for health and medical purpose. The share of transport, however, was 27%, noticeably higher than the all-purposes average, which was 20%.

Statement 4.4: Percentage break-up of expenditure on overnight and same-day trips by major group of items

group of items

percentage share of group in total expenditure on

overnight trips same-day trips

rural urban rural urban

package component 1.52 7.15 0.15 0.89 non-package component

accommodation 2.95 5.65 0.07 0.47 food and drink 9.15 9.66 4.57 7.77 transport 19.97 33.49 13.63 28.78 shopping 30.31 24.73 60.15 44.37 recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities 31.94 15.39 4.93 6.32 others 4.15 3.92 18.41 13.77 all 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00

Ref: Tables 56 & 58 in Appendix A 4.5.3 For religious and pilgrimage trips, the category transport commanded the largest share of expenditure (34%). Shopping took up 22% of expenditure and food and drink, about 17%. For health and medical purpose trips, expenditure on recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities accounted for more than three-quarters of total expenditure, and the shares of the other categories are correspondingly low.

Page 53: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Chapter Four: Expenditure on Trips

 

41 NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

 

Statement 4.5 : Percentage break-up of expenditure on overnight trips separately for trips with different

leading purposes

category of expenditure

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious

& pilgrimage

education &

training

health &

medical shopping other all

RURAL

package component 0.80 14.58 0.10 8.35 9.81 0.08 0.17 0.13 1.52

non-package component

accommodation 6.33 7.77 0.38 5.97 13.62 3.77 1.18 5.42 2.95

food and drink 16.34 14.60 8.32 16.73 14.74 6.27 2.18 10.15 9.15

transport 18.31 24.03 27.21 34.32 21.22 7.10 4.93 13.28 19.97

shopping 51.63 31.69 51.38 21.99 27.93 3.16 84.47 10.69 30.31 recreation, religious, etc.* 2.59 4.82 5.59 9.75 2.02 78.61 6.15 57.52 31.94

others 4.00 2.51 7.02 2.89 10.66 1.02 0.92 2.81 4.15

total 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00

URBAN

package component 0.33 38.64 0.12 5.31 7.18 0.00 2.49 0.22 7.15

non-package component

accommodation 13.71 10.37 1.20 9.81 12.76 3.41 0.94 11.69 5.65

food and drink 13.75 10.41 8.49 15.64 14.16 3.56 2.88 12.16 9.66

transport 30.65 24.64 43.00 43.65 43.25 7.50 6.15 29.51 33.49

shopping 39.85 12.93 37.64 15.34 17.91 2.35 86.40 12.05 24.73 recreation, religious, etc.* 0.63 1.78 2.69 7.22 1.81 82.24 0.30 30.99 15.39

others 1.08 1.21 6.87 3.03 2.93 0.94 0.82 3.38 3.92

total 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00

Ref: Table 56 in Appendix A *recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities

4.5.4 Although food and drink had an overall share of only 9%, and a share of 8% for social trips, its share in expenditure on trips made for business, holidaying and religious purposes was around 15-17% in each case.

4.5.5 Urban: In many respects the variation in expenditure pattern with leading purpose was, for the urban population, similar to that for the rural. In urban India, the package component of expenditure, however, was nearly 39% in trips for holidaying, leisure and recreation (compared to 15% in rural India), and also 5% in trips for religious and pilgrimage purposes. 4.5.6 It has been noted above (paragraph 4.4.2) that transport expenses formed the largest component of expenditure in urban India (33%) but only 20% in rural India. For social trips, and also for religious and pilgrimage purpose trips, transport took up 43-44% of total expenditure and was the largest component. For religious trips, the share of food and drink was 16% and that of shopping was 15%. For business trips, shopping expenditure was the largest component (40%).

4.5.7 The share of accommodation was, as in rural India, noticeably low for social trips (1.2%) but was 10-14% in business trips, trips for religious and pilgrimage, and trips for holidaying, leisure, etc. (For the last-named kind of trip, the share of accommodation was likely to be appreciably larger with part of the actual expenses on it getting subsumed in the package

Page 54: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Chapter Fou

 

 

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Report No. 536

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Page 55: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Chapter Four: Expenditure on Trips

 

43 NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

 

Statement 4.6: RSE (%) of Average expenditure per overnight trip for each State

State/UTs Rural Urban

Andhra Pradesh 5.45 28.13 Arunachal Pradesh 12.03 24.25 Assam 5.69 17.60 Bihar 3.63 14.15 Chhattisgarh 32.57 20.96 Delhi 26.12 8.53 Goa 25.15 13.98 Gujarat 44.00 15.48 Haryana 18.26 18.07 Himachal Pradesh 17.28 22.52 Jammu & Kashmir 16.85 19.64 Jharkhand 23.15 4.35 Karnataka 11.71 12.53 Kerala 10.84 28.46 Madhya Pradesh 17.00 8.04 Maharashtra 6.76 7.41 Manipur 8.19 8.99 Meghalaya 15.58 13.90 Mizoram 18.57 1.24 Nagaland 4.86 17.07 Orissa 8.12 16.89 Punjab 14.73 13.18 Rajasthan 18.24 56.57 Sikkim 15.06 25.62 Tamil Nadu 8.27 34.76 Tripura 10.24 19.33 Uttarakhand 18.02 8.81 Uttar Pradesh 19.92 12.56 West Bengal 11.43 6.52 Andaman & N. Island 12.00 18.45 Chandigarh 18.43 10.43 Dadra Nagar & Haveli 2.53 0.60 Daman & Diu 8.34 4.66 Lakshadweep 16.14 17.41 Puducherry 6.34 11.95

all-India 4.15 8.58

Page 56: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

Detailed Tables

Page 57: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-i

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Control Table 1 Number of villages/blocks, households, total

no. of persons, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each State/UT

A-1

Household characteristics

Overnight visitor

Same-day visitor

Overnight trip Same-day trip Impact of NRI

visit MPCE class Social Group Religion

2 Number of households reporting overnight visitor(s), number of overnight visitor(s), number of households reporting same day visitor(s) and number of same day visitor(s), both surveyed and estimated, separately for each State/UT

A-4

3 Per 1000 distribution of households reporting overnight visitors and same day visitors by household occupation

A-7

4 Per 1000 distribution of households which were visited by NRIs by impact of the NRI visit for each quintile class of MPCE

A-8

5 Number of households reporting overnight visitors, same day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each social group

A-9

6 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight visitors in the household for each social group

A-10

7 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day visitors in the household for each social group

A-11

8 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight trips for each social group

A-12

9 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day trips for each social group

A-13

10 Number of households reporting overnight visitors, same day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each religion

A-14

Page 58: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-ii

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Household characteristics

Overnight visitor

Same-day visitor

Overnight trip Same-day trip MPCE class Religion Household

type

11 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight visitors in the household for each religion

A-15

12 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day visitors in the household for each religion

A-17

13 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight trips for each religion

A-19

14 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day trips for each religion

A-21

15 Number of households reporting overnight visitors, same day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each household type

A-23

16 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight visitors in the household for each household type

A-24

17 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day visitors in the household for each household type

A-25

18 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight trips for each household type

A-26

19 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day trips for each household type

A-27

20 Number of households reporting overnight visitors, same day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each quintile class of MPCE

A-28

21 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight visitors in the household for each quintile class of MPCE

A-29

22 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day visitors in the household for each quintile class of MPCE

A-30

Page 59: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-iii

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Household characteristics

Overnight trip Same-day trip MPCE class Aware of

‘Incredible India’ campaign

Aware of Tourism Promotional campaign

Renting out of house to tourists

Occupation category

23 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of overnight trips for each quintile class of MPCE

A-31

24 Per 1000 distribution of household by number of same day trips for each quintile class of MPCE

A-32

25(I) Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of the Incredible India campaign by quintile class of MPCE for each occupation (NCO) group

A-33

25(O) Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of other tourism promotional campaigns by quintile class of MPCE for each occupation (NCO) group

A-35

26(I) Per 1000 distribution of households on awareness of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT

A-37

26(O) Per 1000 distribution of households on awareness of other tourism promotional campaigns by source separately for each State/UT

A-43

27(I)

Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

A-49

27(O)

Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of other tourism promotional campaigns by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

A-55

28 Per 10000 distribution of households who rented out some portion of the house to tourists for at least one night during last 365 days by social group for each quintile class of MPCE

A-61

29 Per 10000 distribution of households who rented out some portion of the house to tourists for at least one night during last 365 days by NCO(1-digit) for each quintile class of MPCE

A-62

Page 60: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-iv

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Visitor characteristics

Overnight trip Same-day trip Age-group Activity status Industry

category Occupation

category Level of

education Main

destination Purpose of

trip Mode of

travel MPCE class

30 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each age group

A-64

31 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

A-73

32 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

A-82

33 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

A-91

34 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each NIC section

A-100

35 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each age group

A-109

36 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each broad activity status

A-118

37 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each level of education

A-127

38 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each occupation (NCO)

A-136

39 Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each NIC section

A-145

40 Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

A-154

41 Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

A-163

42 Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose of trip separately for each State/UT of destination

A-172

43 Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by major mode of travel for each quintile class of MPCE

A-181

Page 61: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-v

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Visitor characteristics

Overnight visitor

Same-day visitor

Main destination

Activity status MPCE class

44 Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by major type of stay for each quintile class of MPCE

A-183

45 Per 1000 distribution of same day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad usual principal activity status

A-185

46

Per 1000 distribution of same day visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

A-194

47

Per 1000 distribution of same day visitor-trips by major mode of travel for each quintile class of MPCE

A-203

48 Per 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by type of stay for each quintile class of MPCE

A-205

Trip characteristics

Overnight trip Same-day trip Type of trip Leading

purpose of trip Duration Number of

places visited Main

destination

49 Number of overnight trips and number of same day trips, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each State/UT of origin

A-207

50 Per 1000 distribution of overnight trips by type of trip for each leading purpose

A-210

51 Per 1000 distribution of trips by type of trip for overnight trips and same day trips

A-213

52 Average duration (in terms of night spent) per overnight trip by starting and ending month

A-214

53 Average no. of places visited per overnight trip by main destination for each State/UT of destination

A-217

54 Per 1000 distribution of same-day trips by type of trip for each leading purpose

A-220

55 Per 1000 distribution of same day trip by leading purpose for each month

A-223

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List of Detailed Tables in Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-vi

Subject Table no.

Title Page no.

(1) (2) (3) (5) Expenditure related to Trips

Categories of expenditure

Leading purpose

Overnight trip Same-day trip MPCE class

56 Estimated total expenditure(in Rs.‘000) by categories of expenditure for each leading purpose of overnight trips

A-226

57 Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by categories of expenditure for each leading purpose

A-229

58 Estimated total expenditure(in Rs. ‘000) by categories of expenditure for each quintile class of MPCE of same-day trips

A-232

59 Average expenditure (in Rs.) per same-day trip by categories of expenditure for each quintile class of MPCE

A-234

60 Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by quintile class of MPCE and leading purpose of trip

A-236

Page 63: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-1

State/UT sample estimated (’00)

villages / blocks households persons households persons(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

Andhra Pradesh 487 5835 23555 144212 546182

Arunachal Pradesh 103 1212 5947 1853 8241Assam 375 4499 22713 48532 246384

Bihar 469 5621 28674 137147 680875

Chhattisgarh 149 1787 9258 36954 183863

Delhi 16 189 844 1962 9361Goa 16 192 880 1465 6727

Gujarat 280 3343 16666 66610 319647Haryana 144 1727 8937 31831 166574

Himachal Pradesh 160 1885 8488 13735 58532Jammu & Kashmir 127 1506 8596 11331 61750Jharkhand 184 2205 11037 40531 197872

Karnataka 303 3635 16861 76489 344735

Kerala 334 4000 17084 56478 228281

Madhya Pradesh 456 5454 28424 92671 464149

Maharashtra 519 6213 29458 123088 548708

Manipur 192 2304 12339 3052 15314Meghalaya 127 1524 8019 3911 19533Mizoram 63 756 3804 965 4671Nagaland 79 948 4914 1553 7777

Orissa 383 4590 21007 69512 303785

Punjab 158 1888 9658 33247 162649

Rajasthan 382 4571 24463 85510 446125

Sikkim 85 1016 4579 1105 4918Tamil Nadu 399 4787 18551 91995 343562

Tripura 216 2592 11392 6764 28361Uttarakhand 72 864 4236 13938 71926Uttar Pradesh 1119 13400 76237 247046 1333174West Bengal 631 7571 33762 135748 585127A & N Islands 21 252 1140 536 2211Chandigarh 8 93 409 286 838Dadra & Nagar Haveli 16 191 1032 360 1829Daman & Diu 16 192 939 208 988Lakshadweep 4 40 187 61 250Puducherry 16 192 772 853 3259

Table 1: Number of villages/blocks, house holds, total no. of persons, separate ly for each State/UTrural

all-India 8109 97074 474862 1581536 7408178

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-2

State/UT sample estimated (’00)

villages / blocks households persons households persons(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

Andhra P radesh 272 3261 12635 64188 230679

Arunachal Pradesh 40 480 2109 506 2167

Assam 88 1056 4231 6406 27124Bihar 87 1037 4881 16758 73446Chhattisgarh 64 764 3532 8462 36751Delhi 269 3101 12215 25311 102562

Goa 24 288 1277 1451 6240Gujarat 246 2915 13412 43650 187911Haryana 96 1142 5378 14511 65699Himachal P radesh 32 379 1372 1727 5594Jammu & Kashmir 63 751 3607 3301 15779Jharkhand 88 1041 4824 7626 33746Karnataka 240 2870 12121 45225 175336

Kerala 183 2181 8896 20323 77582Madhya Pradesh 245 2931 13957 30333 139814

Maharashtra 516 6134 27552 98342 398089

Manipur 96 1152 5600 1239 5789Meghalaya 48 576 2610 933 3944Mizoram 96 1152 5719 774 3782Nagaland 32 384 1721 620 2815Orissa 103 1234 4927 13224 52369Punjab 128 1535 7102 21369 88038Rajasthan 176 2102 10389 31138 144006

Sikkim 23 276 894 195 608Tamil Nadu 392 4702 16998 80690 274354

Tripura 72 864 3094 1519 5626Uttarakhand 40 479 2339 3929 19699Uttar P radesh 445 5308 27214 69097 344883

West Bengal 376 4489 17423 47100 175028

A & N Islands 16 192 776 263 1077

Chandigarh 39 450 1691 2073 7595Dadra & Nagar Haveli 16 192 679 116 406Daman & Diu 16 192 860 111 432Lakshadweep 12 144 692 41 237Puducherry 40 480 1902 2048 7966

Table 1: Numbe r of villages/blocks, households, total . of persons, se parately for each State/UTurban

all-India 4719 56234 244629 664598 2717171

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-3

State/UT sample estimated (’00)

villages / blocks households persons households persons(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

Andhra P radesh 759 9096 36190 208400 776860

Arunachal Pradesh 143 1692 8056 2359 10408Assam 463 5555 26944 54938 273508

Bihar 556 6658 33555 153905 754320

Chhattisgarh 213 2551 12790 45415 220614

Delhi 285 3290 13059 27273 111923

Goa 40 480 2157 2917 12967Gujarat 526 6258 30078 110260 507558

Haryana 240 2869 14315 46342 232273

Himachal P radesh 192 2264 9860 15462 64126Jammu & Kashmir 190 2257 12203 14632 77529Jharkhand 272 3246 15861 48157 231618

Karnataka 543 6505 28982 121714 520071

Kerala 517 6181 25980 76801 305863

Madhya Pradesh 701 8385 42381 123004 603963

Maharashtra 1035 12347 57010 221430 946796

Manipur 288 3456 17939 4290 21103Meghalaya 175 2100 10629 4844 23477Mizoram 159 1908 9523 1739 8453Nagaland 111 1332 6635 2173 10591Orissa 486 5824 25934 82736 356154

Punjab 286 3423 16760 54615 250687Rajasthan 558 6673 34852 116648 590131

Sikkim 108 1292 5473 1299 5527

Tamil Nadu 791 9489 35549 172686 617916

Tripura 288 3456 14486 8283 33987Uttarakhand 112 1343 6575 17868 91624Uttar P radesh 1564 18708 103451 316142 1678058West Bengal 1007 12060 51185 182848 760155

A & N Islands 37 444 1916 799 3287Chandigarh 47 543 2100 2359 8433Dadra & Nagar Haveli 32 383 1711 476 2235Daman & Diu 32 384 1799 319 1420Lakshadweep 16 184 879 101 487Puducherry 56 672 2674 2901 11225

Table 1: Numbe r of villages/blocks, households, total no. of persons, s parately for each State/UTrural+urban

all-India 12828 153308 719491 2246134 10125349

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-4

State/UT

sample estimated (’00)number of

house-holds reporting

over-night visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

number of house-holds

reporting over-night

visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 5671 21022 5747 20710 136469 480270 141354 481677Arunachal Pradesh 959 2142 943 2232 1303 3135 1330 3338Assam 3975 13183 4255 15152 38729 124796 44288 156295

Bihar 5150 18374 5211 16260 115935 407519 123057 372619

Chhattisgarh 1715 7862 1702 7629 34182 154966 34748 151373

Delhi 178 573 188 623 1668 5878 1961 6535Goa 182 691 175 668 1307 5549 1417 5714Gujarat 3223 13588 3302 13536 62244 253677 65892 261564

Haryana 1666 7598 1605 6861 30464 136673 30022 128457Himachal Pradesh 1877 7664 1873 7786 13709 52564 13271 53783Jammu & Kashmir 1427 6524 1483 7120 10640 47367 11188 51949Jharkhand 2114 8826 2111 7815 37539 151916 37595 136377Karnataka 3415 13686 3529 13771 67742 272250 74126 278169

Kerala 3610 13055 3955 15846 47667 161345 55596 210859

Madhya Pradesh 5368 24297 5355 21636 90181 393252 90361 348402

Maharashtra 5990 23674 5976 22309 116258 439630 116282 419272

Manipur 1798 3303 1980 5045 1852 3204 2547 6296Meghalaya 1281 3927 1457 5555 3015 8895 3639 13553Mizoram 598 1057 537 960 628 1228 603 1092Nagaland 869 2303 935 3044 1276 3098 1504 4456Orissa 4479 17039 4521 17207 66636 244554 67685 249708Punjab 1800 8341 1834 8576 30075 135329 31498 143549

Rajasthan 4529 20979 4535 18688 84164 382268 84466 344690

Sikkim 993 3279 1013 3688 1038 3367 1100 3907

Tamil Nadu 4530 15721 4713 16728 83324 280856 89937 308666

Tripura 2499 8344 2468 8108 6366 20221 6348 19769Uttarakhand 846 3449 821 3323 13191 56551 13130 56343Uttar Pradesh 13125 60167 13125 50608 237793 1033676 238749 880856

West Bengal 7229 27565 7421 28662 126588 463979 132354 496974

A & N Islands 235 916 247 1058 466 1592 522 2040Chandigarh 91 313 71 248 285 744 203 567Dadra & Nagar Haveli 150 533 173 648 233 705 336 1181Daman & Diu 124 492 192 824 95 392 208 809Lakshadweep 40 130 37 81 61 205 55 106Puducherry 184 681 189 719 773 2653 815 2944

Table 2: Number of households reporting overnight visitor(s), number of overnight visitor(s), number of households reporting same day visitor(s) and numbe r of same day visitor(s), both surveyed and estimated, se parately for each State/UT

rural

all-India 91920 361298 93679 353724 1463898 5734306 1518187 5603889

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A-5

State/UT

sample estimated (’00)number of

house-holds

reporting over-night

visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

number of house-holds

reporting over-night

visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra P radesh 3152 11253 2812 9388 59820 193864 52610 157718

Arunachal Pradesh 350 714 291 601 311 668 280 620Assam 978 2787 1004 3099 5676 16018 6011 19335Bihar 954 3186 886 2524 14643 45044 14155 36196Chhattisgarh 739 3088 721 2884 7780 30945 7672 29117Delhi 2823 9380 2838 10308 21930 74965 22767 85824Goa 263 1104 261 1092 1132 4277 1318 5444Gujarat 2751 10998 2625 9888 39291 144370 37913 137645

Haryana 1072 4651 1007 4032 13010 52374 12567 47166Himachal P radesh 374 1290 366 1231 1486 4954 1694 5005Jammu & Kashmir 717 2903 699 2873 2895 10830 2776 10413Jharkhand 1002 3954 945 3233 7057 26734 6342 22218Karnataka 2752 10500 2607 9738 42903 150311 40793 140077Kerala 1933 6582 2112 7972 16282 51091 19092 66579Madhya Pradesh 2854 12008 2689 9897 28713 114905 26690 91954Maharashtra 5628 20749 4740 16043 83660 285188 69972 220747Manipur 876 1427 1099 2678 716 1075 1155 2652Meghalaya 468 1289 495 1489 656 1697 736 2217

Mizoram 904 1550 704 1117 459 830 363 608Nagaland 363 845 378 1020 557 1275 602 1482Orissa 1199 4144 1200 3992 12544 43764 12759 42414Punjab 1449 6004 1366 5894 19224 72426 17011 66687Rajasthan 2072 8633 1918 6890 30241 116570 25607 84142Sikkim 276 800 276 763 195 539 195 535Tamil Nadu 4456 14584 4556 15128 73917 230379 77862 245468

Tripura 840 2531 772 2277 1412 4325 1319 3782Uttarakhand 462 1897 449 1768 3700 15604 3597 14962Uttar P radesh 5128 21548 4799 17621 65032 270536 61706 226089

West Bengal 4124 13679 4091 13745 38327 122979 40444 130971

A & N Islands 169 532 176 630 199 632 229 835Chandigarh 409 1237 328 938 1618 4545 1233 3683Dadra & Nagar Haveli 183 574 180 531 107 333 108 314Daman & Diu 160 619 190 777 78 260 105 377Lakshadweep 138 397 14 16 36 105 4 5Puducherry 446 1541 450 1667 1808 6295 1889 6874

Table 2: Number of households reporting ove rnight visitor(s), number of overnight visitor(s), numbe r of households reporting same day visitor(s) and numbe r of same day visitor(s), both surveyed and estimated, separate ly for each State/UT

urban

all-India 52464 188978 50044 173744 597415 2100711 569574 1910153

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A-6

State/UT*

sample estimated (’00)number of

house-holds

reporting over-night

visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

number of house-holds

reporting over-night

visitors

number of over-night

visitors

number of house-holds

reporting same day visitors

number of same day visitors

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 8823 32275 8559 30098 196289 674135 193963 639395

Arunachal Pradesh 1309 2856 1234 2833 1615 3804 1610 3958Assam 4953 15970 5259 18251 44405 140814 50299 175630

Bihar 6104 21560 6097 18784 130578 452563 137212 408815

Chhattisgarh 2454 10950 2423 10513 41963 185911 42421 180490

Delhi 3001 9953 3026 10931 23598 80843 24728 92359Goa 445 1795 436 1760 2439 9826 2734 11157Gujarat 5974 24586 5927 23424 101535 398046 103805 399210

Haryana 2738 12249 2612 10893 43475 189047 42589 175624

Himachal Pradesh 2251 8954 2239 9017 15196 57518 14965 58788Jammu & Kashmir 2144 9427 2182 9993 13535 58197 13964 62361Jharkhand 3116 12780 3056 11048 44597 178650 43937 158594

Karnataka 6167 24186 6136 23509 110645 422561 114919 418246

Kerala 5543 19637 6067 23818 63949 212437 74688 277438

Madhya Pradesh 8222 36305 8044 31533 118894 508157 117051 440355

Maharashtra 11618 44423 10716 38352 199918 724818 186254 640019Manipur 2674 4730 3079 7723 2568 4279 3702 8948Meghalaya 1749 5216 1952 7044 3671 10592 4374 15769Mizoram 1502 2607 1241 2077 1087 2058 965 1700Nagaland 1232 3148 1313 4064 1833 4373 2106 5938Orissa 5678 21183 5721 21199 79180 288319 80444 292122

Punjab 3249 14345 3200 14470 49299 207755 48509 210235

Rajasthan 6601 29612 6453 25578 114405 498838 110072 428833

Sikkim 1269 4079 1289 4451 1232 3906 1294 4442Tamil Nadu 8986 30305 9269 31856 157241 511235 167799 554134

Tripura 3339 10875 3240 10385 7777 24545 7667 23551Uttarakhand 1308 5346 1270 5091 16891 72155 16726 71305Uttar Pradesh 18253 81715 17924 68229 302825 1304212 300455 1106944West Bengal 11353 41244 11512 42407 164914 586958 172798 627945A & N Islands 404 1448 423 1688 665 2224 752 2875Chandigarh 500 1550 399 1186 1904 5290 1437 4250Dadra & Nagar Haveli 333 1107 353 1179 341 1038 443 1495Daman & Diu 284 1111 382 1601 173 653 313 1186Lakshadweep 178 527 51 97 97 311 60 111Puducherry 630 2222 639 2386 2581 8948 2704 9819

Table 2: Numbe r of households reporting overnight visitor(s), number of overnight visitor(s), numbe r of house holds reporting same day visitor(s) and numbe r of same day visitor(s), both surveye d and estimated, separately for each State/UT

rural+urban

all-India 144384 550276 143723 527468 2061312 7835017 2087761 7514043

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A-7

NCO

households reporting

overnight visitors

households reporting same day visitors

households reporting either overnight visitors or same day visitors or

both

households

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)

legislators, senior offic ials and managers 25 25 25 25professionals 21 21 21 21associate professionals 20 19 19 19clerks 9 9 9 9service workers and shop & market sales workers 48 48 48 49skilled agricultural and fishery workers 376 373 371 369craft and related trades workers 70 70 70 70plant and machine operators and assemblers 29 29 29 28elementary occupations 347 352 350 351n.r. 55 53 57 58

estd.(’00) 1463898 1518187 1542768 1581536sample 91920 93679 96041 97074

legislators, senior offic ials and managers 117 119 117 116professionals 89 90 89 88associate professionals 60 60 60 58clerks 56 56 55 55service workers and shop & market sales workers 130 130 130 130skilled agricultural and fishery workers 33 36 33 33craft and related trades workers 162 165 163 164plant and machine operators and assemblers 77 77 77 76elementary occupations 155 153 155 159n.r. 120 114 119 120

estd.(’00) 597415 569574 629841 664598sample 52464 50044 54979 56234

legislators, senior offic ials and managers 51 51 52 52professionals 41 40 41 41associate professionals 31 30 31 31clerks 23 22 23 23service workers and shop & market sales workers 72 71 72 73skilled agricultural and fishery workers 276 281 273 270craft and related trades workers 97 96 97 97plant and machine operators and assemblers 43 42 43 43elementary occupations 291 297 294 294n.r. 74 70 75 76

estd.(’00) 2061312 2087761 2172609 2246134sample 144384 143723 151020 153308

Table 3: Per 1000 distribution of households re porting ove rnight visitors and same day visitors by household occupation

all-India

rural

all 1000 1000 1000 1000

urban

all 1000 1000 1000 1000

rural+urban

all 1000 1000 1000 1000

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A- 8

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

impact in influencing the visited household to make trips proportionof

householdsvisited by

NRIs

no. of households visited by NRIs

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact

cannot say

total estimated(’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

0-20 1 215 94 434 257 1000 0.01 1770 126

20-40 28 57 224 292 399 1000 0.01 2162 134

40-60 80 42 171 526 181 1000 0.01 2580 202

60-80 84 86 75 655 101 1000 0.01 3588 348

80-100 169 33 96 656 47 1000 0.04 15772 1160

no. of households visited by NRIs

estd.(’00) 3230 1434 2881 15446 2881 25872 xxx xxx xxx

sample 260 122 198 1206 184 1970 xxx xxx xxx

0-20 140 54 64 588 155 1000 0.01 1037 86

20-40 105 36 123 613 122 1000 0.01 1229 141

40-60 39 130 90 706 35 1000 0.01 1838 202

60-80 54 166 177 589 13 1000 0.02 2712 345

80-100 250 132 138 436 44 1000 0.04 6512 748

no. of households visited by NRIs

estd.(’00) 2122 1648 1766 7094 698 13328 xxx xxx xxx

sample 208 160 187 874 93 1522 xxx xxx xxx

Table 4: Per 1000 distribution of households which were visited by NRIs by impact of the NRI visit for each quintile class of MPCE(%)all-India

ru ral

all 125 55 111 597 111 1000 0.02 25872 1970

urban

all 159 124 133 532 52 1000 0.02 13328 1522

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A- 9

social group

sample estimated(’00)number of households

number of households reporting

overnight visitors

number of households

reporting same day visitors

number of households

reporting at least one either overnight or same day visitor

number of households

number of households

reporting overnight visitors

number of households

reporting same day visitors

number of households reporting

at least one either overnight or same

day visitor(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)

ST 15573 14135 14524 15193 177576 161477 169184 172491SC 19257 18457 18700 19107 351180 326002 336402 342869OBC 37331 35566 36332 37038 664820 617206 640292 648780Others 24890 23739 24100 24680 387634 358888 371985 378303n.r. 23 23 23 23 325 325 325 325

ST 3897 3391 3022 3716 21964 19622 16986 20673SC 7821 7344 6923 7623 90242 80884 76896 85301OBC 19528 18302 18034 19228 249860 228141 225240 241147Others 24968 23411 22049 24394 302208 268549 250244 282471n.r. 20 16 16 18 323 219 208 250

ST 19470 17526 17546 18909 199541 181099 186170 193164SC 27078 25801 25623 26730 441422 406886 413298 428170OBC 56859 53868 54366 56266 914681 845347 865531 889926Others 49858 47150 46149 49074 689842 627436 622229 660774n.r. 43 39 39 41 648 544 532 574

Table 5: Numbe r of households reporting overnight visitors, me day visitors, both surveyed and estimate d, separate ly for each social groupall-India

rural

all 97074 91920 93679 96041 1581536 1463898 1518187 1542768

urban

all 56234 52464 50044 54979 664598 597415 569574 629841

ru ral+urban

all 153308 144384 143723 151020 2246134 2061312 2087761 2172609

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A- 10

social group av. no. of overnight visitors per household

number of overnight visitors no. of householdsreporting overnight visitors

no. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

ST 3 308 352 261 57 17 6 1000 161477 14135 611440 48630SC 4 295 359 248 76 14 8 1000 326002 18457 1259899 73324OBC 4 281 355 252 78 21 12 1000 617206 35566 2460962 144809Others 4 280 387 237 64 19 12 1000 358888 23739 1400690 94453n.r. 4 214 407 299 80 0 0 1000 325 23 1315 82

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

estd(’00) 420039 532050 363824 105231 27577 15177 1463898 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

26657 33227 22235 6639 1960 1202 91920xxx xxx xxx xxx

ST 2 558 262 146 22 10 2 1000 19622 3391 53359 9196SC 3 312 352 246 63 20 7 1000 80884 7344 303977 27728OBC 3 321 391 213 53 13 8 1000 228141 18302 823878 67125Others 3 352 401 186 42 14 6 1000 268549 23411 918711 84871n.r. 2 472 19 330 178 0 0 1000 219 16 785 58

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

estd(’00) 204062 230507 121301 28928 8483 4133 597415 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

17579 19963 10866 2675 880 501 52464xxx xxx xxx xxx

ST 3 335 342 249 53 16 5 1000 181099 17526 664799 57826SC 4 298 357 248 74 16 8 1000 406886 25801 1563875 101052OBC 4 292 365 242 71 19 11 1000 845347 53868 3284840 211934Others 3 311 393 215 55 17 10 1000 627436 47150 2319402 179324n.r. 3 318 251 312 119 0 0 1000 544 39 2100 140

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

estd(’00) 624101 762557 485125 134159 36059 19310 2061312 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

44236 53190 33101 9314 2840 1703 144384xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 6: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of overnight visitors in the household for e h social groupall-India

rural

all 4 287 363 249 72 19 10 1000 1463898 91920 5734306 361298

urban

all 3 342 386 203 48 14 7 1000 597415 52464 2100711 188978

rural+urban

all 3 303 370 235 65 17 9 1000 2061312 144384 7835017 550276

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A- 11

social groupaverage no. of same day visitors per household

number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day

visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

ST 4 322 342 253 60 16 6 1000 169184 14524 632463 51671SC 3 343 350 227 60 13 6 1000 336402 18700 1221371 70104OBC 4 349 337 223 64 18 9 1000 640292 36332 2350083 139010Others 4 313 374 224 61 18 11 1000 371985 24100 1398624 92862n.r. 4 146 483 294 78 0 0 1000 325 23 1348 77

no. of households reporting same day visitors

estd(’00) 509664 530692 345584 94293 25197 12757 1518187 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

30064 33239 21470 6141 1765 1000 93679xxx xxx xxx xxx

ST 2 509 306 153 23 7 2 1000 16986 3022 48242 8363SC 3 356 347 221 52 18 5 1000 76896 6923 271241 24754OBC 3 375 375 184 48 12 7 1000 225240 18034 766798 63495Others 3 384 393 164 42 12 4 1000 250244 22049 823038 77071n.r. 3 382 141 144 334 0 0 1000 208 16 834 61

no. of households reporting same day visitors

estd(’00) 216715 214725 102075 25752 7229 3079 569574 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

18241 18727 9618 2287 770 401 50044xxx xxx xxx xxx

ST 3 339 339 244 57 15 5 1000 186170 17546 680705 60034SC 3 345 349 226 59 14 6 1000 413298 25623 1492612 94858OBC 3 356 347 213 60 16 8 1000 865531 54366 3116881 202505Others 3 342 382 200 53 16 8 1000 622229 46149 2221662 169933n.r. 3 238 349 235 177 0 0 1000 532 39 2182 138

no. of households reporting same day visitors

estd(’00) 726379 745417 447659 120046 32426 15835 2087761 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample

48305 51966 31088 8428 2535 1401 143723xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 7: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of same day visitors in the household for each social groupall-India

ru ral

all 4 336 350 228 62 17 8 1000 1518187 93679 5603889 353724

urban

all 3 380 377 179 45 13 5 1000 569574 50044 1910153 173744

rural+urban

all 3 348 357 214 57 16 8 1000 2087761 143723 7514043 527468

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A- 12

social group average no. of overnight trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

ST 4 91 271 320 184 80 54 1000 177576 15573SC 4 72 247 308 194 104 74 1000 351180 19257OBC 4 72 238 303 207 103 78 1000 664820 37331Others 5 74 239 297 198 99 93 1000 387634 24890n.r. 5 0 362 186 147 37 267 1000 325 23

no. of households

estd(’00) 117638 385838 481861 315162 157604 123432 1581536 xxx xxxsample 5154 21133 30110 20578 10887 9212 97074 xxx xxx

ST 4 107 343 265 158 43 85 1000 21964 3897SC 3 104 344 294 138 71 49 1000 90242 7821OBC 4 87 297 323 167 72 54 1000 249860 19528Others 4 111 322 299 153 67 47 1000 302208 24968n.r. 2 322 445 108 14 0 111 1000 323 20

no. of households

estd(’00) 67183 210334 203409 104112 45636 33923 664598 xxx xxxsample 3770 15887 17517 10186 4895 3979 56234 xxx xxx

ST 4 92 279 314 181 76 58 1000 199541 19470SC 4 78 267 305 183 98 69 1000 441422 27078OBC 4 76 254 308 196 95 71 1000 914681 56859Others 4 90 276 298 178 85 73 1000 689842 49858n.r. 4 161 404 147 81 19 189 1000 648 43

no. of households

estd(’00) 184821 596173 685270 419274 203240 157355 2246134 xxx xxxsample 8924 37020 47627 30764 15782 13191 153308 xxx xxx

Table 8: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of overnight trips for each social groupall-India

rural

all 4 74 244 305 199 100 78 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 4 101 316 306 157 69 51 1000 664598 56234

rural+urban

all 4 82 265 305 187 90 70 1000 2246134 153308

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A- 13

social group average no. of same day trips per household

number of same day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

ST 8 47 88 180 224 173 287 1000 177576 15573SC 8 42 84 193 203 163 315 1000 351180 19257OBC 8 37 74 185 211 171 321 1000 664820 37331Others 9 40 71 168 191 168 362 1000 387634 24890n.r. 8 0 79 326 134 110 352 1000 325 23

no. of households

estd(’00) 63349 122016 287845 325493 267047 515786 1581536 xxx xxx

sample 3395 6426 16261 19433 16882 34677 97074 xxx xxx

ST 5 227 175 229 138 93 138 1000 21964 3897SC 5 148 170 218 181 124 158 1000 90242 7821OBC 6 99 140 230 225 129 177 1000 249860 19528Others 5 172 158 217 177 111 165 1000 302208 24968n.r. 3 358 335 0 181 13 112 1000 323 20

no. of households

estd(’00) 95024 102179 147851 129087 79007 111449 664598 xxx xxxsample 6190 6938 11764 11233 7770 12339 56234 xxx xxx

ST 8 67 98 185 215 165 271 1000 199541 19470SC 8 64 102 198 199 155 283 1000 441422 27078OBC 8 54 92 197 215 160 282 1000 914681 56859Others 7 98 109 190 185 143 276 1000 689842 49858n.r. 5 179 207 163 158 62 232 1000 648 43

no. of households

estd(’00) 158372 224196 435697 454580 346054 627235 2246134 xxx xxxsample 9585 13364 28025 30666 24652 47016 153308 xxx xxx

Table 9: Per 1000 distribution of households by number of same day trips for each social groupall-India

rural

all 8 40 77 182 206 169 326 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 5 143 154 222 194 119 168 1000 664598 56234

ru ral+urban

all 8 71 100 194 202 154 279 1000 2246134 153308

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A- 14

religion sample estimated(’00)no. of

householdsno. of

householdsreporting overnight visitors

no. of householdsreporting same-day

visitors

no. of households reporting at

least overnighte

either overnight or

same-day visitor

no. of households

no. of householdsreporting overnight visitors

no. of households reporting same-day

visitors

no. of households reporting at

least overnighte

either overnight or

same-day visitor

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)

Hinduism 76598 73296 74498 76010 1338906 1248187 1288626 1308581Islam 10829 10177 10414 10697 167873 151569 160143 162884Christianity 5854 5010 5298 5675 34190 28014 32090 32957Sikhism 1590 1507 1539 1573 26274 23494 24480 24778Jainism 77 74 75 76 1209 1035 1124 1130Buddhism 1179 1097 1077 1154 8529 7543 7650 8207others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 946 758 777 855 4530 4030 4049 4205

n.r 1 1 1 1 25 25 25 25

Hinduism 43105 40607 38700 42326 534870 484323 457989 509058Islam 7434 6865 6575 7198 86071 74700 73850 79640Christianity 3502 2992 2860 3357 22554 19338 20047 21451Sikhism 1003 932 924 973 10802 10190 9857 10537Jainism 341 329 301 337 3773 3552 3490 3685Buddhism 574 535 495 556 5133 4326 3499 4452others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 270 200 185 228 1388 981 838 1013

n.r 5 4 4 4 7 4 4 4

Hinduism 119703 113903 113198 118336 1873776 1732510 1746615 1817639Islam 18263 17042 16989 17895 253943 226269 233993 242524Christianity 9356 8002 8158 9032 56744 47351 52138 54409Sikhism 2593 2439 2463 2546 37076 33684 34337 35315Jainism 418 403 376 413 4982 4588 4614 4816Buddhism 1753 1632 1572 1710 13663 11869 11149 12659others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 1216 958 962 1083 5918 5011 4887 5218

n.r 6 5 5 5 32 30 30 30

Table 10: Number of households reporting overnight visitors, ame day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately fo r each religion

all-India

rural

all 97074 91920 93679 96041 1581536 1463898 1518187 1542768

urban

all 56234 52464 50044 54979 664598 597415 569574 629841

rural + urban

all 153308 144384 143723 151020 2246134 2061312 2087761 2172609

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A- 15

religion

average no. of overnight visitors per household

number of overnight visitorsno. of households

reporting overnight visitorsno. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

Hinduism 4 288 363 250 71 18 10 1000 1248187 73296 4879689 291615

Islam 4 273 364 232 91 25 14 1000 151569 10177 613230 42953Christianity 3 402 371 188 31 5 3 1000 28014 5010 90198 14089Sikhism 4 172 349 361 80 21 17 1000 23494 1507 105268 6907

Jainism 4 265 282 301 126 26 0 1000 1035 74 4617 300Buddhism 3 303 401 272 22 2 0 1000 7543 1097 26269 3459others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 3 321 334 269 70 0 6 1000 4030 758 14958 1972n.r 3 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 25 1 76 3

no. of households reporting overnight

visitors

estd(’00) 420039 532050 363824 105231 27577 15177 1463898 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 26657 33227 22235 6639 1960 1202 91920 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Hinduism 3 340 402 197 43 13 6 1000 484323 40607 1681537 145654

Islam 3 331 307 231 94 24 14 1000 74700 6865 289541 28000Christianity 2 505 308 152 29 5 0 1000 19338 2992 54970 7753Sikhism 4 227 418 285 43 24 2 1000 10190 932 40792 3840Jainism 4 161 445 346 20 20 8 1000 3552 329 15038 1432Buddhism 3 326 266 341 60 6 1 1000 4326 535 15762 1814others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 2 567 175 251 5 2 0 1000 981 200 3064 478n.r 1 696 304 0 0 0 0 1000 4 4 8 7

no. of households reporting overnight

visitors

estd(’00) 204062 230507 121301 28928 8483 4133 597415 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 17579 19963 10866 2675 880 501 52464 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 11: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by numbe r of overnight visitors in the household for each religionall-India

rural

all 4 287 363 249 72 19 10 1000 1463898 91920 5734306 361298

urban

all 3 342 386 203 48 14 7 1000 597415 52464 2100711 188978

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A- 16

religion

average no. of overnight visitors per household

number of overnight visitorsno. of households

reporting overnight visitorsno. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

Hinduism 4 303 374 235 63 17 9 1000 1732510 113903 6561225 437269

Islam 4 292 345 232 92 25 14 1000 226269 17042 902771 70953Christianity 3 444 345 173 30 5 2 1000 47351 8002 145167 21842Sikhism 4 189 370 338 69 22 13 1000 33684 2439 146060 10747Jainism 4 184 408 336 44 21 6 1000 4588 403 19655 1732Buddhism 3 311 352 297 36 3 0 1000 11869 1632 42031 5273others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 3 369 303 266 57 0 5 1000 5011 958 18022 2450n.r 3 99 901 0 0 0 0 1000 30 5 84 10

no. of households reporting overnight

visitors

estd(’00) 624101 762557 485125 134159 36059 19310 2061312 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 44236 53190 33101 9314 2840 1703 144384 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 11: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by numbe r of overnight visitors in the household for each religionall-India

rural+urban

all 3 303 370 235 65 17 9 1000 2061312 144384 7835017 550276

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A- 17

religionaverage no. of same-day visitors per household

number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day

visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

Hinduism 4 341 349 226 60 16 8 1000 1288626 74498 4725960 280958

Islam 4 317 342 226 79 21 14 1000 160143 10414 615887 42529Christianity 3 351 406 199 33 8 2 1000 32090 5298 108482 17277Sikhism 4 154 377 354 78 21 15 1000 24480 1539 109697 7043Jainism 3 468 181 144 183 24 0 1000 1124 75 4214 296Buddhism 3 431 346 193 27 2 0 1000 7650 1077 23445 3512others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 4 261 349 296 88 2 4 1000 4049 777 16129 2106n.r 3 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 25 1 76 3

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 509664 530692 345584 94293 25197 12757 1518187 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 30064 33239 21470 6141 1765 1000 93679 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Hinduism 3 379 390 176 40 11 5 1000 457989 38700 1517113 133024

Islam 3 374 314 191 86 26 10 1000 73850 6575 270930 25845Christianity 2 527 319 121 28 6 0 1000 20047 2860 55477 7901Sikhism 4 230 442 250 52 25 2 1000 9857 924 39106 3766Jainism 3 341 391 227 11 23 8 1000 3490 301 12406 1197

Buddhism 2 376 217 378 24 4 0 1000 3499 495 12060 1572others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 2 458 148 387 5 1 0 1000 838 185 3054 433n.r 1 696 304 0 0 0 0 1000 4 4 7 6

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 216715 214725 102075 25752 7229 3079 569574 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 18241 18727 9618 2287 770 401 50044 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 12: Per 1000 distributio n of househo lds by number of same day visitors in the household fo r each religionall-India

rural

all 4 336 350 228 62 17 8 1000 1518187 93679 5603889 353724

urban

all 3 380 377 179 45 13 5 1000 569574 50044 1910153 173744

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A- 18

religionaverage no. of same-day visitors per household

number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day

visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

Hinduism 3 351 359 213 55 15 7 1000 1746615 113198 6243073 413982

Islam 3 335 334 215 81 23 12 1000 233993 16989 886817 68374Christianity 3 419 373 169 31 7 1 1000 52138 8158 163960 25178Sikhism 4 176 396 324 71 22 11 1000 34337 2463 148803 10809Jainism 3 372 340 207 53 23 6 1000 4614 376 16620 1493Buddhism 3 414 306 251 26 3 0 1000 11149 1572 35505 5084others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 3 295 314 312 74 2 3 1000 4887 962 19183 2539n.r 3 99 901 0 0 0 0 1000 30 5 83 9

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 726379 745417 447659 120046 32426 15835 2087761 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 48305 51966 31088 8428 2535 1401 143723 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 12: Per 1000 distributio n of househo lds by number of same day visitors in the household fo r each religionall-India

ru ral + urban

all 3 348 357 214 57 16 8 1000 2087761 143723 7514043 527468

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A- 19

religionaverage no. of overnight trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8

Total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

Hinduism 4 68 241 308 203 102 78 1000 1338906 76598Islam 4 97 277 289 177 83 76 1000 167873 10829Christianity 4 181 264 282 145 62 66 1000 34190 5854Sikhism 5 106 106 259 260 157 113 1000 26274 1590Jainism 4 144 233 207 289 107 22 1000 1209 77

Buddhism 5 116 323 306 96 65 94 1000 8529 1179others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 4 110 253 204 218 158 56 1000 4530 946n.r 1 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 25 1

no. of households

estd(’00) 117638 385838 481861 315162 157604 123432 1581536 xxx xxx

sample 5154 21133 30110 20578 10887 9212 97074 xxx xxx

Hinduism 4 95 314 309 161 70 52 1000 534870 43105Islam 3 132 319 305 141 62 41 1000 86071 7434Christianity 3 143 349 279 113 54 62 1000 22554 3502Sikhism 4 57 290 283 186 105 80 1000 10802 1003Jainism 4 59 331 253 176 92 89 1000 3773 341Buddhism 3 157 424 301 74 21 23 1000 5133 574others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 4 293 339 99 207 6 55 1000 1388 270n.r 2 402 232 184 182 0 0 1000 7 5

no. of households

estd(’00) 67183 210334 203409 104112 45636 33923 664598 xxx xxx

sample 3770 15887 17517 10186 4895 3979 56234 xxx xxx

Table 13: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by number of overnight trips for each religion

all-India

rural

all 4 74 244 305 199 100 78 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 4 101 316 306 157 69 51 1000 664598 56234

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A- 20

religionaverage no. of overnight trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8

Total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

Hinduism 4 75 262 309 191 93 70 1000 1873776 119703

Islam 4 109 291 295 165 76 64 1000 253943 18263Christianity 4 166 298 281 133 59 64 1000 56744 9356Sikhism 5 91 159 266 238 142 103 1000 37076 2593Jainism 4 79 307 241 203 96 73 1000 4982 418Buddhism 4 131 360 304 88 49 67 1000 13663 1753others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 4 153 273 179 216 123 55 1000 5918 1216n.r 1 88 832 40 40 0 0 1000 32 6

no. of households

estd(’00) 184821 596173 685270 419274 203240 157355 2246134 xxx xxx

sample 8924 37020 47627 30764 15782 13191 153308 xxx xxx

Table 13: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by number of overnight trips for each religion

all-India

ru ral+urban

all 4 82 265 305 187 90 70 1000 2246134 153308

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A- 21

religionaverage no. of same-day trips per household

number of same-day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

Hinduism 8 38 74 184 210 170 325 1000 1338906 76598Islam 8 46 104 175 192 169 314 1000 167873 10829Christianity 9 61 80 166 181 150 362 1000 34190 5854Sikhism 10 68 37 108 148 171 469 1000 26274 1590Jainism 6 70 221 215 32 175 288 1000 1209 77

Buddhism 8 103 148 273 138 78 259 1000 8529 1179others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 6 106 113 212 242 120 207 1000 4530 946n.r 2 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 25 1

no. of households

estd(’00) 63349 122016 287845 325493 267047 515786 1581536 xxx xxx

sample 3395 6426 16261 19433 16882 34677 97074 xxx xxx

Hinduism 5 144 151 222 195 124 165 1000 534870 43105Islam 5 142 160 219 213 109 157 1000 86071 7434Christianity 6 111 227 231 162 73 195 1000 22554 3502Sikhism 8 87 90 211 152 111 347 1000 10802 1003Jainism 8 75 203 194 146 114 268 1000 3773 341Buddhism 4 318 145 323 115 44 54 1000 5133 574others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 4 397 33 262 23 52 233 1000 1388 270n.r 3 402 232 0 184 182 0 1000 7 5

no. of households

estd(’00) 95024 102179 147851 129087 79007 111449 664598 xxx xxx

sample 6190 6938 11764 11233 7770 12339 56234 xxx xxx

Table 14: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of same-day trips for each religion

all-India

ru ral

all 8 40 77 182 206 169 326 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 5 143 154 222 194 119 168 1000 664598 56234

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A- 22

religionaverage no. of same-day trips per household

number of same-day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

Hinduism 8 68 96 195 206 157 279 1000 1873776 119703

Islam 7 79 123 190 199 148 260 1000 253943 18263Christianity 8 81 138 192 174 119 296 1000 56744 9356Sikhism 10 74 52 138 149 154 433 1000 37076 2593Jainism 8 74 207 199 118 129 273 1000 4982 418Buddhism 6 184 147 292 129 66 182 1000 13663 1753others ( incl. Zoroastrianism) 6 174 94 224 191 104 213 1000 5918 1216n.r 2 88 832 0 40 40 0 1000 32 6

no. of households

estd(’00) 158372 224196 435697 454580 346054 627235 2246134 xxx xxx

sample 9585 13364 28025 30666 24652 47016 153308 xxx xxx

Table 14: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of same-day trips for each religion

all-India

rural +urban

all 8 71 100 194 202 154 279 1000 2246134 153308

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A- 23

household type sample estimated(’00)number of househo lds

number of households reporting overnight visitors

number of households

reporting same day visitors

number of households reporting at least one

either overnight or same day visitor

number of households

number of households reporting overnight

visitors

number of households

reporting same day visitors

number of households reporting at least one

either overnight or same day visitor

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)self employed in non-agriculture 14931 14245 14524 14831 222655 205844 214143 217444

agricultural labour 19894 18722 19245 19671 426509 387323 408764 413587other labour 10417 9831 10175 10341 173863 160917 169545 171354

self employed in agriculture 37820 35940 36492 37377 562615 531493 545076 551378

others 13988 13162 13222 13798 195383 177849 180248 188498

n.r 24 20 21 23 510 472 411 507

household type sample estimated(’00)no. of

householdsno. of

households reporting overnight visitors

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

no. of households reporting atleast overnighte overnight

or same-day visitor

no. of households

no. of households reporting overnight

visitors

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

no. of households reporting atleast

overnighte overnight or same-day visitor

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)self employed 21275 19913 19445 20862 229800 208508 205284 219602

regular wage /salary earning 22704 21324 19851 22203 262022 235163 217816 247240

casual labour 6650 6100 5976 6477 87012 76494 75728 81954others 5580 5103 4749 5413 85526 77015 70512 80810n.r 25 24 23 24 239 236 235 236

Table 15-R: Number of households reporting overnight visitors, same day visitors, both surveyed and estimated, separately for each household typeall-India rural

all 97074 91920 93679 96041 1581536 1463898 1518187 1542768

Table 15-U: Number of households repo rting overnight visito rs, day visito rs, both surveyed and estimated, separately fo r each househo ld type

all-India urban

all 56234 52464 50044 54979 664598 597415 569574 629841

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A- 24

household type number of overnight visitors no. of householdsreporting overnight visitors

no. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

self employed in novernight-agriculture 248 376 271 75 22 8 1000 205844 14245 838107 57726agricultural labour 304 392 232 55 13 4 1000 387323 18722 1429542 70013other labour 238 403 269 71 12 7 1000 160917 9831 639736 39591self employed in agriculture 250 341 270 94 26 18 1000 531493 35940 2263299 150714

others 449 319 176 38 12 6 1000 177849 13162 562324 43179n.r 532 246 205 0 4 12 1000 472 20 1299 75

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

estd(’00) 420039 532050 363824 105231 27577 15177 1463898 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 26657 33227 22235 6639 1960 1202 91920 xxx xxx xxx xxx

household type number of overnight visitors no. of householdsreporting overnight visitors

no. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

self employed 229 403 265 66 25 12 1000 208508 19913 855635 81209regular wage /salary earning 308 439 194 44 10 5 1000 235163 21324 822836 74195casual labour 339 382 213 50 10 6 1000 76494 6100 272120 21980others 754 180 52 11 1 1 1000 77015 5103 148852 11485n.r 15 239 413 329 4 0 1000 236 24 1269 109

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

estd(’00) 204062 230507 121301 28928 8483 4133 597415 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 17579 19963 10866 2675 880 501 52464 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 16-R: Per 1000 distributiovernight of households by numbe r of overnight visitors in the household for e ch household typeall-India rural

all 287 363 249 72 19 10 1000 1463898 91920 5734306 361298

Table 16-U: Per 1000 distributiovernight of households by numbe r of overnight visitors in the household for e ch household typeall-India urban

all 342 386 203 48 14 7 1000 597415 52464 2100711 188978

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A- 25

household type number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

self employed in non-agriculture 287 373 248 64 20 8 1000 214143 14524 827711 56667agricultural labour 354 371 212 49 10 4 1000 408764 19245 1427000 68922other labour 252 398 264 67 13 5 1000 169545 10175 661024 40344self employed in agriculture 321 322 242 78 22 14 1000 545076 36492 2132693 144400

others 473 312 160 38 13 5 1000 180248 13222 554180 43311n.r 535 156 286 4 5 14 1000 411 21 1282 80

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 509664 530692 345584 94293 25197 12757 1518187 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 30064 33239 21470 6141 1765 1000 93679 xxx xxx xxx xxx

household type number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) Sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

self employed 294 392 225 58 22 9 1000 205284 19445 780955 75249regular wage /salary earning 343 434 168 42 9 3 1000 217816 19851 729258 66697casual labour 373 355 212 48 6 6 1000 75728 5976 261167 20745others 755 182 45 13 3 2 1000 70512 4749 137799 10969n.r 305 231 139 291 34 0 1000 235 23 975 84

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 216715 214725 102075 25752 7229 3079 569574 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 18241 18727 9618 2287 770 401 50044 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 17-R: Per 1000 distribution of households by numbe r of same day visitors in the house hold for e ach househo typeall-India rural

all 336 350 228 62 17 8 1000 1518187 93679 5603889 353724

Table 17-U: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of same day visitors in the household for each house hold typeall-India urban

all 380 377 179 45 13 5 1000 569574 50044 1910153 173744

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A- 26

all-India ruralhousehold type average no. of

overnight trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

self employed in non-agriculture 5 76 246 292 195 101 91 1000 222655 14931agricultural labour 4 92 281 316 181 80 50 1000 426509 19894other labour 4 74 236 308 208 105 69 1000 173863 10417self employed in agriculture 5 55 202 311 220 119 93 1000 562615 37820others 4 90 288 276 178 79 89 1000 195383 13988n.r 3 75 498 350 65 0 11 1000 510 24

no. of households estd(’00) 117638 385838 481861 315162 157604 123432 1581536 xxx xxxsample 5154 21133 30110 20578 10887 9212 97074 xxx xxx

all-India urban

household typeaverage no. of overnight trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

self employed 4 93 290 308 165 83 62 1000 229800 21275regular wage /salary earning 4 103 327 312 151 61 45 1000 262022 22704casual labour 3 121 374 279 140 48 37 1000 87012 6650others 4 100 296 310 167 74 53 1000 85526 5580n.r 4 12 320 426 22 36 184 1000 239 25

no. of households estd(’00) 67183 210334 203409 104112 45636 33923 664598 xxx xxxsample 3770 15887 17517 10186 4895 3979 56234 xxx xxx

Table 18-R: Per 1000 distributio n of households by number of overnight trips fo r each household type

all 4 74 244 305 199 100 78 1000 1581536 97074

Table 18-U: Per 1000 distribution of households by number o f overnight trips fo r each household type

all 4 101 316 306 157 69 51 1000 664598 56234

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A- 27

all-India ruralhousehold type average no.

of same-day trips per household

number of same-day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8

total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)self employed in non-agriculture 9 38 70 173 199 163 357 1000 222655 14931agricultural labour 7 42 97 219 220 164 259 1000 426509 19894other labour 9 25 69 162 201 184 360 1000 173863 10417self employed in agriculture 9 31 57 165 207 177 363 1000 562615 37820others 8 77 107 179 183 149 304 1000 195383 13988n.r. 5 194 137 229 175 236 30 1000 510 24

no. of households estd(’00) 63349 122016 287845 325493 267047 515786 1581536 xxx xxxsample 3395 6426 16261 19433 16882 34677 97074 xxx xxx

all-India urbanhousehold type average no.

of same-day trips perhousehold

number of same-day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8

total estd (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)self employed 6 107 116 223 201 136 217 1000 229800 21275regular wage /salary earning 5 169 154 213 194 114 157 1000 262022 22704casual labour 5 130 165 250 200 119 136 1000 87012 6650others 4 176 246 221 171 85 101 1000 85526 5580n.r 6 15 16 595 138 18 220 1000 239 25

no. of households estd(’00) 95024 102179 147851 129087 79007 111449 664598 xxx xxxsample 6190 6938 11764 11233 7770 12339 56234 xxx xxx

Table 19-R: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by numbe r of same -day trips for each household type

all 8 40 77 182 206 169 326 1000 1581536 97074

Table 19-U: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of same-day trips for each household type

all 5 143 154 222 194 119 168 1000 664598 56234

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A- 28

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

sample estimated(’00)no. of

householdsno. of

households reporting overnight visitors

no. of households reporting same-day

visitors

no. of households reporting at least one overnight visitor or same-day visitors

no. ofhouseholds

no. of households reporting overnight visitors

no. of households

reporting same-day visitors

no. of households reporting at least one overnight visitor or same-day visitors

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)

0-20 13078 12343 12561 12871 261373 237942 247014 251022

20-40 15382 14648 14839 15223 290057 270259 276549 282703

40-60 17625 16639 17067 17436 302385 280454 291153 295890

60-80 21711 20488 20921 21495 336113 310870 323682 328360

80-100 29278 27802 28291 29016 391607 364373 379789 384792

0-20 6921 6323 6236 6671 105083 92547 92732 97902

20-40 9170 8425 8438 8958 114066 102247 103523 109185

40-60 11249 10338 10170 10951 128192 114054 111314 120647

60-80 13357 12504 11799 13085 138436 124846 115837 131304

80-100 15537 14874 13401 15314 178821 163720 146169 170805

Table 20: Number of house holds re porting overnight visitors, day visitors, both surveye d and estimated, separately for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India

rural

all 97074 91920 93679 96041 1581536 1463898 1518187 1542768

urban

all 56234 52464 50044 54979 664598 597415 569574 629841

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A- 29

quintile-class in MPCE number of overnight visitors no. of households

reporting overnightvisitors

no. of overnight visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

0-20 226 275 320 128 32 19 1000 237942 12343 1082334 57913

20-40 242 347 289 85 22 15 1000 270259 14648 1134843 64189

40-60 238 374 276 82 21 10 1000 280454 16639 1154954 69366

60-80 295 397 233 52 15 7 1000 310870 20488 1165519 77508

80-100 391 397 164 34 9 4 1000 364373 27802 1196657 92322

no. of households reporting overnightvisitors

estd(’00) 420039 532050 363824 105231 27577 15177 1463898 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 26657 33227 22235 6639 1960 1202 91920 xxx xxx xxx xxx

0-20 281 274 296 106 27 16 1000 92547 6323 390107 28387

20-40 243 392 265 68 22 10 1000 102247 8425 411935 34554

40-60 303 404 224 43 18 8 1000 114054 10338 416323 38664

60-80 330 432 186 39 8 5 1000 124846 12504 429522 43661

80-100 473 398 110 15 4 1 1000 163720 14874 452825 43712

no. of households reporting overnightvisitors

estd(’00) 204062 230507 121301 28928 8483 4133 597415 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 17579 19963 10866 2675 880 501 52464 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 44236 53190 33101 9314 2840 1703 144384 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 21: Per 1000 distribution of households by number of overnight visitors in the house hold for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India

rural

all 287 363 249 72 19 10 1000 1463898 91920 5734306 361298

urban

all 342 386 203 48 14 7 1000 597415 52464 2100711 188978

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A- 30

quintile-class in MPCE (%) number of same day visitors no. of householdsreporting same day

visitors

no. of same day visitors

1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11+ total estd (’00) sample estd (’00) sample(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

0-20 311 257 284 106 27 15 1000 247014 12561 1015490 53689

20-40 314 327 255 74 19 11 1000 276549 14839 1071432 60266

40-60 298 357 245 70 20 9 1000 291153 17067 1124094 67728

60-80 336 378 221 46 13 7 1000 323682 20921 1160953 77669

80-100 396 396 163 33 8 3 1000 379789 28291 1231920 94372

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 509664 530692 345584 94293 25197 12757 1518187 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 30064 33239 21470 6141 1765 1000 93679 xxx xxx xxx xxx

0-20 368 269 244 85 22 13 1000 92732 6236 350110 25639

20-40 297 377 235 64 20 7 1000 103523 8438 391453 32810

40-60 346 401 187 43 18 5 1000 111314 10170 386728 36642

60-80 360 431 162 35 7 4 1000 115837 11799 383725 39750

80-100 489 385 106 17 2 1 1000 146169 13401 398137 38903

no. of households reporting same-day visitors

estd(’00) 216715 214725 102075 25752 7229 3079 569574 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample 18241 18727 9618 2287 770 401 50044 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 22: Pe r 1000 distribution of households by numbe r of same day visitors in the household for each quintile class of MPCE(%)all-India

rural

all 336 350 228 62 17 8 1000 1518187 93679 5603889 353724

urban

all 380 377 179 45 13 5 1000 569574 50044 1910153 173744

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A- 31

quintile-class in MPCE(%)

average no. of overnight

trips per household

number of overnight trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8 total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

0-20 4 90 264 295 180 98 73 1000 261373 13078

20-40 4 68 264 317 192 92 67 1000 290057 15382

40-60 4 73 232 304 215 112 65 1000 302385 17625

60-80 4 75 248 307 201 94 75 1000 336113 21711

80-100 5 70 222 301 204 102 102 1000 391607 29278

no. of households

estd(’00) 117638 385838 481861 315162 157604 123432 1581536 xxx xxx

sample 5154 21133 30110 20578 10887 9212 97074 xxx xxx

0-20 4 119 302 307 143 73 57 1000 105083 6921

20-40 4 104 306 313 163 73 43 1000 114066 9170

40-60 4 110 327 298 149 67 48 1000 128192 11249

60-80 4 98 317 317 158 62 48 1000 138436 13357

80-100 4 84 324 298 166 71 57 1000 178821 15537

no. of households

estd(’00) 67183 210334 203409 104112 45636 33923 664598 xxx xxx

sample 3770 15887 17517 10186 4895 3979 56234 xxx xxx

Table 23: Per 1000 distribution of house holds by number of overnight trips for each quintile class of MPCE (%)all-India

rural

all 4 74 244 305 199 100 78 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 4 101 316 306 157 69 51 1000 664598 56234

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A- 32

quintile-class in MPCE(%) average no. of same-day trips per household

number of same-day trips no. of households

no trip 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 more than 8

total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

0-20 8 55 90 193 201 169 293 1000 261373 13078

20-40 8 47 86 203 209 161 293 1000 290057 15382

40-60 8 37 71 173 209 184 325 1000 302385 17625

60-80 8 37 74 184 211 172 322 1000 336113 21711

80-100 9 30 69 164 200 160 377 1000 391607 29278

no. of households

estd(’00) 63349 122016 287845 325493 267047 515786 1581536 xxx xxx

sample 3395 6426 16261 19433 16882 34677 97074 xxx xxx

0-20 5 118 177 232 204 120 150 1000 105083 6921

20-40 6 92 138 239 218 139 173 1000 114066 9170

40-60 6 132 139 219 213 132 165 1000 128192 11249

60-80 5 163 134 220 187 116 179 1000 138436 13357

80-100 5 183 175 211 166 98 168 1000 178821 15537

no. of households

estd(’00) 95024 102179 147851 129087 79007 111449 664598 xxx xxx

sample 6190 6938 11764 11233 7770 12339 56234 xxx xxx

Table 24: Per 1000 distribution o f households by number of same-day trips for each quintile class o f MPCE(%)

all-India

rural

all 8 40 77 182 206 169 326 1000 1581536 97074

urban

all 5 143 154 222 194 119 168 1000 664598 56234

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A- 33

NCOproportion (per thousand) of households who are aware of Incredible India campaign

quintile class of MPCE no. of households, who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’

campaign00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. total estd no.

(’00)sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers 121 48 24 187 120 622 0 1000 4684 473professionals 235 21 57 55 197 670 0 1000 7775 1143associate professionals 327 24 51 118 200 606 0 1000 9846 1216clerks 280 9 36 103 122 730 0 1000 4035 479service workers and shop & market sales workers 97 28 116 109 173 574 0 1000 7484 806skilled agricultural and fishery workers 60 105 120 158 247 369 0 1000 35286 3412craft and related trades workers 39 22 157 249 140 432 0 1000 4272 418plant and machine operators and assemblers 83 34 99 78 262 527 0 1000 3740 300elementary occupations 17 154 153 201 222 271 0 1000 9191 867n.r 65 20 39 52 151 737 0 1000 6012 571

estd no. of households who are aware (’00) 6336 9005 12796 19145 45187 0 92469 xxx xxx

sample no. of households who are aware 468 737 1219 2156 5188 0 9768 xxx xxx

Table 25(I): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by quintile class o f MPCE for each occupatio n (NCO) gro up all-India rural

all 58 69 97 138 207 489 0 1000 92469 9768

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A- 34

NCOproportion (per thousand) of households who are aware of Incredible India campaign

quintile class of MPCE no. of households, who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’

campaign 00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. total estd no.

(’00)sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers 286 18 43 115 202 623 0 1000 22113 2336professionals 416 11 36 69 203 681 0 1000 24312 2703associate professionals 369 11 64 155 281 488 0 1000 14324 1716clerks 343 14 45 121 260 560 0 1000 12453 1335service workers and shop & market sales workers 145 67 109 206 319 298 0 1000 12556 1640skilled agricultural and fishery workers 111 106 133 284 211 265 0 1000 2470 366craft and related trades workers 86 101 100 226 305 268 0 1000 9389 938plant and machine operators and assemblers 148 66 253 201 169 312 0 1000 7486 720elementary occupations 40 192 233 169 220 186 0 1000 4177 518n.r 252 11 30 77 195 687 0 1000 20016 1492

estd no. of households who are aware (’00) 4599 9422 17112 30166 68141 0 129440 xxx xxx

sample no. of households who are aware 544 1150 1967 3382 6799 0 13842 xxx xxx

Table 25(I): Pe r 1000 distribution of households who are aware the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by quintile class of MPCE for each occupation (NCO) group all-India urban

all 195 36 73 132 233 526 0 1000 129440 13842

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A- 35

NCOproportion (per thousand) of households who are aware ofother tourism promotionalcampaigns

quintile class of MPCE no. of households, who are aware of other tourism promotional campaigns

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. total estd no.(’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers 122 4 28 85 195 689 0 1000 4741 594professionals 277 17 47 48 231 656 0 1000 9181 1219associate professionals 352 21 45 94 178 661 0 1000 10594 1278clerks 318 7 32 130 164 666 0 1000 4574 517service workers and shop & market sales workers 143 51 107 140 187 516 0 1000 11015 1081skilled agricultural and fishery workers 77 66 114 177 242 402 0 1000 45032 4254craft and related trades workers 87 61 104 186 188 462 0 1000 9584 753plant and machine operators and assemblers 144 31 153 91 248 476 0 1000 6471 472elementary occupations 37 140 187 186 228 259 0 1000 20369 1637n.r 84 18 31 66 128 757 0 1000 7745 731

estd no. of households who are aware (’00) 7756 13540 18607 27739 61857 0 129500 xxx xxx

sample no. of households who are aware 538 994 1663 2878 6545 0 12618 xxx xxx

Table 25(O): Per 1000 distribution of househo lds who are aware of o ther to urism pro motional campaigns by quintile class of MPCE for each occupation (NCO) group

all-India rural

all 82 60 105 144 214 478 0 1000 129500 12618

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A- 36

NCOproportion (per thousand) of households who are aware of other tourism promotional campaigns

quintile class of MPCE no. of households, who are aware of other tourism promotional campaigns

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. total estd no.(’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers 231 24 48 126 203 599 0 1000 17815 1862professionals 326 20 68 89 182 640 0 1000 19065 2105associate professionals 306 17 54 158 274 496 0 1000 11879 1442clerks 270 12 84 130 278 496 0 1000 9812 1058service workers and shop & market sales workers 169 56 105 356 268 215 0 1000 14605 1518skilled agricultural and fishery workers 150 66 190 310 278 156 0 1000 3317 403craft and related trades workers 119 73 176 185 361 205 0 1000 12981 1060plant and machine operators and assemblers 164 56 273 217 235 219 0 1000 8301 744elementary occupations 55 204 394 137 155 110 0 1000 5840 640n.r 203 13 44 75 242 626 0 1000 16122 1432

estd no. of households who are aware (’00) 5006 13356 19544 29375 52608 0 119889 xxx xxx

sample no. of households who are aware 537 1256 2026 3221 5306 0 12346 xxx xxx

Table 25(O): Per 1000 distribution of househo lds who are aware of o ther to urism pro motional campaigns by quintile class of MPCE for each occupation (NCO) group

all-India urban

all 180 42 111 163 245 439 0 1000 119889 12346

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A- 37

State/UT proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra P radesh 25 76 0 648 0 13 262 1 1000 3650 204Arunachal P radesh 176 17 94 698 0 78 62 51 1000 325 255Assam 109 121 158 463 2 0 252 4 1000 5288 759Bihar 42 278 302 225 0 0 138 57 1000 5723 265Chhattisgarh 100 55 350 487 1 22 83 2 1000 3698 245Delhi 232 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 454 30Goa 192 32 0 553 1 0 414 0 1000 282 24Gujarat 73 175 13 808 0 0 2 2 1000 4852 291Haryana 20 122 3 875 0 0 0 1 1000 626 34Himachal Pradesh 106 42 0 853 1 4 98 2 1000 1457 177Jammu & Kashmir 134 42 76 472 0 0 390 20 1000 1520 227Jharkhand 66 89 188 398 0 0 325 0 1000 2673 193Karnataka 42 514 7 435 0 0 44 0 1000 3197 171Kerala 133 155 18 527 0 3 258 38 1000 7539 506Madhya Pradesh 50 94 51 705 0 1 119 31 1000 4662 322Maharashtra 61 59 37 835 7 20 19 24 1000 7452 428Manipur 145 48 228 356 0 45 320 3 1000 444 373Meghalaya 178 207 52 294 0 89 312 46 1000 696 328Mizoram 135 77 166 756 0 0 0 0 1000 130 114Nagaland 408 109 30 599 0 30 213 19 1000 634 432Orissa 52 38 63 694 0 3 191 12 1000 3611 387Punjab 23 6 0 897 0 0 0 97 1000 749 54Rajasthan 32 224 20 518 38 0 199 1 1000 2703 180Sikkim 201 22 9 531 0 47 390 1 1000 222 278Tamil Nadu 49 207 73 514 13 5 184 3 1000 4481 302

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT ru ral

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A- 38

State/UT proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Tripura 515 17 51 597 3 13 116 203 1000 3486 1543Uttarakhand 65 22 0 958 0 0 20 0 1000 909 43Uttar Pradesh 34 261 70 294 0 6 335 33 1000 8504 596West Bengal 90 119 61 498 0 28 265 28 1000 12219 861A & N Islands 177 76 0 509 0 53 362 0 1000 95 48Chandigarh 12 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 3 5Dadra & Nagar Haveli 94 0 6 994 0 0 0 0 1000 34 27Daman & Diu 52 743 0 235 0 0 21 0 1000 11 24Lakshadweep 95 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 6 3Puducherry 159 60 0 277 0 0 664 0 1000 135 39

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 13420 7537 50620 238 932 17194 2528 92469 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1130 710 5481 26 143 1835 443 9768 xxx xxx

.

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT ru ral

all-India 58 145 82 547 3 10 186 27 1000 92469 9768

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A- 39

State/UT proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra P radesh 72 203 2 474 15 10 275 20 1000 4631 347Arunachal P radesh 205 50 50 706 0 27 163 4 1000 104 119Assam 318 181 34 617 13 3 131 22 1000 2039 438Bihar 159 193 24 309 4 0 461 8 1000 2668 203Chhattisgarh 205 12 123 736 8 1 106 13 1000 1733 227Delhi 318 62 20 885 13 5 15 1 1000 8045 1007Goa 421 100 0 893 3 0 4 0 1000 610 98Gujarat 207 128 37 733 0 0 101 1 1000 9036 587Haryana 116 88 0 887 0 0 24 1 1000 1684 142Himachal Pradesh 175 76 0 761 4 0 159 0 1000 303 110Jammu & Kashmir 158 18 132 637 8 0 156 49 1000 521 179Jharkhand 272 156 15 488 1 15 322 2 1000 2074 305Karnataka 212 349 4 462 22 0 160 1 1000 9603 549Kerala 212 157 5 582 16 4 232 5 1000 4303 512Madhya Pradesh 235 91 28 737 1 3 132 8 1000 7122 852Maharashtra 208 61 28 804 31 2 64 9 1000 20438 1463Manipur 223 17 155 391 0 29 404 5 1000 276 301Meghalaya 577 41 20 467 0 2 470 0 1000 538 358Mizoram 236 60 105 813 0 1 19 1 1000 183 311Nagaland 610 106 32 541 13 21 261 26 1000 378 277Orissa 292 145 19 660 14 1 158 2 1000 3859 307Punjab 93 17 4 951 1 0 21 6 1000 1992 202Rajasthan 164 136 4 632 15 13 199 0 1000 5118 340Sikkim 482 47 0 265 0 2 686 0 1000 94 180Tamil Nadu 191 206 30 507 78 16 161 3 1000 15373 934Tripura 746 16 5 774 2 0 157 45 1000 1133 700

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT urban

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A- 40

State/UT proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Uttarakhand 215 121 0 681 2 0 87 108 1000 844 90Uttar Pradesh 177 120 26 715 3 5 127 4 1000 12264 961West Bengal 237 155 5 617 5 5 197 16 1000 11156 1269A & N Islands 162 0 0 510 0 10 480 0 1000 43 41Chandigarh 276 61 0 824 4 0 21 90 1000 573 129Dadra & Nagar Haveli 343 85 0 915 0 0 0 0 1000 40 60Daman & Diu 194 13 0 900 78 0 10 0 1000 22 46

Lakshadweep222 15 3 256 0 174 553 0 1000 9 57

Puducherry 307 165 53 202 0 0 557 23 1000 630 141

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 18006 2846 85619 2594 661 18706 1008 129440 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1536 326 9258 108 107 2348 159 13842 xxx xxx

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT urban

all-India 195 139 22 661 20 5 145 8 1000 129440 13842

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A- 41

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra P radesh 40 147 1 551 8 11 269 12 1000 8281 551Arunachal P radesh 182 25 83 700 0 65 86 40 1000 429 374Assam 133 137 123 506 5 1 218 9 1000 7326 1197Bihar 55 251 213 252 1 0 241 42 1000 8390 468Chhattisgarh 120 41 278 567 3 15 90 6 1000 5431 472Delhi 312 59 19 891 12 5 14 0 1000 8500 1037Goa 306 78 0 786 2 0 134 0 1000 892 122Gujarat 126 144 28 759 0 0 66 1 1000 13888 878Haryana 50 97 1 883 0 0 18 1 1000 2310 176Himachal Pradesh 114 48 0 837 2 3 108 1 1000 1760 287Jammu & Kashmir 139 36 90 514 2 0 331 27 1000 2041 406Jharkhand 99 119 112 437 0 7 324 1 1000 4747 498Karnataka 105 391 5 456 17 0 131 1 1000 12799 720Kerala 154 156 13 547 6 3 249 26 1000 11842 1018Madhya Pradesh 96 92 37 725 1 2 127 17 1000 11784 1174Maharashtra 126 61 30 812 25 7 52 13 1000 27890 1891Manipur 168 36 200 369 0 39 352 4 1000 720 674Meghalaya 255 135 38 369 0 51 381 26 1000 1234 686Mizoram 180 67 131 790 0 1 11 1 1000 313 425Nagaland 466 108 31 578 5 27 231 21 1000 1012 709Orissa 90 93 40 676 7 2 174 6 1000 7471 694Punjab 50 14 3 936 1 0 15 31 1000 2742 256Rajasthan 67 167 9 593 23 8 199 1 1000 7821 520Sikkim 243 30 6 452 0 33 478 1 1000 316 458Tamil Nadu 115 206 40 509 63 13 166 3 1000 19854 1236Tripura 558 17 39 640 3 10 126 165 1000 4620 2243

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT rural+urban

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A- 42

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Uttarakhand 98 70 0 825 1 0 52 52 1000 1753 133Uttar Pradesh 66 178 44 543 1 6 212 16 1000 20768 1557West Bengal 128 136 34 555 3 17 233 22 1000 23375 2130A & N Islands 172 52 0 509 0 40 399 0 1000 137 89Chandigarh 244 60 0 825 4 0 21 90 1000 576 134Dadra & Nagar Haveli 155 46 3 951 0 0 0 0 1000 74 87Daman & Diu 101 258 0 677 52 0 14 0 1000 32 70Lakshadweep 146 9 2 546 0 106 337 0 1000 15 60Puducherry 264 146 43 215 0 0 576 19 1000 765 180

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 31425 10383 136239 2832 1593 35900 3536 221908 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 2666 1036 14739 134 250 4183 602 23610 xxx xxx

Table 26(I): Per 1000 distribution o f households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by source separately for each State/UT rural+urban

all-India 99 142 47 614 13 7 162 16 1000 221908 23610

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A- 43

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) ofhouseholds who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 85 138 4 309 0 98 261 190 1000 12305 550Arunachal Pradesh 160 79 104 554 15 127 57 64 1000 297 214Assam 161 76 284 184 0 26 422 8 1000 7805 869Bihar 79 205 533 147 0 0 109 7 1000 10800 436Chhattisgarh 63 16 435 200 0 150 198 1 1000 2334 207Delhi 118 7 0 993 0 0 0 0 1000 232 14Goa 254 178 0 444 0 79 299 0 1000 373 35Gujarat 76 310 31 363 0 191 39 67 1000 5075 298Haryana 16 614 0 326 0 9 50 0 1000 523 25Himachal Pradesh 83 446 49 289 0 36 163 17 1000 1138 153Jammu & Kashmir 279 21 304 319 0 31 282 42 1000 3165 403Jharkhand 53 272 44 41 0 92 509 42 1000 2168 140Karnataka 61 456 24 284 0 126 99 11 1000 4703 248Kerala 368 169 17 367 0 51 365 32 1000 20765 1473Madhya Pradesh 34 50 114 489 35 88 149 75 1000 3134 199Maharashtra 63 209 50 344 0 3 384 9 1000 7780 405Manipur 166 200 301 167 0 34 243 54 1000 507 453Meghalaya 241 174 138 73 0 305 238 72 1000 944 444Mizoram 128 48 72 878 0 0 0 2 1000 124 109Nagaland 493 103 9 131 2 548 193 17 1000 766 522Orissa 86 133 52 412 0 157 204 43 1000 5962 543Punjab 7 18 0 982 0 0 0 0 1000 239 21Rajasthan 32 456 2 323 0 8 209 2 1000 2774 180Sikkim 495 56 35 31 0 237 558 82 1000 546 578Tamil Nadu 91 222 105 478 7 8 159 22 1000 8391 544Tripura 642 39 47 468 0 91 142 213 1000 4340 1888

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of other tourism promo tional campaigns by source separately for each State/UT

ru ral

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A- 44

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) ofhouseholds who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Uttarakhand 27 285 49 516 0 114 36 0 1000 374 28Uttar Pradesh 12 200 201 279 1 21 258 40 1000 2861 217West Bengal 138 106 40 302 0 57 352 143 1000 18696 1234A & N Islands 297 60 2 100 0 69 765 5 1000 159 64Chandigarh 12 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 3 5Dadra & Nagar Haveli 183 288 3 709 0 0 0 0 1000 66 49Daman & Diu 46 892 0 68 0 40 0 0 1000 10 14Lakshadweep 565 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 1000 34 19Puducherry 128 10 2 22 0 0 967 0 1000 109 37

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 22298 14601 41192 182 8528 34274 8424 129500 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1892 1143 4227 16 1196 3266 878 12618 xxx xxx

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware of other tourism promo tional campaigns by source separately for each State/UT

ru ral

all-India 82 172 113 318 1 66 265 65 1000 129500 12618

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A- 45

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 182 295 10 313 26 91 247 18 1000 11689 708Arunachal Pradesh 197 38 20 540 0 127 184 92 1000 100 111Assam 319 201 127 409 14 35 200 14 1000 2047 381Bihar 145 221 107 177 27 36 429 3 1000 2423 168Chhattisgarh 177 40 117 448 9 54 322 10 1000 1496 218Delhi 186 100 22 841 9 28 0 0 1000 4707 573Goa 410 23 0 629 30 128 191 0 1000 596 121Gujarat 177 525 14 366 3 23 65 4 1000 7714 486Haryana 28 357 0 363 12 82 181 6 1000 413 46Himachal Pradesh 107 113 0 288 13 49 528 9 1000 184 81Jammu & Kashmir 253 68 115 417 0 10 257 134 1000 836 246Jharkhand 174 155 23 159 0 312 349 2 1000 1329 212Karnataka 220 473 52 232 20 15 203 4 1000 9965 549Kerala 504 208 4 377 5 13 382 11 1000 10245 1165Madhya Pradesh 121 233 56 631 3 45 31 1 1000 3671 429Maharashtra 139 123 20 324 2 16 473 42 1000 13634 767Manipur 274 265 173 119 0 1 227 216 1000 339 354Meghalaya 606 233 154 124 0 114 354 22 1000 565 369Mizoram 145 295 100 598 4 1 1 0 1000 112 205Nagaland 660 152 44 44 3 509 235 12 1000 409 291Orissa 282 189 3 587 1 82 133 4 1000 3727 307Punjab 35 182 15 718 25 3 50 7 1000 743 86

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by source separately for each State/UT

urban

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A- 46

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Rajasthan 161 266 6 479 21 6 221 1 1000 5024 323Sikkim 541 42 0 114 0 186 658 0 1000 105 192Tamil Nadu 233 350 38 348 0 32 223 9 1000 18835 1107Tripura 852 37 12 679 3 1 190 78 1000 1295 755Uttarakhand 94 327 0 469 0 141 0 63 1000 371 39Uttar P radesh 63 325 59 462 4 44 93 13 1000 4375 366West Bengal 251 254 11 359 2 34 304 36 1000 11838 1240A & N Islands 337 245 30 41 45 137 503 0 1000 89 62Chandigarh 164 205 0 673 7 0 112 4 1000 341 85Dadra & Nagar Haveli 138 399 0 601 0 0 0 0 1000 16 44Daman & Diu 137 123 0 788 0 90 0 0 1000 15 28Lakshadweep 403 22 2 325 0 198 453 0 1000 16 79Puducherry 305 80 53 236 0 72 554 5 1000 625 153

180 272 30 385 8 40 248 17 1000 119889 12346

estd. no. of aware households (’00)

32643 3575 46117 976 4769 29768 2041 119889 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households

2602 487 5060 93 701 3037 366 12346 xxx xxx

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by source separately for each State/UT

urban

all-India

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A- 47

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra P radesh 115 215 7 311 13 95 254 106 1000 23994 1258Arunachal Pradesh 168 68 83 550 12 127 89 71 1000 397 325Assam 179 102 251 231 3 28 376 9 1000 9851 1250Bihar 86 208 455 152 5 7 167 6 1000 13223 604Chhattisgarh 84 26 311 297 3 112 247 5 1000 3830 425Delhi 181 95 21 848 9 27 0 0 1000 4939 587Goa 332 82 0 558 19 109 232 0 1000 968 156Gujarat 116 440 21 365 2 90 54 29 1000 12789 784Haryana 20 501 0 342 5 41 108 2 1000 936 71Himachal P radesh 86 399 42 289 2 38 214 16 1000 1322 234Jammu & Kashmir 273 31 265 340 0 27 277 61 1000 4001 649Jharkhand 73 228 36 86 0 176 448 27 1000 3497 352Karnataka 121 468 43 249 13 51 169 7 1000 14668 797Kerala 404 182 12 370 2 38 371 25 1000 31011 2638Madhya Pradesh 55 149 83 566 18 65 85 35 1000 6804 628Maharashtra 97 154 31 331 1 11 441 30 1000 21414 1172Manipur 197 226 250 147 0 21 237 119 1000 846 807Meghalaya 312 196 144 93 0 233 281 53 1000 1510 813Mizoram 136 166 86 745 2 0 1 1 1000 236 314Nagaland 541 120 21 101 2 534 207 15 1000 1175 813Orissa 117 154 33 479 0 128 177 28 1000 9689 850Punjab 18 142 11 782 19 2 38 6 1000 982 107Rajasthan 67 334 4 424 14 7 217 2 1000 7798 503Sikkim 501 54 29 44 0 229 574 69 1000 652 770Tamil Nadu 158 311 59 388 2 24 203 13 1000 27226 1651Tripura 680 39 39 516 1 70 153 182 1000 5634 2643

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distributio n of households who are aware of other tourism pro motional campaigns by source separ tely fo r each State/UT

rural+urban

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A- 48

State/UT* proportion (per thousand) of households who are aware

source of awareness households who are aware

newspaper/magazine radio TV internet billboard /hoarding

more than one of these

others any/some/ all of these

estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Uttarakhand 42 306 25 493 0 127 18 31 1000 745 67Uttar P radesh 23 275 116 390 3 35 158 24 1000 7236 583West Bengal 167 164 29 324 1 48 333 102 1000 30534 2474A & N Islands 310 126 12 79 16 93 671 3 1000 247 126Chandigarh 146 203 0 676 7 0 110 4 1000 344 90Dadra & Nagar Haveli 172 309 2 688 0 0 0 0 1000 82 93Daman & Diu 78 420 0 510 0 70 0 0 1000 25 42Lakshadweep 500 7 1 782 0 64 146 0 1000 51 98Puducherry 253 70 45 204 0 61 615 4 1000 734 190

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 54941 18176 87309 1158 13298 64042 10465 249389 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 4494 1630 9287 109 1897 6303 1244 24964 xxx xxx

Table 26(O): Per 1000 distributio n of households who are aware of other tourism pro motional campaigns by source separ tely fo r each State/UT

rural+urban

all-India 111 220 73 350 5 53 257 42 1000 249389 24964

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A- 49

State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 142 113 185 525 36 1000 3650 204Arunachal Pradesh 177 66 155 494 107 1000 325 255Assam 30 393 317 167 92 1000 5288 759Bihar 23 264 227 273 213 1000 5723 265Chhattisgarh 1 64 353 534 49 1000 3698 245Delhi 0 6 838 156 0 1000 454 30Goa 0 39 363 327 271 1000 282 24Gujarat 64 178 304 443 12 1000 4852 291Haryana 31 258 572 109 30 1000 626 34Himachal Pradesh 12 113 241 262 372 1000 1457 177Jammu & Kashmir 5 246 158 530 61 1000 1520 227Jharkhand 1 52 379 425 144 1000 2673 193Karnataka 6 26 438 507 24 1000 3197 171Kerala 29 127 277 469 98 1000 7539 506Madhya Pradesh 57 167 441 192 143 1000 4662 322Maharashtra 12 131 431 381 44 1000 7452 428Manipur 70 234 574 45 77 1000 444 373Meghalaya 8 111 593 235 53 1000 696 328Mizoram 0 229 407 283 80 1000 130 114Nagaland 13 182 507 104 194 1000 634 432Orissa 29 151 621 162 38 1000 3611 387Punjab 0 4 164 695 137 1000 749 54Rajasthan 58 180 332 366 64 1000 2703 180Sikkim 0 122 331 463 85 1000 222 278Tamil Nadu 19 238 411 324 9 1000 4481 302

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distributio n of households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by impact o f the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

rural

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A- 50

State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Tripura 23 34 857 13 72 1000 3486 1543Uttarakhand 0 4 369 438 188 1000 909 43Uttar Pradesh 35 80 385 416 84 1000 8504 596West Bengal 29 97 561 285 28 1000 12219 861A & N Islands 117 11 349 388 135 1000 95 48Chandigarh 730 0 270 0 0 1000 3 5Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 253 695 30 22 1000 34 27

Daman & Diu 0 50 785 164 0 1000 11 24Lakshadweep 0 0 0 1000 0 1000 6 3Puducherry 0 5 813 183 0 1000 135 39

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 2954 13227 37528 31555 7205 92469 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 303 1423 4668 2595 779 9768 xxx xxx

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distributio n of households who are aware of the ‘Incredible India’ campaign by impact o f the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

rural

all-India 32 143 406 341 78 1000 92469 9768

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State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted intoone or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 78 207 181 503 31 1000 4631 347

Arunachal Pradesh 50 259 426 136 129 1000 104 119Assam 55 258 364 231 93 1000 2039 438

Bihar 29 138 255 490 88 1000 2668 203

Chhattisgarh 17 100 546 319 19 1000 1733 227

Delhi 9 49 589 262 91 1000 8045 1007

Goa 0 211 470 244 75 1000 610 98

Gujarat 85 134 427 268 87 1000 9036 587

Haryana 4 119 191 534 152 1000 1684 142Himachal Pradesh 18 218 204 407 154 1000 303 110

Jammu & Kashmir 6 303 260 333 97 1000 521 179

Jharkhand 32 263 233 422 49 1000 2074 305

Karnataka 28 90 468 359 55 1000 9603 549

Kerala 21 102 377 458 42 1000 4303 512

Madhya Pradesh 77 208 404 173 138 1000 7122 852

Maharashtra 46 189 465 259 41 1000 20438 1463Manipur 169 27 599 135 70 1000 276 301

Meghalaya 28 166 425 237 144 1000 538 358

Mizoram 31 261 393 219 96 1000 183 311

Nagaland 35 129 363 233 240 1000 378 277

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distribution of house holds who are awar of the ‘Incre dible India’ campaign by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

urban

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State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted intoone or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Orissa 28 264 424 203 82 1000 3859 307Punjab 24 113 375 445 44 1000 1992 202

Rajasthan 88 140 328 407 37 1000 5118 340

Sikkim 1 449 270 228 51 1000 94 180

Tamil Nadu 50 243 341 363 4 1000 15373 934

Tripura 119 40 827 2 13 1000 1133 700

Uttarakhand 0 94 166 448 292 1000 844 90

Uttar Pradesh 35 193 358 319 95 1000 12264 961

West Bengal 44 164 429 302 61 1000 11156 1269

A & N Islands 10 57 594 308 31 1000 43 41

Chandigarh 11 248 417 117 207 1000 573 129

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 12 911 20 57 1000 40 60

Daman & Diu 0 35 684 193 88 1000 22 46

Lakshadweep 5 196 66 723 10 1000 9 57

Puducherry 13 113 788 27 59 1000 630 141

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 5871 21870 52602 40799 8297 129440 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 720 2420 5756 3890 1056 13842 xxx xxx

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distribution of house holds who are awar of the ‘Incre dible India’ campaign by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

urban

all-India 45 169 406 315 64 1000 129440 13842

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State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 106 165 183 513 33 1000 8281 551

Arunachal Pradesh 147 113 220 408 113 1000 429 374

Assam 37 356 330 185 92 1000 7326 1197

Bihar 25 224 236 342 174 1000 8390 468

Chhattisgarh 6 75 414 465 39 1000 5431 472

Delhi 9 46 602 257 86 1000 8500 1037

Goa 0 157 436 270 137 1000 892 122

Gujarat 78 149 384 329 60 1000 13888 878

Haryana 12 157 294 419 119 1000 2310 176

Himachal Pradesh 13 131 235 287 334 1000 1760 287

Jammu & Kashmir 5 261 184 480 70 1000 2041 406

Jharkhand 14 144 315 424 102 1000 4747 498

Karnataka 22 74 461 396 47 1000 12799 720

Kerala 26 118 313 465 78 1000 11842 1018

Madhya Pradesh 69 192 419 181 140 1000 11784 1174

Maharashtra 37 174 456 292 42 1000 27890 1891

Manipur 108 155 584 79 74 1000 720 674Meghalaya 17 135 520 236 93 1000 1234 686

Mizoram 18 248 399 246 89 1000 313 425

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distribution of house holds who are awar of the ‘Incre dible India’ campaign by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

rural+urban

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State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Nagaland 22 162 453 152 211 1000 1012 709Orissa 28 209 519 183 61 1000 7471 694

Punjab 17 83 317 513 69 1000 2742 256

Rajasthan 77 154 330 393 46 1000 7821 520

Sikkim 0 219 313 393 75 1000 316 458

Tamil Nadu 43 242 356 354 5 1000 19854 1236

Tripura 47 36 850 10 57 1000 4620 2243

Uttarakhand 0 47 271 443 238 1000 1753 133

Uttar Pradesh 35 147 369 359 91 1000 20768 1557

West Bengal 36 129 498 293 44 1000 23375 2130

A & N Islands 84 25 425 363 103 1000 137 89

Chandigarh 15 246 416 116 206 1000 576 134

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 122 812 25 41 1000 74 87

Daman & Diu 0 40 718 184 59 1000 32 70

Lakshadweep 3 120 41 831 6 1000 15 60

Puducherry 11 94 792 55 48 1000 765 180

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 8825 35097 90130 72354 15502 221908 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1023 3843 10424 6485 1835 23610 xxx xxx

Table 27(I): Per 1000 distribution of house holds who are awar of the ‘Incre dible India’ campaign by impact of the campaign for each State/UT/ all India

rural+urban

all-India 40 158 406 326 70 1000 221908 23610

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A- 55

State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 58 119 241 556 27 1000 12305 550Arunachal Pradesh 19 62 115 402 403 1000 297 214Assam 34 329 525 91 21 1000 7805 869Bihar 9 143 431 200 217 1000 10800 436Chhattisgarh 87 15 597 226 76 1000 2334 207Delhi 0 1 999 0 0 1000 232 14Goa 0 5 167 604 224 1000 373 35Gujarat 111 162 448 255 24 1000 5075 298Haryana 0 180 662 90 69 1000 523 25Himachal Pradesh 45 59 252 288 356 1000 1138 153Jammu & Kashmir 5 306 283 337 70 1000 3165 403Jharkhand 1 117 449 416 18 1000 2168 140Karnataka 2 48 563 361 26 1000 4703 248Kerala 28 61 300 570 41 1000 20765 1473Madhya Pradesh 61 216 403 158 161 1000 3134 199Maharashtra 37 185 566 152 59 1000 7780 405Manipur 123 154 518 129 76 1000 507 453Meghalaya 35 212 217 419 117 1000 944 444Mizoram 0 171 148 436 244 1000 124 109Nagaland 21 145 525 106 203 1000 766 522Orissa 26 101 565 211 97 1000 5962 543Punjab 0 0 164 775 61 1000 239 21Rajasthan 78 81 342 460 39 1000 2774 180Sikkim 11 49 380 468 91 1000 546 578Tamil Nadu 23 262 449 265 2 1000 8391 544Tripura 181 52 696 3 69 1000 4340 1888

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each all-India rural

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A- 56

State/UT* impact households who are aware

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Uttarakhand 7 17 277 625 74 1000 374 28Uttar P radesh 81 93 306 434 86 1000 2861 217West Bengal 48 82 592 258 19 1000 18696 1234A & N Islands 89 15 645 93 158 1000 159 64Chandigarh 730 0 270 0 0 1000 3 5Dadra & Nagar Haveli 37 0 682 0 281 1000 66 49

Daman & Diu 0 57 128 814 0 1000 10 14Lakshadweep 0 0 0 1000 0 1000 34 19Puducherry 2 4 691 298 6 1000 109 37

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 5594 16960 57263 41632 8050 129500 xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 779 1722 5913 3293 911 12618 xxx xxx

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are aware o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each all-India rural

all-India 43 131 442 321 62 1000 129500 12618

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A- 57

urbanState/UT* impact households who are

awareresulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 111 135 212 522 20 1000 11689 708Arunachal Pradesh 26 281 379 39 275 1000 100 111Assam 92 285 370 146 108 1000 2047 381Bihar 2 119 274 377 228 1000 2423 168Chhattisgarh 63 213 412 277 35 1000 1496 218Delhi 12 11 794 133 49 1000 4707 573Goa 8 157 475 300 60 1000 596 121Gujarat 138 133 323 171 234 1000 7714 486Haryana 12 127 352 329 181 1000 413 46Himachal P radesh 15 102 242 470 171 1000 184 81Jammu & Kashmir 50 191 322 273 164 1000 836 246Jharkhand 75 423 126 338 37 1000 1329 212Karnataka 32 92 458 368 50 1000 9965 549Kerala 24 52 332 572 19 1000 10245 1165Madhya Pradesh 97 309 349 167 78 1000 3671 429Maharashtra 54 148 614 140 43 1000 13634 767Manipur 130 105 534 165 66 1000 339 354Meghalaya 63 290 224 273 150 1000 565 369Mizoram 122 173 74 473 159 1000 112 205Nagaland 61 137 339 278 184 1000 409 291Orissa 43 212 530 147 67 1000 3727 307Punjab 66 237 565 123 10 1000 743 86Rajasthan 95 147 270 416 72 1000 5024 323Sikkim 60 375 265 295 4 1000 105 192Tamil Nadu 51 238 408 232 71 1000 18835 1107Tripura 363 49 575 2 11 1000 1295 755Uttarakhand 15 150 319 504 13 1000 371 39Uttar P radesh 53 244 345 270 89 1000 4375 366West Bengal 66 119 533 255 28 1000 11838 1240A & N Islands 138 227 488 106 41 1000 89 62Chandigarh 8 138 448 162 245 1000 341 85Dadra & Nagar Haveli 130 126 564 0 180 1000 16 44Daman & Diu 20 39 877 64 0 1000 15 28

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are awar o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each

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A- 58

urbanState/UT* impact households who are

awareresulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Lakshadweep 9 248 225 513 5 1000 16 79Puducherry 13 93 790 34 69 1000 625 153

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 7803 18600 50632 34798 8056 119889

xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1096 2089 4973 3341 847 12346

xxx xxx

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are awar o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each

all-India 65 155 422 290 67 1000 119889 12346

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A- 59

rural+urbanState/UT* impact households who are

aware( with code’1’ in item12.1,block 3)

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Andhra Pradesh 84 127 227 540 23 1000 23994 1258Arunachal Pradesh 20 117 181 311 371 1000 397 325Assam 46 320 493 102 39 1000 9851 1250Bihar 8 138 403 232 219 1000 13223 604Chhattisgarh 77 92 525 246 60 1000 3830 425Delhi 11 11 804 127 47 1000 4939 587Goa 5 99 356 417 123 1000 968 156Gujarat 128 144 373 204 151 1000 12789 784Haryana 5 156 525 196 118 1000 936 71Himachal P radesh 40 65 251 313 330 1000 1322 234Jammu & Kashmir 14 282 291 324 89 1000 4001 649Jharkhand 29 233 326 386 25 1000 3497 352Karnataka 22 78 492 366 42 1000 14668 797Kerala 27 58 310 571 34 1000 31011 2638Madhya Pradesh 80 266 374 163 117 1000 6804 628Maharashtra 48 162 597 144 49 1000 21414 1172Manipur 126 134 524 143 72 1000 846 807Meghalaya 46 241 220 364 129 1000 1510 813Mizoram 58 172 113 454 204 1000 236 314Nagaland 35 142 460 166 197 1000 1175 813Orissa 33 144 552 186 85 1000 9689 850Punjab 50 179 467 282 22 1000 982 107Rajasthan 89 124 296 432 60 1000 7798 503Sikkim 19 102 361 440 77 1000 652 770Tamil Nadu 42 245 421 242 50 1000 27226 1651Tripura 222 51 668 3 56 1000 5634 2643Uttarakhand 11 83 298 564 43 1000 745 67Uttar P radesh 64 184 329 335 88 1000 7236 583West Bengal 55 97 569 257 22 1000 30534 2474A & N Islands 107 91 589 98 116 1000 247 126Chandigarh 15 137 446 160 242 1000 344 90Dadra & Nagar Haveli 55 25 659 0 261 1000 82 93

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are awar o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each

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A- 60

rural+urbanState/UT* impact households who are

aware( with code’1’ in item12.1,block 3)

resulted into one or more trips

planning to make a trip in near future

willing to make a trip but could not make it due to other constraints

no impact cannot say total estd. no. (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)Daman & Diu 12 46 588 353 0 1000 25 42Lakshadweep 3 80 72 843 2 1000 51 98Puducherry 12 80 776 73 60 1000 734 190

estd. no. of aware households (’00) 13397 35560 107895 76431 16106 249389

xxx xxx

sample no. of aware households 1875 3811 10886 6634 1758 24964

xxx xxx

Table 27(O): Per 1000 distribution of households who are awar o f other tourism pro motional campaigns by impact o f the campaign for each

all-India 54 143 433 306 65 1000 249389 24964

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all-India

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

proportion (per ten thousand) of households who rented out some portion of the house to tourists for at least one night

social groupno. of households, who rented out some portion of the house to tourists for at least one night during last 365 days

ST SC OBC others total estd (’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)

0-20 4 0 0 388 9612 10000 111 7

20-40 2 0 7769 2231 0 10000 57 3

40-60 9 78 9748 112 62 10000 275 9

60-80 5 238 0 9762 0 10000 176 6

80-100 6 592 3731 4051 1626 10000 216 25

all 5 229 4707 3344 1719 10000 834 50

no. of households who rented out

estd(’00) 19 393 279 143 834 xxx xxx

sample15 6 17 12 50 xxx xxx

0-20 0 1149 0 0 8851 10000 1 2

20-40 2 0 1540 4040 4420 10000 26 5

40-60 24 8 5 9758 229 10000 310 12

60-80 16 3 89 3433 6474 10000 225 20

80-100 28 1069 1116 277 7538 10000 503 24

all 16 509 585 3795 5112 10000 1065 63

no. of households who rented out

estd(’00) 54 62 404 544 1065 xxx xxx

sample6 5 21 31 63 xxx xxx

Table 28: Per 10000 distribution of househo lds who rented out some portio n of the house to tourists fo r at least one night during last 365 days by social group for each quintile lass of MPCE (%)

ru ral

urban

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A- 62

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

proportion (per ten thousand) of householdswho rented out some portion of the house to tourists for at least one night

no. of households, who rented out some portion of

the house to tourists for at

least one night during last 365

dayslegislators,

senior offic ials

and managers

Profe-ssionals

associate professionals

clerks service workers and shop

& market sales

workers

skilled agricultural and fishery

workers

craft and related trades

workers

plant and machine operators

and assemblers

elementary occupations

n.r. total estd (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15)0-20 4 0 0 0 0 0 1081 0 0 8212 706 10000 111 720-40 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1240 8760 0 10000 57 340-60 9 8276 103 60 0 0 1449 21 0 91 0 10000 275 960-80 5 0 0 0 87 0 9913 0 0 0 0 10000 176 680-100 6 0 44 482 1697 138 5184 239 0 2131 85 10000 216 25

no. of households who rented out

estd(’00) 227 4 12 38 3 338 6 7 190 10 834 xxx xxxsample

1 4 3 7 2 20 4 1 6 2 50xxx xxx

Table 29: Per 10000 distribution of households who rented out some po rtion o f the house to tourists fo r at least one night during last 365 days by NCO(1-digit) fo r each quintile class of MPCE (%)

all-India rural

NCO(1-digit)

all 5 2724 45 145 457 36 4048 69 85 2275 116 10000 834 50

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all-India urban

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

proportion (per ten thousand) of household who rented out someportion of the house to tourists for at least one night

no. of households, who rented out some portion of

the house to tourists for at

least one night during last 365

dayslegislators,

senior offic ials

and managers

Profe-ssionals

associate professionals

clerks service workers and shop

& market sales

workers

skilled agricultural and fishery

workers

craft and related trades

workers

plant and machine operators

and assemblers

elementary occupations

n.r. total estd (’00)

sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15)0-20 0 8851 0 0 0 0 0 0 1149 0 0 10000 1 220-40 2 0 0 0 4040 475 0 1540 3519 426 0 10000 26 540-60 24 0 10 64 35 175 141 0 7 0 9567 10000 310 1260-80 16 437 2416 5129 1508 217 55 163 48 0 26 10000 225 2080-100 28 1932 165 200 199 1 1 5 283 0 7214 10000 503 24

no. of households who rented out

estd(’00) 108 63 127 56 12 6 8 25 1 660 1065 xxx xxxsample

10 6 5 9 6 3 4 5 1 14 63xxx xxx

Table 29: Per 10000 distribution of households who rented out some po rtion o f the house to tourists fo r at least one night during last 365 days by NCO(1-digit) fo r each quintile class of MPCE (%)

NCO(1-digit)

all 16 1015 591 1196 522 109 53 75 234 10 6195 10000 1065 63

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A- 64

all-India male ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1994 228 177 300 295 1000 280198 17373 362871 226915-9 1841 254 189 290 267 1000 339691 19982 455535 2770710-14 1635 298 200 281 221 1000 344552 20345 491029 3013715-19 1838 278 200 258 264 1000 284026 17816 393374 2571720-24 2235 203 178 274 345 1000 247034 16381 310008 2097225-29 2747 132 144 282 442 1000 246657 16164 284283 1890930-34 3040 109 116 257 518 1000 125737 8463 141047 953035-39 2856 114 125 275 485 1000 236423 15173 266902 1691840-44 2920 112 119 272 497 1000 199997 13122 225263 1464345-49 2785 131 139 266 464 1000 175301 11692 201753 1333350-54 2661 157 142 273 428 1000 133769 8792 158653 1032055-59 2423 179 160 273 388 1000 100783 6661 122821 812660-64 2297 219 180 244 356 1000 85301 5576 109273 709665-69 2008 266 160 274 301 1000 60102 3890 81884 523270-74 1739 350 183 210 257 1000 34446 2161 52997 327575-79 1461 442 168 208 182 1000 11496 833 20613 140380-84 1601 456 121 187 236 1000 6444 386 11854 803Above 84 1039 552 186 153 109 1000 3696 188 8247 446all 2251 209 166 274 351 1000 3012542 190997 3810021 244105

estd. no. of persons (’00) 797479 633120 1042732 1336691 3810021

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 53108 41657 62209 87131 244105

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each age group

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all-India female ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1989 232 181 285 302 1000 262803 15815 342235 210465-9 1813 262 191 283 264 1000 293250 17291 397469 2422310-14 1638 309 204 274 213 1000 279438 16844 404667 2562115-19 1618 303 213 267 216 1000 232587 14870 333925 2242620-24 2201 192 174 302 332 1000 260836 17122 322849 2169025-29 2297 161 172 305 362 1000 251313 16111 299479 1964730-34 2327 156 168 308 367 1000 137784 8730 163322 1051035-39 2259 173 163 304 360 1000 222201 14096 268728 1717640-44 2155 189 181 295 335 1000 173341 10922 213720 1379645-49 2051 214 197 287 301 1000 148808 9588 189349 1247750-54 1875 239 220 273 269 1000 113631 7151 149262 964455-59 1815 284 195 272 249 1000 86102 5678 120217 795060-64 1635 337 188 251 223 1000 76355 4604 115148 699965-69 1484 377 219 221 183 1000 45078 2999 72360 473670-74 1130 491 206 171 132 1000 23677 1567 46491 297075-79 1083 521 173 170 135 1000 9935 613 20747 131080-84 732 659 134 121 85 1000 4251 320 12481 839Above 84 628 671 140 134 55 1000 2630 207 7993 568all 1941 244 188 283 286 1000 2721763 170301 3598138 230756estd. no. of persons (’00) 876374 675744 1017111 1028909 3598138

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 60455 44043 60597 65661 230756

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each age group

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A- 66

all-India persons ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1992 230 179 293 298 1000 543001 33188 705125 437385-9 1828 258 190 287 265 1000 632940 37273 853004 5193010-14 1636 303 202 278 217 1000 623990 37189 895697 5575815-19 1737 290 206 263 242 1000 516613 32686 727299 4814320-24 2218 197 176 288 338 1000 507870 33503 632856 4266225-29 2516 147 158 294 401 1000 497970 32275 583762 3855630-34 2657 134 144 285 437 1000 263521 17193 304370 2004035-39 2557 144 144 290 422 1000 458624 29269 535630 3409440-44 2548 150 149 284 418 1000 373337 24044 438983 2843945-49 2430 171 167 277 385 1000 324109 21280 391102 2581050-54 2280 197 180 273 351 1000 247400 15943 307915 1996455-59 2122 231 177 272 320 1000 186885 12339 243038 1607660-64 1957 280 184 248 288 1000 161655 10180 224421 1409565-69 1762 318 187 249 246 1000 105180 6889 154244 996870-74 1454 416 194 192 198 1000 58124 3728 99488 624575-79 1271 482 170 189 159 1000 21431 1446 41360 271380-84 1155 561 128 153 159 1000 10694 706 24335 1642Above 84 837 610 163 144 83 1000 6326 395 16241 1014all 2100 226 177 278 319 1000 5734306 361298 7408178 474862estd. no. of persons (’00) 1673872 1308863 2059843 2365599 7408178

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 113564 85700 122806 152792 474862

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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A- 67

all-India male urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1942 228 183 298 290 1000 87541 7181 113446 94025-9 1939 217 207 292 284 1000 102264 8576 130640 1128610-14 1834 256 225 254 264 1000 113957 9388 153187 1328415-19 1837 271 211 248 269 1000 109237 9742 149944 1355020-24 2083 237 199 245 320 1000 112150 9948 146890 1304825-29 2409 186 159 266 390 1000 105981 9333 130120 1138930-34 2493 165 167 267 402 1000 57730 5399 69102 620335-39 2554 144 164 291 401 1000 92671 8466 108200 967140-44 2738 141 154 271 434 1000 78832 7445 91757 848945-49 2635 144 167 274 415 1000 72932 6888 85227 789750-54 2512 176 154 262 408 1000 50407 5148 61155 601255-59 2385 184 163 256 396 1000 38559 3857 47280 456760-64 2148 245 199 234 321 1000 29084 2880 38544 359665-69 1980 278 157 262 302 1000 20217 1981 28004 258470-74 1790 361 207 194 238 1000 12058 1070 18867 155075-79 1699 353 194 202 251 1000 6072 477 9381 78380-84 1431 495 195 153 157 1000 2115 175 4186 354Above 84 1021 552 107 241 101 1000 1274 116 2840 248all 2201 210 185 265 340 1000 1127707 101113 1428380 127545estd. no. of persons (’00) 300674 264183 378015 485508 1428380

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 26432 23797 32496 44820 127545

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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A- 68

all-India female urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1939 222 207 281 289 1000 76352 6396 98140 85035-9 1865 238 206 280 276 1000 86807 7279 113888 986210-14 1714 295 203 242 260 1000 91047 7915 129149 1130415-19 1714 289 215 249 247 1000 87535 7922 123182 1151720-24 1969 221 211 283 285 1000 99799 9059 128093 1198225-29 2136 184 191 293 331 1000 95476 8832 117059 1106230-34 2114 193 188 276 343 1000 53481 4785 66241 590635-39 2123 205 183 294 318 1000 84521 7699 106377 952240-44 2161 206 167 279 348 1000 68235 6570 85988 813645-49 2052 218 189 286 307 1000 56755 5483 72569 697050-54 1960 238 167 290 305 1000 43773 4091 57431 529655-59 1880 278 204 238 281 1000 34323 3219 47537 429860-64 1635 336 204 249 211 1000 26627 2512 40085 351765-69 1635 359 220 206 216 1000 16961 1587 26452 243170-74 1058 472 227 194 106 1000 9106 894 17259 152075-79 1177 500 192 184 124 1000 4302 402 8601 78380-84 958 567 169 136 129 1000 1864 212 4304 488Above 84 638 680 122 104 93 1000 1236 128 3868 357all 1919 245 198 269 287 1000 973004 87865 1288791 117084estd. no. of persons (’00) 315786 255613 347285 370107 1288791

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 29219 23512 30632 33721 117084

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each age group

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A- 69

all-India persons urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1941 225 194 291 290 1000 163893 13577 211586 179055-9 1904 227 207 286 281 1000 189071 15855 244528 2114810-14 1779 274 215 249 262 1000 205004 17303 282336 2458815-19 1781 280 213 249 259 1000 196772 17664 273126 2506720-24 2030 229 205 263 304 1000 211949 19007 274983 2503025-29 2280 185 174 279 362 1000 201457 18165 247179 2245130-34 2308 178 177 271 373 1000 111212 10184 135343 1210935-39 2340 174 173 293 360 1000 177192 16165 214577 1919340-44 2458 173 160 275 392 1000 147067 14015 177745 1662545-49 2367 178 178 279 365 1000 129686 12371 157796 1486750-54 2245 206 161 276 358 1000 94181 9239 118587 1130855-59 2132 231 183 247 338 1000 72882 7076 94817 886560-64 1887 291 202 242 265 1000 55711 5392 78629 711365-69 1812 317 187 235 260 1000 37178 3568 54456 501570-74 1440 414 217 194 175 1000 21164 1964 36126 307075-79 1450 423 193 193 190 1000 10374 879 17981 156680-84 1191 531 182 144 143 1000 3979 387 8490 842Above 84 800 626 116 162 96 1000 2510 244 6709 605all 2067 227 191 267 315 1000 2100711 188978 2717171 244629estd. no. of persons (’00) 616460 519796 725300 855615 2717171

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 55651 47309 63128 78541 244629

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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A- 70

all-India male rural+urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1982 228 179 300 294 1000 367740 24554 476317 320935-9 1863 246 193 290 271 1000 441955 28558 586175 3899310-14 1683 288 206 274 231 1000 458508 29733 644216 4342115-19 1837 276 203 256 265 1000 393264 27558 543318 3926720-24 2186 214 185 265 337 1000 359184 26329 456898 3402025-29 2641 149 148 277 425 1000 352638 25497 414403 3029830-34 2860 127 133 260 480 1000 183467 13862 210150 1573335-39 2769 123 137 280 461 1000 329093 23639 375102 2658940-44 2867 120 129 272 479 1000 278829 20567 317021 2313245-49 2741 135 147 269 449 1000 248233 18580 286980 2123050-54 2620 162 146 270 423 1000 184176 13940 219808 1633255-59 2412 181 161 268 390 1000 139342 10518 170100 1269360-64 2258 226 185 242 347 1000 114384 8456 147817 1069265-69 2001 269 159 271 301 1000 80319 5871 109888 781670-74 1752 353 189 206 252 1000 46504 3231 71864 482575-79 1535 414 176 206 203 1000 17568 1310 29993 218680-84 1557 466 140 178 215 1000 8559 561 16040 1157Above 84 1035 552 166 176 107 1000 4970 304 11087 694all 2237 210 171 271 348 1000 4140249 292110 5238402 371650estd. no. of persons (’00) 1098153 897303 1420747 1822199 5238402

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 79540 65454 94705 131951 371650

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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A- 71

all-India female rural+urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1978 230 187 284 299 1000 339155 22211 440375 295495-9 1824 257 195 282 267 1000 380056 24570 511357 3408510-14 1656 306 203 266 224 1000 370485 24759 533817 3692515-19 1644 300 214 263 224 1000 320122 22792 457107 3394320-24 2135 200 185 297 318 1000 360635 26181 450942 3367225-29 2252 167 177 302 353 1000 346789 24943 416538 3070930-34 2266 167 174 299 360 1000 191266 13515 229563 1641635-39 2220 182 168 301 348 1000 306723 21795 375105 2669840-44 2157 194 177 291 339 1000 241576 17492 299708 2193245-49 2052 215 195 287 303 1000 205563 15071 261918 1944750-54 1898 238 205 278 279 1000 157404 11242 206693 1494055-59 1834 282 197 262 258 1000 120425 8897 167754 1224860-64 1635 337 193 251 220 1000 102982 7116 155233 1051665-69 1525 372 219 217 192 1000 62039 4586 98811 716770-74 1110 486 212 178 125 1000 32784 2461 63750 449075-79 1110 515 179 174 132 1000 14237 1015 29348 209380-84 790 636 143 125 97 1000 6115 532 16785 1327Above 84 631 674 134 124 68 1000 3866 335 11862 925all 1935 244 191 279 286 1000 3694768 258166 4886928 347840estd. no. of persons (’00) 1192161 931356 1364396 1399016 4886928

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 89674 67555 91229 99382 347840

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 72

all-India persons rural+urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1980 229 183 292 296 1000 706895 46765 916711 616435-9 1845 251 194 286 269 1000 822011 53128 1097533 7307810-14 1671 296 205 271 228 1000 828994 54492 1178033 8034615-19 1749 287 208 259 247 1000 713386 50350 1000425 7321020-24 2161 207 185 280 328 1000 719819 52510 907839 6769225-29 2446 158 163 289 389 1000 699427 50440 830941 6100730-34 2550 148 154 280 418 1000 374733 27377 439713 3214935-39 2495 152 152 291 404 1000 635816 45434 750206 5328740-44 2522 156 152 281 410 1000 520405 38059 616728 4506445-49 2412 173 170 277 379 1000 453796 33651 548898 4067750-54 2270 199 174 274 353 1000 341580 25182 426501 3127255-59 2125 231 179 265 325 1000 259767 19415 337855 2494160-64 1939 283 189 246 282 1000 217366 15572 303050 2120865-69 1775 318 187 245 249 1000 142359 10457 208700 1498370-74 1450 415 200 193 192 1000 79288 5692 135614 931575-79 1325 464 177 190 168 1000 31805 2325 59342 427980-84 1164 553 142 151 155 1000 14673 1093 32824 2484Above 84 826 615 149 149 87 1000 8837 639 22949 1619all 2091 226 181 275 318 1000 7835017 550276 10125349 719491estd. no. of persons (’00) 2290332 1828659 2785143 3221214 10125349

× × × ×

sample no. of persons 169215 133009 185934 231333 719491

× × × ×

Table 30: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each age group

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A- 73

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2833 133 132 265 470 1000 702593 48229 810551 5581812 2924 140 126 260 474 1000 17775 1344 20668 1537

21 2284 186 189 272 353 1000 246054 17017 302381 2119731 2915 137 149 248 466 1000 143565 11920 166435 1375541 2426 130 85 431 354 1000 5125 371 5893 48851 2505 162 144 277 417 1000 621986 32827 742385 3842311-51 2640 152 146 269 433 1000 1737097 111708 2048315 131218

81 1867 260 211 258 270 1000 31960 2778 43197 378691 1798 270 192 284 254 1000 795947 49246 1089622 7086592 1667 280 243 233 244 1000 15906 777 22088 125393 1391 367 220 225 188 1000 6901 491 10906 78494 1999 269 184 251 296 1000 28924 2061 39588 270995 1378 466 150 207 177 1000 18460 1119 34582 211197 1821 276 183 280 261 1000 376925 22779 520832 3125999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 1797 276 189 280 255 1000 1243063 76473 1717618 108981

all (including n.r.) 2251 209 166 274 351 1000 3012542 190997 3810021 244105

estd. no. of persons (’00) 797479 633120 1042732 1336691 3810021 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 53108 41657 62209 87131 244105 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of overnight trips for each broad activity status

all-India male rural

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A- 74

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2409 179 169 278 375 1000 77293 5614 94143 739612 2296 215 162 244 380 1000 3564 197 4539 25321 2285 151 176 305 368 1000 275154 17038 324188 2104931 2668 167 176 261 396 1000 28763 2387 34534 291541 2324 129 232 275 364 1000 3523 207 4047 28251 2278 159 166 308 366 1000 288199 13855 342781 1633011-51 2313 159 171 301 369 1000 676495 39298 804233 4822581 2745 152 138 328 381 1000 8519 935 10051 1227

91 1753 283 195 277 244 1000 600652 37766 837708 5587892 1891 261 184 279 276 1000 646017 43547 874581 5853693 1949 220 206 297 277 1000 409699 25747 525566 3349394 2158 235 189 261 314 1000 23599 1464 30860 188295 928 538 243 118 101 1000 9141 631 19786 1347

97 1746 298 188 261 253 1000 346643 20859 493699 3003299 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 1831 268 193 277 262 1000 2035752 130014 2782200 181168

all (including n.r.) 1941 244 188 283 286 1000 2721763 170301 3598138 230756

estd. no. of persons (’00) 876374 675744 1017111 1028909 3598138 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 60455 44043 60597 65661 230756 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of overni ht trips for each broad activity status

all-India female rural

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A- 75

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2789 138 136 266 460 1000 779886 53843 904695 6321412 2811 154 132 257 457 1000 21338 1541 25208 179021 2284 168 182 289 360 1000 521208 34055 626569 4224631 2873 143 153 250 454 1000 172327 14307 200969 1667041 2384 130 145 367 358 1000 8648 578 9940 77051 2434 161 151 287 401 1000 910185 46682 1085166 5475311-51 2548 154 153 278 415 1000 2413592 151006 2852548 179443

81 2032 240 198 271 291 1000 40479 3713 53248 501391 1778 275 193 281 250 1000 1396600 87012 1927330 126743

92 1886 262 186 277 275 1000 661923 44324 896669 5978993 1937 223 206 296 275 1000 416600 26238 536472 3427794 2069 254 186 255 304 1000 52523 3525 70448 459195 1214 492 183 175 150 1000 27601 1750 54368 345897 1785 287 185 271 257 1000 723568 43638 1014530 6129199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1818 271 191 278 259 1000 3278815 206487 4499818 290149

all (including n.r.) 2100 226 177 278 319 1000 5734306 361298 7408178 474862

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1673872 1308863 2059843 2365599 7408178 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 113564 85700 122806 152792 474862 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

all-India perso ns rural

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 76

all-India male urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2550 164 157 262 417 1000 206428 20000 246798 2345412 2552 137 290 222 351 1000 13194 1274 15296 147821 2036 211 195 287 307 1000 45788 4549 58046 582531 2519 162 174 266 398 1000 263192 23847 314135 2757841 1590 383 144 267 205 1000 1520 193 2465 26051 2185 191 182 285 342 1000 96097 8165 118784 991411-51 2437 171 174 268 387 1000 626219 58028 755525 6850981 1702 327 200 213 260 1000 21085 2241 31346 313491 1996 236 205 260 299 1000 316495 27241 414262 3726592 1551 414 198 186 202 1000 6046 550 10319 89393 1825 149 181 468 202 1000 1262 86 1483 13794 2301 230 195 234 340 1000 36138 3172 46957 399295 1166 525 149 162 164 1000 6283 560 13221 102397 1801 264 184 291 261 1000 114151 9227 155176 1256099 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1947 251 198 263 288 1000 480376 40836 641417 55870all (including n.r.) 2201 210 185 265 340 1000 1127707 101113 1428380 127545

estd. no. of persons (’00) 300674 264183 378015 485508 1428380 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 26432 23797 32496 44820 127545 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 77

all-India female urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2266 195 174 254 377 1000 21708 2104 26965 285012 3061 85 68 390 457 1000 449 79 491 9421 2226 228 140 294 338 1000 20541 1821 26599 250431 2338 193 197 254 356 1000 50829 4353 62967 551141 1104 376 423 146 55 1000 123 24 197 3551 1946 234 187 271 308 1000 22897 1906 29895 233511-51 2226 208 180 265 347 1000 116548 10287 147114 1332981 1954 266 163 320 251 1000 4993 732 6798 107291 1844 256 212 254 278 1000 250677 22055 336970 3093892 1926 239 197 274 290 1000 424595 38749 557890 4982893 2024 203 188 318 291 1000 65077 6413 81630 812094 1995 305 160 226 310 1000 11053 1158 15904 156395 818 574 190 139 96 1000 2742 297 6443 60797 1721 285 201 273 241 1000 97233 8161 135914 1159899 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1879 250 201 270 280 1000 851377 76833 1134752 102654

all (including n.r.) 1919 245 198 269 287 1000 973004 87865 1288791 117084

estd. no. of persons (’00) 315786 255613 347285 370107 1288791 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 29219 23512 30632 33721 117084 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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A- 78

all-India persons urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2522 167 159 261 413 1000 228137 22104 273763 2630412 2568 136 283 227 354 1000 13643 1353 15787 157221 2096 216 178 289 317 1000 66329 6370 84645 832931 2489 167 177 264 391 1000 314021 28200 377102 3308941 1554 383 165 258 194 1000 1643 217 2662 29551 2137 200 183 282 335 1000 118994 10071 148679 1224911-51 2403 177 175 268 380 1000 742767 68315 902639 8183881 1747 316 193 232 258 1000 26078 2973 38144 420691 1928 245 208 257 290 1000 567172 49296 751232 6820392 1919 242 197 272 288 1000 430640 39299 568209 5072193 2021 202 188 321 289 1000 66340 6499 83113 8257

94 2224 249 186 232 333 1000 47191 4330 62861 555595 1052 541 163 155 142 1000 9025 857 19664 163097 1764 274 192 283 252 1000 211384 17388 291090 2415899 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1904 250 200 267 283 1000 1331753 117669 1776169 158524

all (including n.r.) 2067 227 191 267 315 1000 2100711 188978 2717171 244629

estd. no. of persons (’00) 616460 519796 725300 855615 2717171 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 55651 47309 63128 78541 244629 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 79

all-India male rural+urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2767 140 138 264 458 1000 909021 68229 1057350 7927212 2766 139 196 244 422 1000 30969 2618 35965 301521 2244 190 190 274 345 1000 291842 21566 360427 2702231 2656 154 165 260 422 1000 406756 35767 480570 4133341 2179 205 102 382 310 1000 6645 564 8359 74851 2461 166 150 278 406 1000 718083 40992 861169 4833711-51 2585 157 153 269 420 1000 2363316 169736 2803840 19972781 1797 288 207 239 266 1000 53045 5019 74543 692091 1853 260 196 277 267 1000 1112442 76487 1503884 108130

92 1630 323 229 218 231 1000 21952 1327 32406 214693 1443 341 216 254 189 1000 8163 577 12389 92194 2163 248 190 242 320 1000 65062 5233 86545 670195 1319 482 149 194 174 1000 24743 1679 47803 313497 1816 274 183 283 261 1000 491076 32006 676007 4381999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1838 269 191 275 264 1000 1723439 117309 2359035 164851

all (including n.r.) 2237 210 171 271 348 1000 4140249 292110 5238402 371650

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1098153 897303 1420747 1822199 5238402 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 79540 65454 94705 131951 371650 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 80

all-India female rural+urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2377 183 170 272 375 1000 99001 7718 121109 1024612 2370 202 153 258 387 1000 4013 276 5030 34721 2280 157 173 304 365 1000 295695 18859 350787 2355331 2455 184 189 257 370 1000 79592 6740 97501 842641 2267 141 241 269 350 1000 3646 231 4244 31751 2252 165 168 305 361 1000 311096 15761 372676 1866511-51 2300 166 173 295 366 1000 793043 49585 951347 6155481 2426 198 148 325 329 1000 13513 1667 16849 229991 1779 275 200 271 254 1000 851329 59821 1174678 8681692 1905 253 189 277 281 1000 1070612 82296 1432472 108364

93 1959 218 203 300 278 1000 474777 32160 607196 4161394 2103 259 179 249 313 1000 34652 2622 46764 344595 901 547 230 123 100 1000 11883 928 26229 195497 1741 295 191 264 251 1000 443876 29020 629613 4163099 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1845 263 195 275 267 1000 2887129 206847 3916952 283822

all (including n.r.) 1935 244 191 279 286 1000 3694768 258166 4886928 347840

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1192161 931356 1364396 1399016 4886928 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 89674 67555 91229 99382 347840 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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A- 81

all-India persons rural+urban

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 2727 145 141 265 449 1000 1008022 75947 1178458 8951812 2717 147 190 245 418 1000 34981 2894 40995 336221 2262 174 182 289 355 1000 587537 40425 711214 5057531 2622 159 169 259 413 1000 486348 42507 578072 4975941 2209 183 149 344 324 1000 10291 795 12603 106551 2398 166 155 286 393 1000 1029179 56753 1233845 6700211-51 2513 159 158 276 407 1000 3156359 219321 3755186 261281

81 1913 272 196 255 278 1000 66557 6686 91392 921991 1820 267 198 274 261 1000 1963771 136308 2678562 194946

92 1899 254 190 276 280 1000 1092564 83623 1464878 110510

93 1949 221 203 299 277 1000 482940 32737 619586 4253494 2142 252 186 244 318 1000 99714 7855 133309 1014695 1171 505 178 169 148 1000 36626 2607 74032 508897 1780 284 187 273 256 1000 934952 61026 1305620 8544999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 1842 265 194 275 266 1000 4610568 324156 6275987 448673

all (including n.r.) 2091 226 181 275 318 1000 7835017 550276 10125349 719491

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2290332 1828659 2785143 3221214 10125349 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 169215 133009 185934 231333 719491 × × × ×

Table 31: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of overnight trips for each broad activity status

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A- 82

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate2179 217 164 279 340 1000 892521 49739 1139929 63477

literate without any schooling2397 171 137 271 421 1000 15569 1012 18780 1256

literate without formal schooling2310 190 168 267 375 1000 25563 1434 31541 1864

below primary1973 238 183 286 293 1000 556267 34311 730045 45743

primary2187 214 175 273 338 1000 497773 31415 632997 40840

middle2319 205 163 259 373 1000 495269 33219 623169 42384

secondary2525 178 154 272 396 1000 280216 19835 340712 24621

higher secondary2701 165 143 268 424 1000 139789 10755 167372 13202

diploma courses2879 172 144 235 449 1000 18990 1453 22936 1733

graduate3100 116 142 244 499 1000 74752 6441 84535 7425

post-graduate and above3596 92 66 246 596 1000 15742 1357 17335 1509

n.r.536 864 14 45 78 1000 91 26 672 51

all 2251 209 166 274 351 1000 3012542 190997 3810021 244105estd. no. of persons (’00) 797479 633120 1042732 1336691 3810021 × × × ×sample no. of persons 53108 41657 62209 87131 244105 × × × ×

Table 32 : Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India male rural

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A- 83

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1883 249 191 285 275 1000 1268907 72122 1689685 96521

literate without any schooling1755 263 196 293 248 1000 11822 717 16030 1062

literate without formal schooling2185 228 184 223 364 1000 20097 1197 26033 1581

below primary1881 247 193 283 277 1000 475847 29369 631538 40468

primary1942 243 190 287 280 1000 377645 25126 498693 34397

middle2016 238 180 283 299 1000 313561 21945 411320 30336

secondary2158 221 167 273 339 1000 149095 11245 191468 15216

higher secondary2253 230 155 265 350 1000 65085 5333 84538 7028

diploma courses2287 232 162 266 339 1000 7281 580 9485 757

graduate2645 184 183 233 399 1000 26014 2174 31896 2787

post-graduate and above2786 117 144 302 436 1000 6219 469 7046 550

n.r.3481 533 86 88 293 1000 189 24 405 53

all 1941 244 188 283 286 1000 2721763 170301 3598138 230756estd. no. of persons (’00) 876374 675744 1017111 1028909 3598138 × × × ×sample no. of persons 60455 44043 60597 65661 230756 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India female rural

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A- 84

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate2002 236 180 283 301 1000 2161428 121861 2829614 159998

literate without any schooling2102 213 164 281 342 1000 27391 1729 34810 2318

literate without formal schooling2253 207 176 247 370 1000 45660 2631 57574 3445

below primary1930 242 188 285 286 1000 1032114 63680 1361583 86211

primary2079 226 182 279 313 1000 875418 56541 1131690 75237

middle2198 218 170 269 343 1000 808830 55164 1034488 72720

secondary2393 193 159 272 376 1000 429311 31080 532179 39837

higher secondary2551 187 147 267 399 1000 204874 16088 251910 20230

diploma courses2706 190 149 244 417 1000 26271 2033 32422 2490

graduate2975 135 153 241 471 1000 100766 8615 116431 10212

post-graduate and above3362 99 89 262 550 1000 21961 1826 24381 2059

n.r.1615 744 40 60 156 1000 281 50 1096 105

all 2100 226 177 278 319 1000 5734306 361298 7408178 474862estd. no. of persons (’00) 1673872 1308863 2059843 2365599 7408178 × × × ×sample no. of persons 113564 85700 122806 152792 474862 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India persons rural

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A- 85

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1920 242 186 285 287 1000 180286 14460 237697 18807

literate without any schooling1869 292 173 319 216 1000 3232 333 4565 440

literate without formal schooling2212 233 183 244 340 1000 7921 605 10325 822

below primary2002 230 191 277 302 1000 150457 13216 195370 17273

primary2010 227 203 266 304 1000 153234 12991 198147 16946

middle2124 229 179 261 331 1000 184671 16789 239625 21728

secondary2228 206 200 252 342 1000 151041 14383 190183 17912

higher secondary2430 183 178 253 387 1000 111185 10591 136017 13041

diploma courses2648 148 163 233 455 1000 25687 2221 30153 2611

graduate2675 150 168 261 421 1000 123155 11985 144909 14028

post-graduate and above3283 108 133 234 525 1000 36769 3525 41227 3910

n.r.1745 572 33 189 205 1000 69 14 162 27

all 2201 210 185 265 340 1000 1127707 101113 1428380 127545estd. no. of persons (’00) 300674 264183 378015 485508 1428380 × × × ×sample no. of persons 26432 23797 32496 44820 127545 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India male urban

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A- 86

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1780 273 202 267 259 1000 247717 20770 340516 28018

literate without any schooling1657 354 176 240 230 1000 2817 363 4358 535

literate without formal schooling1845 264 286 168 282 1000 6098 560 8287 759

below primary1855 250 193 276 281 1000 137917 11929 184011 16239

primary1820 263 201 266 270 1000 128938 11852 174980 15967

middle1968 252 175 263 310 1000 140432 13293 187868 18233

secondary2033 212 207 281 301 1000 119792 10890 151926 14476

higher secondary2011 223 209 264 304 1000 78503 7559 101058 9856

diploma courses2154 238 179 267 317 1000 9079 936 11911 1162

graduate2197 186 209 276 329 1000 76462 7284 93962 8977

post-graduate and above2384 151 195 300 353 1000 25167 2416 29659 2840

n.r.733 679 38 251 32 1000 82 13 255 22

all 1919 245 198 269 287 1000 973004 87865 1288791 117084estd. no. of persons (’00) 315786 255613 347285 370107 1288791 × × × ×sample no. of persons 29219 23512 30632 33721 117084 × × × ×

Table 32 : Per 1000 distribution o f persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each level of education

all-India female urban

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A- 87

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1837 260 195 274 270 1000 428003 35230 578213 46825

literate without any schooling1765 322 175 281 223 1000 6049 696 8923 975

literate without formal schooling2049 247 229 210 314 1000 14019 1165 18612 1581

below primary1931 240 192 277 292 1000 288374 25145 379380 33512

primary1921 244 202 266 288 1000 282173 24843 373127 32913

middle2055 240 177 262 322 1000 325103 30082 427493 39961

secondary2141 208 203 265 324 1000 270833 25273 342109 32388

higher secondary2251 200 191 258 351 1000 189687 18150 237074 22897

diploma courses2508 174 168 243 416 1000 34765 3157 42064 3773

graduate2487 164 184 267 385 1000 199617 19269 238872 23005

post-graduate and above2907 126 159 261 453 1000 61937 5941 70887 6750

n.r.1127 637 36 227 100 1000 151 27 417 49

all 2067 227 191 267 315 1000 2100711 188978 2717171 244629estd. no. of persons (’00) 616460 519796 725300 855615 2717171 × × × ×sample no. of persons 55651 47309 63128 78541 244629 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India persons urban

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A- 88

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate2134 221 167 280 331 1000 1072807 64199 1377626 82284

literate without any schooling2294 195 144 280 381 1000 18801 1345 23344 1696

literate without formal schooling2286 200 172 261 367 1000 33484 2039 41866 2686

below primary1980 236 184 284 295 1000 706723 47527 925414 63016

primary2145 217 182 271 330 1000 651008 44406 831144 57786

middle2264 212 167 260 361 1000 679940 50008 862794 64112

secondary2418 188 171 265 377 1000 431257 34218 530895 42533

higher secondary2579 173 159 261 407 1000 250974 21346 303388 26243

diploma courses2748 158 155 234 453 1000 44676 3674 53090 4344

graduate2831 137 158 255 450 1000 197907 18426 229444 21453

post-graduate and above3376 103 113 237 546 1000 52511 4882 58563 5419

n.r.771 807 18 73 102 1000 161 40 834 78

all 2237 210 171 271 348 1000 4140249 292110 5238402 371650estd. no. of persons (’00) 1098153 897303 1420747 1822199 5238402 × × × ×sample no. of persons 79540 65454 94705 131951 371650 × × × ×

Table 32 : Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each l of education

all-India male rural+urban

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A- 89

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1866 253 193 282 272 1000 1516624 92892 2030201 124539

literate without any schooling1734 282 192 282 244 1000 14639 1080 20388 1597

literate without formal schooling2103 237 209 210 344 1000 26195 1757 34320 2340

below primary1875 247 193 282 278 1000 613764 41298 815549 56707

primary1910 248 193 281 278 1000 506583 36978 673673 50364

middle2001 242 178 277 303 1000 453992 35238 599187 48569

secondary2103 217 185 276 322 1000 268887 22135 343394 29692

higher secondary2121 226 185 264 325 1000 143588 12892 185596 16884

diploma courses2213 235 172 267 326 1000 16360 1516 21396 1919

graduate2311 186 203 265 347 1000 102477 9458 125859 11764

post-graduate and above2461 145 185 300 369 1000 31386 2885 36705 3390

n.r.2420 589 68 151 193 1000 271 37 660 75

all 1935 244 191 279 286 1000 3694768 258166 4886928 347840estd. no. of persons (’00) 1192161 931356 1364396 1399016 4886928 × × × ×sample no. of persons 89674 67555 91229 99382 347840 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India female rural+urban

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A- 90

educational levelaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate1974 240 183 281 296 1000 2589431 157091 3407827 206823

literate without any schooling2033 235 166 281 317 1000 33440 2425 43732 3293

literate without formal schooling2203 217 189 238 357 1000 59679 3796 76186 5026

below primary1930 242 189 283 287 1000 1320488 88825 1740963 119723

primary2040 231 187 276 307 1000 1157591 81384 1504817 108150

middle2156 224 172 267 337 1000 1133933 85246 1461981 112681

secondary2295 199 176 269 355 1000 700144 56353 874289 72225

higher secondary2406 193 168 262 376 1000 394562 34238 488984 43127

diploma courses2594 181 160 243 416 1000 61036 5190 74486 6263

graduate2647 155 174 258 413 1000 300383 27884 355303 33217

post-graduate and above3023 119 141 262 478 1000 83897 7767 95268 8809

n.r.1481 715 39 106 140 1000 432 77 1512 154

all 2091 226 181 275 318 1000 7835017 550276 10125349 719491estd. no. of persons (’00) 2290332 1828659 2785143 3221214 10125349 × × × ×sample no. of persons 169215 133009 185934 231333 719491 × × × ×

Table 32 : Pe r 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each level of education

all-India persons rural+urban

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A- 91

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2866 135 130 277 458 1000 44416 3387 51359 3853professionals (2) 3167 128 156 285 431 1000 40335 3822 46245 4399associate professionals (3) 3303 103 142 220 535 1000 30458 2907 33969 3290clerks (4) 2840 123 125 237 515 1000 16993 1539 19372 1762service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2554 173 165 254 407 1000 94804 6684 114692 7875skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2684 148 145 263 444 1000 748735 50803 879147 60388craft and related trades workers (7) 2581 162 147 262 429 1000 120455 7998 143799 9345plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2785 166 119 245 470 1000 52831 3534 63320 4093elementary occupations (9) 2509 155 147 286 412 1000 584560 30739 691979 35764One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2641 152 146 269 433 1000 1733586 111413 2043881 130769

n.r. 1799 276 190 279 256 1000 1278956 79584 1766140 113336

estd. no. of persons (’00) 797479 633120 1042732 1336691 3810021 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 53108 41657 62209 87131 244105 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India male rural

all 2251 209 166 274 351 1000 3012542 190997 3810021 244105

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A- 92

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2097 227 219 223 331 1000 7896 599 10216 727professionals (2) 2730 140 165 285 410 1000 7586 698 8822 843associate professionals (3) 2809 133 191 250 425 1000 12192 1002 14068 1186clerks (4) 3124 191 174 208 426 1000 2012 190 2487 260service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2164 216 197 225 361 1000 14801 1076 18885 1406skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2314 153 173 304 370 1000 318907 20106 376526 25059craft and related trades workers (7) 2281 183 173 284 361 1000 33292 1844 40741 2389plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 1746 306 203 264 228 1000 2637 207 3798 289elementary occupations (9) 2300 157 165 310 369 1000 276633 13505 328067 15949One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2314 159 171 301 369 1000 675955 39227 803611 48108n.r. 1834 268 193 277 262 1000 2045808 131074 2794526 182648

estd. no. of persons (’00) 876374 675744 1017111 1028909 3598138 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 60455 44043 60597 65661 230756 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each ccupation (NCO)

all-India female rural

all 1941 244 188 283 286 1000 2721763 170301 3598138 230756

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A- 93

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2738 150 145 268 437 1000 52312 3986 61575 4580professionals (2) 3097 130 158 285 428 1000 47921 4520 55067 5242associate professionals (3) 3158 112 156 229 503 1000 42650 3909 48036 4476clerks (4) 2872 131 131 234 504 1000 19005 1729 21860 2022service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2499 179 170 250 401 1000 109605 7760 133577 9281skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2573 150 153 275 422 1000 1067641 70909 1255674 85447craft and related trades workers (7) 2515 167 153 267 414 1000 153747 9842 184541 11734plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2726 174 124 246 456 1000 55469 3741 67118 4382elementary occupations (9) 2442 156 153 294 398 1000 861192 44244 1020045 51713One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2549 154 153 278 415 1000 2409542 150640 2847492 178877n.r. 1820 271 192 278 260 1000 3324764 210658 4560685 295985

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1673872 1308863 2059843 2365599 7408178 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 113564 85700 122806 152792 474862 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India persons rural

all 2100 226 177 278 319 1000 5734306 361298 7408178 474862

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A- 94

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2596 161 159 261 419 1000 84427 8020 100592 9307professionals (2) 2717 143 182 238 438 1000 58246 6270 67982 7140associate professionals (3) 2754 130 163 290 416 1000 35601 3729 40933 4304clerks (4) 2548 145 188 269 398 1000 36396 3448 42574 4016service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2389 189 175 248 388 1000 104799 10072 129169 12094skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2632 177 153 274 396 1000 26198 2867 31835 3662craft and related trades workers (7) 2273 190 163 289 358 1000 114204 9163 141010 10879plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2563 153 152 268 428 1000 54942 4882 64897 5642elementary occupations (9) 2161 183 203 280 334 1000 110948 9474 135874 11301One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2437 171 173 269 387 1000 625761 57925 754867 68345n.r. 1935 255 198 260 287 1000 501946 43188 673514 59200

estd. no. of persons (’00) 300674 264183 378015 485508 1428380× × × ×

sample no. of persons 26432 23797 32496 44820 127545× × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each occupation (NCO)

all-India male urban

all 2201 210 185 265 340 1000 1127707 101113 1428380 127545

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A- 95

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2257 247 152 213 388 1000 8760 836 11630 1053professionals (2) 2537 158 219 243 380 1000 12142 1301 14428 1589associate professionals (3) 2337 167 176 289 368 1000 12986 1210 15585 1514clerks (4) 2528 169 207 288 336 1000 6225 572 7494 801service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2067 271 173 254 302 1000 12212 1202 16744 1694skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2469 180 141 298 382 1000 8219 735 10019 1061craft and related trades workers (7) 2222 179 179 295 346 1000 19870 1532 24214 2034plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2276 148 197 221 434 1000 2549 167 2992 210elementary occupations (9) 2029 237 182 259 323 1000 33264 2707 43600 3324One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2226 208 180 266 347 1000 116226 10262 146705 13280n.r. 1880 250 201 270 280 1000 856778 77603 1142086 103804

estd. no. of persons (’00) 315786 255613 347285 370107 1288791 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 29219 23512 30632 33721 117084 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India female urban

all 1919 245 198 269 287 1000 973004 87865 1288791 117084

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A- 96

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2561 170 158 256 416 1000 93186 8856 112222 10360professionals (2) 2686 146 188 239 427 1000 70388 7571 82409 8729associate professionals (3) 2639 140 167 290 403 1000 48587 4939 56518 5818clerks (4) 2545 149 190 272 389 1000 42621 4020 50068 4817service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2352 198 175 249 378 1000 117011 11274 145913 13788skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2593 178 150 280 392 1000 34417 3602 41854 4723craft and related trades workers (7) 2265 189 166 290 356 1000 134073 10695 165224 12913plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2550 153 154 265 428 1000 57491 5049 67889 5852elementary occupations (9) 2129 196 197 275 331 1000 144212 12181 179474 14625One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2403 177 174 268 380 1000 741987 68187 901572 81625n.r. 1900 252 200 266 282 1000 1358724 120791 1815600 163004

estd. no. of persons (’00) 616460 519796 725300 855615 2717171 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 55651 47309 63128 78541 244629 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips f r each occupation (NCO)

all-India persons urban

all 2067 227 191 267 315 1000 2100711 188978 2717171 244629

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A- 97

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2687 152 149 266 432 1000 128842 11407 151951 13160professionals (2) 2899 137 171 257 435 1000 98581 10092 114226 11539associate professionals (3) 3003 118 154 258 470 1000 66059 6636 74901 7594clerks (4) 2639 138 168 259 435 1000 53389 4987 61946 5778service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2466 181 171 251 397 1000 199603 16756 243861 19969skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2683 149 145 263 443 1000 774933 53670 910983 64050craft and related trades workers (7) 2428 176 155 275 393 1000 234659 17161 284809 20224plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2673 159 136 256 449 1000 107774 8416 128217 9735elementary occupations (9) 2452 160 156 285 399 1000 695507 40213 827853 47065One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2586 157 153 269 421 1000 2359347 169338 2798748 199114

n.r. 1836 270 192 274 264 1000 1780902 122772 2439654 172536

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1098153 897303 1420747 1822199 5238402 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 79540 65454 94705 131951 371650 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India male rural+urban

all 2237 210 171 271 348 1000 4140249 292110 5238402 371650

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A- 98

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2182 238 184 218 361 1000 16656 1435 21846 1780professionals (2) 2610 151 198 259 391 1000 19728 1999 23250 2432associate professionals (3) 2561 151 183 271 395 1000 25178 2212 29653 2700clerks (4) 2676 175 199 268 359 1000 8237 762 9981 1061service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2118 242 186 239 333 1000 27013 2278 35629 3100skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2318 154 172 304 370 1000 327125 20841 386545 26120craft and related trades workers (7) 2259 182 175 288 356 1000 53161 3376 64956 4423plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 1979 236 200 245 319 1000 5186 374 6790 499elementary occupations (9) 2268 166 167 304 363 1000 309897 16212 371666 19273One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2300 166 172 295 366 1000 792181 49489 950316 61388n.r. 1847 263 195 275 267 1000 2902586 208677 3936612 286452

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1192161 931356 1364396 1399016 4886928 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 89674 67555 91229 99382 347840 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India female rural+urban

all 1935 244 191 279 286 1000 3694768 258166 4886928 347840

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A- 99

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2623 163 154 260 424 1000 145498 12842 173797 14940professionals (2) 2850 139 176 257 428 1000 118309 12091 137476 13971associate professionals (3) 2878 127 162 262 449 1000 91237 8848 104554 10294clerks (4) 2644 143 172 260 424 1000 61625 5749 71928 6839service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2422 189 172 249 389 1000 226616 19034 279490 23069skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 2574 151 153 275 421 1000 1102058 74511 1297528 90170craft and related trades workers (7) 2397 177 159 278 386 1000 287821 20537 349765 24647plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2638 163 139 256 442 1000 112960 8790 135007 10234elementary occupations (9) 2395 162 159 291 388 1000 1005405 56425 1199519 66338One digit NCO (1) –(9) 2514 159 158 276 407 1000 3151528 218827 3749064 260502n.r. 1843 265 194 275 266 1000 4683488 331449 6376285 458989

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2290332 1828659 2785143 3221214 10125349× × × ×

sample no. of persons 169215 133009 185934 231333 719491 × × × ×

Table 33: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each occupation (NCO) all-India pe rsons rural+urban

all 2091 226 181 275 318 1000 7835017 550276 10125349 719491

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A- 100

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2601 152 147 272 429 1000 1172047 71584 1382649 84611fishing 2194 354 113 237 296 1000 6551 475 10147 657mining and quarrying 2729 174 125 260 442 1000 12291 803 14871 954manufacturing 2601 155 153 269 423 1000 115226 7133 136337 8350electricity, gas and water supply 3614 98 78 169 655 1000 4139 385 4588 422construction 2778 130 129 273 468 1000 139323 9167 160121 10517wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2479 169 165 272 393 1000 110291 8020 132711 9406hotels and restaurants 2654 140 150 235 475 1000 15372 943 17873 1131transport, storage and communications 2739 145 140 279 437 1000 66117 4359 77309 5014financial intermediation 3533 133 85 228 553 1000 5460 414 6298 461real estate, renting and business activities 3077 223 91 157 529 1000 7154 465 9209 571public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2970 144 135 239 482 1000 19685 2454 23006 2909education 3455 95 128 242 535 1000 30016 3053 33178 3350health and social work 3141 96 139 312 454 1000 6806 546 7527 611other community, social and personal service activities 2833 162 156 255 428 1000 23050 1586 27492 1786activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1663 293 263 121 323 1000 2591 207 3665 258extraterritorial organizations and bodies 0 1000 0 0 0 1000 0 0 5 1n.r. 1798 276 190 279 256 1000 1276422 79403 1763036 113096

estd. no. of persons (’00) 797479 633120 1042732 1336691 3810021 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 53108 41657 62209 87131 244105 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all-India male rural

all 2251 209 166 274 351 1000 3012542 190997 3810021 244105

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A- 101

all-India female rural

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2306 154 170 306 370 1000 561512 31839 663754 38846fishing 1416 368 163 212 256 1000 418 33 661 46mining and quarrying 2457 146 116 345 393 1000 2020 123 2365 154manufacturing 2233 200 173 283 343 1000 45321 2560 56678 3357electricity, gas and water supply 5655 23 63 213 701 1000 171 18 175 22construction 2368 143 164 326 367 1000 19849 1047 23153 1227wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2174 212 172 240 377 1000 12781 948 16213 1230hotels and restaurants 2262 151 156 314 379 1000 3007 209 3540 266transport, storage and communications 2260 32 312 411 244 1000 1172 55 1211 66financial intermediation 2576 73 323 182 422 1000 732 56 789 62real estate, renting and business activities 3227 179 439 119 262 1000 692 30 843 39public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2957 220 97 248 435 1000 2059 318 2640 422education 2931 135 141 270 455 1000 13831 1178 15981 1380health and social work 3034 59 267 203 472 1000 4299 322 4566 371other community, social and personal service activities 1926 299 198 185 318 1000 4709 313 6716 381activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1697 217 303 241 238 1000 3599 208 4597 281extraterritorial organizations and bodies 1000 0 1000 0 0 1000 1 1 1 1n.r. 1834 268 193 277 262 1000 2045592 131043 2794255 182605

estd. no. of persons (’00) 876374 675744 1017111 1028909 3598138 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 60455 44043 60597 65661 230756 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 1941 244 188 283 286 1000 2721763 170301 3598138 230756

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A- 102

all-India persons ruralNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2505 153 155 283 410 1000 1733559 103423 2046403 123457fishing 2146 355 116 236 293 1000 6969 508 10808 703mining and quarrying 2692 170 124 272 435 1000 14311 926 17236 1108manufacturing 2493 168 159 273 400 1000 160547 9693 193015 11707electricity, gas and water supply 3689 95 77 170 657 1000 4310 403 4763 444construction 2726 132 133 280 455 1000 159172 10214 183274 11744wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2446 174 166 269 392 1000 123072 8968 148923 10636hotels and restaurants 2589 142 151 248 459 1000 18379 1152 21413 1397transport, storage and communications 2732 143 142 281 434 1000 67289 4414 78520 5080financial intermediation 3426 126 112 223 539 1000 6193 470 7087 523real estate, renting and business activities 3089 219 120 154 507 1000 7846 495 10051 610public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2968 152 131 240 477 1000 21744 2772 25646 3331education 3285 108 132 251 509 1000 43847 4231 49159 4730health and social work 3101 82 187 271 461 1000 11105 868 12093 982other community, social and personal service activitie 2655 189 164 241 406 1000 27759 1899 34208 2167activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private hous olds 1682 251 286 188 276 1000 6190 415 8262 539extraterritorial organizations and bodies 145 855 145 0 0 1000 1 1 6 2n.r. 1820 271 191 278 260 1000 3322014 210446 4557309 295702

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1673872 1308863 2059843 2365599 7408178 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 113564 85700 122806 152792 474862 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of pe rsons by number of overnight trips for each NIC section

all 2100 226 177 278 319 1000 5734306 361298 7408178 474862

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A- 103

all-India male urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2480 173 152 276 399 1000 35819 3447 43292 4319fishing 2497 390 186 128 295 1000 2420 273 3967 396mining and quarrying 2650 139 118 242 500 1000 5286 642 6143 685manufacturing 2281 190 171 284 355 1000 138206 11492 170680 13496electricity, gas and water supply 2895 131 154 200 515 1000 3824 488 4403 540construction 2332 158 189 279 374 1000 71857 5843 85353 7017wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2278 190 188 251 370 1000 148799 14514 183795 17319hotels and restaurants 2630 134 171 245 449 1000 23610 1865 27277 2141transport, storage and communications 2584 152 160 281 407 1000 68778 6053 81072 7046financial intermediation 2766 125 185 295 395 1000 16779 1369 19175 1544real estate, renting and business activities 2567 149 190 262 399 1000 26258 2295 30844 2641public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2851 130 181 242 447 1000 34581 4345 39736 5118education 3001 119 132 266 483 1000 21620 2397 24548 2710health and social work 2691 218 62 231 489 1000 7889 943 10089 1071other community, social and personal service activities 2494 170 165 330 335 1000 16885 1626 20331 1904activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 2005 250 211 235 304 1000 3302 363 4402 442extraterritorial organizations and bodies 1147 580 17 282 121 1000 13 11 32 13n.r. 1935 255 198 260 287 1000 501781 43147 673240 59143

estd. no. of persons (’00) 300674 264183 378015 485508 1428380 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 26432 23797 32496 44820 127545 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 2201 210 185 265 340 1000 1127707 101113 1428380 127545

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A- 104

all-India female urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2129 228 156 273 343 1000 15483 1307 20055 1732fishing 7148 62 79 96 764 1000 331 24 353 29mining and quarrying 2271 6 286 222 486 1000 1123 42 1129 45manufacturing 2237 182 186 279 353 1000 28314 2243 34627 2943electricity, gas and water supply 2618 107 16 514 363 1000 534 39 598 53construction 2335 148 173 237 441 1000 6678 590 7840 698wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2076 288 158 239 315 1000 12136 1244 17045 1739hotels and restaurants 2176 212 257 226 305 1000 2961 258 3759 319transport, storage and communications 2055 243 137 276 343 1000 2509 198 3315 235financial intermediation 2733 89 260 184 467 1000 2102 183 2308 220real estate, renting and business activities 2439 199 167 267 367 1000 3627 312 4530 375public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2903 199 144 233 424 1000 4118 593 5138 866education 2418 139 206 282 372 1000 15586 1499 18109 1820health and social work 2449 163 172 317 348 1000 5111 504 6103 614other community, social and personal service activities 2186 166 211 291 332 1000 8245 612 9888 754activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1565 377 172 234 218 1000 7564 627 12138 854extraterritorial organizations and bodies 0 1000 0 0 0 1000 0 0 26 1n.r. 1880 250 201 270 279 1000 856582 77590 1141827 103787

estd. no. of persons (’00) 315786 255613 347285 370107 1288791 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 29219 23512 30632 33721 117084 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 1919 245 198 269 287 1000 973004 87865 1288791 117084

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A- 105

all-India persons urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2369 190 153 275 381 1000 51302 4754 63347 6051fishing 2878 363 178 126 333 1000 2751 297 4321 425mining and quarrying 2591 119 144 239 498 1000 6409 684 7272 730manufacturing 2273 189 173 283 355 1000 166520 13735 205307 16439electricity, gas and water supply 2862 128 137 237 497 1000 4359 527 5001 593construction 2332 157 188 276 380 1000 78534 6433 93194 7715wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2261 199 186 250 366 1000 160935 15758 200841 19058hotels and restaurants 2575 144 182 243 432 1000 26571 2123 31036 2460transport, storage and communications 2563 155 159 281 405 1000 71287 6251 84387 7281financial intermediation 2763 121 193 284 402 1000 18881 1552 21484 1764real estate, renting and business activities 2551 155 187 263 395 1000 29885 2607 35375 3016public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2857 138 177 241 445 1000 38699 4938 44874 5984education 2753 128 163 273 436 1000 37206 3896 42657 4530health and social work 2600 197 103 264 436 1000 12999 1447 16192 1685other community, social and personal service activities 2393 168 180 317 334 1000 25130 2238 30219 2658activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1682 343 182 234 241 1000 10866 990 16540 1296extraterritorial organizations and bodies 628 770 9 154 66 1000 13 11 58 14n.r. 1900 252 200 266 282 1000 1358363 120737 1815067 162930

estd. no. of persons (’00) 616460 519796 725300 855615 2717171 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 55651 47309 63128 78541 244629 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 2067 227 191 267 315 1000 2100711 188978 2717171 244629

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A- 106

all-India male rural+urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2597 153 147 272 428 1000 1207866 75031 1425941 88930fishing 2279 364 133 207 296 1000 8971 748 14115 1053mining and quarrying 2706 164 123 255 459 1000 17577 1445 21014 1639manufacturing 2423 175 163 277 385 1000 253433 18625 307017 21846electricity, gas and water supply 3262 114 115 184 587 1000 7963 873 8991 962construction 2623 140 150 275 435 1000 211180 15010 245474 17534wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2362 181 179 260 380 1000 259090 22534 316506 26725hotels and restaurants 2640 137 163 241 459 1000 38982 2808 45150 3272transport, storage and communications 2660 148 150 280 422 1000 134895 10412 158381 12060financial intermediation 2956 127 160 279 434 1000 22239 1783 25473 2005real estate, renting and business activities 2685 166 167 238 429 1000 33412 2760 40053 3212public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2894 135 164 241 460 1000 54266 6799 62742 8027education 3262 105 129 252 513 1000 51636 5450 57726 6060health and social work 2883 166 95 266 474 1000 14695 1489 17616 1682other community, social and personal service activities 2689 165 160 287 389 1000 39935 3212 47823 3690activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1849 269 235 183 313 1000 5893 570 8067 700extraterritorial organizations and bodies 991 637 15 243 105 1000 13 11 37 14n.r. 1836 270 192 274 264 1000 1778203 122550 2436276 172239

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1098153 897303 1420747 1822199 5238402 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 79540 65454 94705 131951 371650 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 2237 210 171 271 348 1000 4140249 292110 5238402 371650

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 107

all-India female rural+urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2301 156 170 305 369 1000 576995 33146 683809 40578fishing 3412 262 134 172 433 1000 749 57 1014 75mining and quarrying 2397 101 171 305 423 1000 3143 165 3494 199manufacturing 2235 194 178 282 347 1000 73635 4803 91305 6300electricity, gas and water supply 3306 88 27 445 440 1000 705 57 773 75construction 2360 144 166 303 386 1000 26526 1637 30994 1925wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2124 251 165 239 345 1000 24917 2192 33258 2969hotels and restaurants 2218 182 208 269 341 1000 5968 467 7299 585transport, storage and communications 2110 187 184 312 317 1000 3681 253 4526 301financial intermediation 2693 85 276 184 455 1000 2834 239 3098 282real estate, renting and business activities 2563 196 210 244 350 1000 4319 342 5373 414public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2921 206 128 238 428 1000 6177 911 7778 1288education 2659 137 176 276 411 1000 29417 2677 34090 3200health and social work 2700 118 213 268 401 1000 9409 826 10669 985other community, social and personal service activities 2081 220 206 248 326 1000 12954 925 16604 1135activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1601 333 208 236 223 1000 11163 835 16735 1135extraterritorial organizations and bodies 31 969 31 0 0 1000 1 1 27 2n.r. 1847 263 195 275 267 1000 2902174 208633 3936081 286392

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1192161 931356 1364396 1399016 4886928 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 89674 67555 91229 99382 347840 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 1935 244 191 279 286 1000 3694768 258166 4886928 347840

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 108

all-India persons rural+urbanNIC average

no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of overnight trips number of overnight visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2501 154 155 283 409 1000 1784861 108177 2109750 129508fishing 2355 358 133 204 305 1000 9720 805 15129 1128mining and quarrying 2662 155 130 262 454 1000 20720 1610 24508 1838manufacturing 2380 179 166 278 377 1000 327067 23428 398322 28146electricity, gas and water supply 3265 112 108 205 575 1000 8669 930 9765 1037construction 2593 140 151 279 430 1000 237706 16647 276468 19459wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 2340 188 177 258 377 1000 284007 24726 349764 29694hotels and restaurants 2581 143 169 245 443 1000 44950 3275 52449 3857transport, storage and communications 2645 149 151 281 419 1000 138576 10665 162907 12361financial intermediation 2927 122 173 269 436 1000 25073 2022 28571 2287real estate, renting and business activities 2670 169 172 239 420 1000 37731 3102 45426 3626public administration and defence; compulsory social security 2897 143 160 241 456 1000 60443 7710 70521 9315education 3038 117 147 261 475 1000 81053 8127 91816 9260health and social work 2814 148 139 267 446 1000 24104 2315 28285 2667other community, social and personal service activities 2532 179 172 277 372 1000 52889 4137 64427 4825activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 1682 312 217 219 252 1000 17056 1405 24802 1835extraterritorial organizations and bodies 584 778 22 140 60 1000 14 12 64 16n.r. 1843 266 194 275 266 1000 4680378 331183 6372376 458632

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2290332 1828659 2785143 3221214 10125349 × × × ×

sample no. of persons 169215 133009 185934 231333 719491 × × × ×

Table 34: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f overnight trips fo r each NIC section

all 2091 226 181 275 318 1000 7835017 550276 10125349 719491

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 109

all-India male ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2204 353 114 204 329 1000 234605 14457 362871 226915-9 2047 372 115 201 312 1000 286170 17021 455535 2770710-14 2142 353 116 208 323 1000 317803 19006 491029 3013715-19 3102 239 108 204 449 1000 299355 18848 393374 2571720-24 4177 133 88 190 589 1000 268745 17626 310008 2097225-29 5239 78 58 158 706 1000 261968 17081 284283 1890930-34 6219 42 36 114 808 1000 135102 8897 141047 953035-39 5740 52 35 112 801 1000 253067 15916 266902 1691840-44 5896 54 31 112 803 1000 213059 13844 225263 1464345-49 5659 50 42 130 778 1000 191629 12536 201753 1333350-54 5222 61 50 159 730 1000 148963 9567 158653 1032055-59 4926 79 57 162 703 1000 113116 7378 122821 812660-64 4501 123 70 165 642 1000 95801 6227 109273 709665-69 4118 166 75 170 589 1000 68291 4337 81884 523270-74 3597 248 72 176 504 1000 39851 2434 52997 327575-79 3299 352 73 170 405 1000 13353 948 20613 140380-84 2831 381 69 172 378 1000 7335 463 11854 803Above 84 1716 512 133 82 273 1000 4026 218 8247 446

estd. no. of persons (’00) 755280 307673 657589 2089479 3810021

xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 51014 20448 41240 131403 244105

xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 3891 198 81 173 548 1000 3054741 193091 3810021 244105

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 110

all-India female ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2242 358 110 204 328 1000 219674 13074 342235 210465-9 2019 374 116 210 300 1000 248832 14612 397469 2422310-14 1941 385 125 205 285 1000 248874 15334 404667 2562115-19 2221 320 136 223 321 1000 227078 14498 333925 2242620-24 2854 256 113 218 413 1000 240090 15935 322849 2169025-29 3127 228 99 215 458 1000 231272 15127 299479 1964730-34 3484 184 90 200 526 1000 133295 8511 163322 1051035-39 3406 207 81 199 513 1000 212995 13733 268728 1717640-44 3350 204 100 204 493 1000 170225 10767 213720 1379645-49 3341 212 104 211 473 1000 149234 9671 189349 1247750-54 3030 243 91 216 450 1000 113041 7281 149262 964455-59 2868 265 117 204 413 1000 88309 5822 120217 795060-64 2628 308 101 208 383 1000 79729 4761 115148 699965-69 2536 330 102 206 362 1000 48462 3110 72360 473670-74 2093 411 136 182 272 1000 27400 1664 46491 297075-79 2030 436 118 160 287 1000 11708 722 20747 131080-84 1324 583 116 116 186 1000 5209 370 12481 839Above 84 1064 644 92 138 125 1000 2845 230 7993 568

estd. no. of persons (’00)

1048989 392295 749019 1407834 3598138 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70123 25781 45732 89120 230756 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 2666 292 109 208 391 1000 2549149 160633 3598138 230756

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 111

all-India persons ruralage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2222 356 112 204 328 1000 454279 27531 705125 437385-9 2034 373 116 205 306 1000 535001 31633 853004 5193010-14 2051 367 120 207 306 1000 566677 34340 895697 5575815-19 2698 276 121 213 390 1000 526432 33346 727299 4814320-24 3502 196 101 205 499 1000 508836 33561 632856 4266225-29 4155 155 79 187 579 1000 493239 32208 583762 3855630-34 4751 118 65 160 657 1000 268398 17408 304370 2004035-39 4569 130 58 156 656 1000 466063 29649 535630 3409440-44 4657 127 64 157 652 1000 383283 24611 438983 2843945-49 4537 128 72 169 630 1000 340863 22207 391102 2581050-54 4159 149 70 187 594 1000 262004 16848 307915 1996455-59 3908 171 86 183 560 1000 201425 13200 243038 1607660-64 3540 218 86 187 509 1000 175531 10988 224421 1409565-69 3376 243 87 187 483 1000 116753 7447 154244 996870-74 2894 324 102 179 395 1000 67251 4098 99488 624575-79 2662 394 95 165 346 1000 25061 1670 41360 271380-84 2058 484 93 143 279 1000 12545 833 24335 1642Above 84 1395 577 113 110 201 1000 6872 448 16241 1014

estd. no. of persons (’00)

1804288 699968 1406608 3497314 7408178 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 121138 46229 86972 220523 474862 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 3296 244 94 190 472 1000 5603889 353724 7408178 474862

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 112

all-India male urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2007 385 125 175 315 1000 69801 5778 113446 94025-9 1945 383 111 206 299 1000 80606 6947 130640 1128610-14 1988 366 118 209 306 1000 97061 8149 153187 1328415-19 2247 335 108 214 343 1000 99730 9063 149944 1355020-24 2827 250 90 210 450 1000 110235 9719 146890 1304825-29 3410 199 73 192 536 1000 104167 9120 130120 1138930-34 3685 191 75 157 577 1000 55923 5274 69102 620335-39 3958 160 58 165 617 1000 90890 8316 108200 967140-44 4228 136 47 169 647 1000 79241 7404 91757 848945-49 3994 162 52 201 585 1000 71415 6799 85227 789750-54 3846 170 60 180 590 1000 50775 5061 61155 601255-59 3591 187 81 176 556 1000 38419 3846 47280 456760-64 3264 238 58 187 517 1000 29376 2893 38544 359665-69 2938 259 107 178 455 1000 20738 1965 28004 258470-74 2456 359 65 229 347 1000 12100 1073 18867 155075-79 2190 376 96 212 316 1000 5856 510 9381 78380-84 1558 502 102 198 198 1000 2085 192 4186 354Above 84 1209 591 40 178 191 1000 1161 110 2840 248

estd. no. of persons (’00)

375823 123491 274042 655024 1428380 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 32326 11355 23082 60782 127545 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 2967 263 86 192 459 1000 1052557 95219 1428380 127545

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 113

all-India female urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1915 391 112 205 292 1000 59773 5175 98140 85035-9 1872 401 122 197 280 1000 68170 5881 113888 986210-14 1866 388 126 204 282 1000 78997 6809 129149 1130415-19 1896 367 127 212 294 1000 77975 6961 123182 1151720-24 2243 316 117 214 353 1000 87642 7985 128093 1198225-29 2508 292 97 215 395 1000 82873 7873 117059 1106230-34 2719 255 85 212 447 1000 49321 4471 66241 590635-39 2724 262 89 215 434 1000 78497 7202 106377 952240-44 2770 267 90 217 426 1000 63006 6124 85988 813645-49 2678 278 92 218 412 1000 52402 5150 72569 697050-54 2564 297 87 197 419 1000 40383 3811 57431 529655-59 2462 313 91 224 372 1000 32659 3084 47537 429860-64 2055 379 104 200 317 1000 24876 2392 40085 351765-69 2002 397 92 219 292 1000 15945 1496 26452 243170-74 1598 499 82 206 213 1000 8647 824 17259 152075-79 1568 534 89 160 217 1000 4008 416 8601 78380-84 972 620 131 121 128 1000 1638 199 4304 488Above 84 662 702 105 132 61 1000 1152 115 3868 357

estd. no. of persons (’00)

431195 135911 270792 450893 1288791 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 38559 12662 23395 42468 117084 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 2258 335 105 210 350 1000 857596 78525 1288791 117084

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 114

all-India persons urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 1964 388 119 189 304 1000 129574 10953 211586 179055-9 1911 392 116 202 290 1000 148776 12828 244528 2114810-14 1932 376 122 207 295 1000 176058 14958 282336 2458815-19 2089 349 117 213 321 1000 177705 16024 273126 2506720-24 2555 280 103 212 405 1000 197877 17704 274983 2503025-29 2983 243 85 203 469 1000 187040 16993 247179 2245130-34 3212 222 80 184 513 1000 105244 9745 135343 1210935-39 3346 211 73 190 526 1000 169386 15518 214577 1919340-44 3523 200 68 192 540 1000 142247 13528 177745 1662545-49 3389 215 70 209 506 1000 123817 11949 157796 1486750-54 3225 231 73 188 507 1000 91158 8872 118587 1130855-59 3025 250 86 200 464 1000 71078 6930 94817 886560-64 2648 310 81 194 415 1000 54253 5285 78629 711365-69 2484 326 100 198 376 1000 36682 3461 54456 501570-74 2046 426 73 218 283 1000 20747 1897 36126 307075-79 1892 451 93 187 268 1000 9864 926 17981 156680-84 1261 562 117 159 163 1000 3722 391 8490 842Above 84 894 655 77 151 116 1000 2313 225 6709 605

estd. no. of persons (’00)

807018 259402 544834 1105917 2717171 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70885 24017 46477 103250 244629 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 2631 297 95 201 407 1000 1910153 173744 2717171 244629

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 115

all-India male rural+ urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2157 361 116 197 325 1000 304406 20235 476317 320935-9 2025 374 114 202 309 1000 366776 23968 586175 3899310-14 2105 356 117 208 319 1000 414864 27155 644216 4342115-19 2866 265 108 207 420 1000 399084 27911 543318 3926720-24 3743 171 89 197 544 1000 378980 27345 456898 3402025-29 4665 116 63 168 653 1000 366135 26201 414403 3029830-34 5385 91 49 128 732 1000 191025 14171 210150 1573335-39 5226 83 42 127 748 1000 343957 24232 375102 2658940-44 5414 78 35 129 758 1000 292300 21248 317021 2313245-49 5165 83 45 151 721 1000 263044 19335 286980 2123050-54 4839 91 53 165 691 1000 199738 14628 219808 1633255-59 4555 109 63 166 662 1000 151535 11224 170100 1269360-64 4179 153 66 171 609 1000 125178 9120 147817 1069265-69 3817 190 83 172 555 1000 89029 6302 109888 781670-74 3297 277 70 190 462 1000 51951 3507 71864 482575-79 2952 360 80 183 377 1000 19208 1458 29993 218680-84 2499 413 78 179 331 1000 9420 655 16040 1157Above 84 1586 532 109 106 252 1000 5187 328 11087 694

estd. no. of persons (’00)

1131104 431164 931631 2744503 5238402 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 83340 31803 64322 192185 371650 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 3639 216 82 178 524 1000 4107298 288310 5238402 371650

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A- 116

all-India female rural+ urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2169 365 111 204 320 1000 279447 18249 440375 295495-9 1986 380 118 207 295 1000 317002 20493 511357 3408510-14 1923 386 125 205 284 1000 327871 22143 533817 3692515-19 2134 333 134 220 313 1000 305053 21459 457107 3394320-24 2680 273 114 217 396 1000 327732 23920 450942 3367225-29 2953 246 99 215 441 1000 314144 23000 416538 3070930-34 3263 205 89 203 503 1000 182616 12982 229563 1641635-39 3213 223 83 203 490 1000 291492 20935 375105 2669840-44 3183 222 97 207 474 1000 233231 16891 299708 2193245-49 3157 230 101 213 456 1000 201636 14821 261918 1944750-54 2900 258 90 211 442 1000 153424 11092 206693 1494055-59 2753 279 110 210 402 1000 120968 8906 167754 1224860-64 2480 326 102 206 366 1000 104606 7153 155233 1051665-69 2393 348 99 209 343 1000 64407 4606 98811 716770-74 1959 435 121 189 256 1000 36048 2488 63750 449075-79 1894 464 109 160 266 1000 15716 1138 29348 209380-84 1234 592 120 117 171 1000 6847 569 16785 1327Above 84 933 663 96 136 104 1000 3997 345 11862 925

estd. no. of persons (’00)

1480184 528205 1019812 1858727 4886928 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 108682 38443 69127 131588 347840 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 2559 303 108 209 380 1000 3406745 239158 4886928 347840

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 117

all-India persons rural+ urbanage group average no.

of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)0-4 2163 363 114 201 323 1000 583853 38484 916711 616435-9 2007 377 116 205 303 1000 683777 44461 1097533 7307810-14 2023 370 121 207 303 1000 742735 49298 1178033 8034615-19 2532 296 120 213 371 1000 704137 49370 1000425 7321020-24 3215 222 101 207 470 1000 706713 51265 907839 6769225-29 3807 181 81 192 546 1000 680279 49201 830941 6100730-34 4278 150 70 167 613 1000 373642 27153 439713 3214935-39 4219 153 62 165 619 1000 635449 45167 750206 5328740-44 4330 148 65 167 620 1000 525530 38139 616728 4506445-49 4207 153 72 181 594 1000 464680 34156 548898 4067750-54 3900 172 71 187 570 1000 353162 25720 426501 3127255-59 3660 193 86 188 533 1000 272503 20130 337855 2494160-64 3308 242 85 189 485 1000 229784 16273 303050 2120865-69 3143 265 91 190 455 1000 153435 10908 208700 1498370-74 2668 351 94 189 365 1000 87999 5995 135614 931575-79 2429 411 95 172 322 1000 34924 2596 59342 427980-84 1852 504 99 147 249 1000 16267 1224 32824 2484Above 84 1249 600 103 122 176 1000 9184 673 22949 1619

estd. no. of persons (’00)

2611306 959369 1951443 4603231 10125349 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 192023 70246 133449 323773 719491 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 35: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each age group

all 3118 258 95 193 455 1000 7514043 527468 10125349 719491

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A- 118

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 5588 63 44 130 762 1000 759216 51481 810551 5581812 7688 42 43 74 841 1000 19806 1453 20668 1537

21 4145 137 92 184 588 1000 261084 18197 302381 2119731 5807 71 46 149 734 1000 154701 12581 166435 1375541 4743 64 82 132 722 1000 5518 411 5893 48851 4966 78 57 155 709 1000 684362 35274 742385 3842311-51 5186 80 56 148 716 1000 1884687 119397 2048315 131218

81 3555 183 99 212 506 1000 35284 3034 43197 378691 2376 325 111 206 358 1000 734979 46313 1089622 7086592 2540 298 107 227 368 1000 15512 812 22088 125393 2285 358 101 151 389 1000 6997 491 10906 78494 4748 150 84 138 627 1000 33630 2290 39588 270995 2566 407 77 157 360 1000 20523 1270 34582 211197 2109 381 111 198 310 1000 322557 19423 520832 3125999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2355 340 109 201 350 1000 1134198 70599 1717618 108981

n.r. 1395 359 301 185 155 1000 572 61 892 120

estd. no. of persons (’00) 755280 307673 657589 2089479 3810021 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 51014 20448 41240 131403 244105 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same day trips for each broad activity status

all-India male rural

all 3891 198 81 173 548 1000 3054741 193091 3810021 244105

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A- 119

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 4234 144 81 180 595 1000 80546 6127 94143 739612 6293 172 19 102 707 1000 3758 228 4539 25321 3031 206 104 221 469 1000 257253 16321 324188 2104931 5804 109 73 137 681 1000 30785 2553 34534 291541 3387 173 86 240 501 1000 3348 220 4047 28251 3580 164 85 212 539 1000 286684 13591 342781 1633011-51 3545 176 91 208 524 1000 662373 39040 804233 4822581 5131 140 63 145 652 1000 8645 959 10051 1227

91 2117 353 122 210 315 1000 542072 34574 837708 5587892 2685 289 103 210 399 1000 621998 41783 874581 5853693 2726 271 123 218 388 1000 383112 24398 525566 3349394 3833 176 93 176 556 1000 25443 1523 30860 188295 1645 489 119 180 212 1000 10111 668 19786 134797 1994 404 114 196 286 1000 294398 17633 493699 3003299 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

91-99 2404 325 114 208 352 1000 1877133 120579 2782200 181168

n.r. 1624 397 53 411 140 1000 997 55 1654 136

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1048989 392295 749019 1407834 3598138 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70123 25781 45732 89120 230756 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India female rural

all 2666 292 109 208 391 1000 2549149 160633 3598138 230756

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A- 120

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 5448 72 48 135 745 1000 839762 57608 904695 6321412 7437 65 39 79 817 1000 23563 1681 25208 179021 3569 173 98 203 526 1000 518337 34518 626569 4224631 5806 77 51 147 725 1000 185486 15134 200969 1667041 4191 108 84 176 632 1000 8865 631 9940 77051 4529 105 66 173 656 1000 971047 48865 1085166 5475311-51 4724 107 66 165 662 1000 2547060 158437 2852548 179443

81 3853 175 92 199 533 1000 43928 3993 53248 501391 2263 337 116 208 339 1000 1277051 80887 1927330 126743

92 2681 289 103 210 398 1000 637510 42595 896669 5978993 2717 273 122 217 388 1000 390109 24889 536472 3427794 4347 161 88 155 596 1000 59073 3813 70448 459195 2231 437 92 166 306 1000 30634 1938 54368 345897 2053 392 113 197 299 1000 616955 37056 1014530 6129199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2385 331 112 205 351 1000 3011331 191178 4499818 290149

n.r. 1532 388 139 329 144 1000 1569 116 2565 257

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1804288 699968 1406608 3497314 7408178 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 121138 46229 86972 220523 474862 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India persons rural

all 3296 244 94 190 472 1000 5603889 353724 7408178 474862

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 121

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 4119 141 66 171 622 1000 212002 20215 246798 2345412 4040 213 42 199 546 1000 12033 1241 15296 147821 3050 217 91 229 463 1000 45455 4620 58046 582531 3442 212 68 177 543 1000 247424 22599 314135 2757841 2358 332 15 288 364 1000 1647 179 2465 26051 3528 171 64 200 565 1000 98468 8241 118784 991411-51 3655 183 68 183 566 1000 617029 57095 755525 6850981 2634 319 76 202 403 1000 21334 2238 31346 313491 2181 345 110 209 337 1000 271501 23915 414262 3726592 1744 439 124 157 279 1000 5788 523 10319 89393 2251 327 147 87 439 1000 998 80 1483 13794 3039 245 79 223 453 1000 35471 3143 46957 399295 1842 445 82 171 302 1000 7335 548 13221 102397 1947 400 116 182 301 1000 93055 7667 155176 1256099 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2173 354 109 201 335 1000 414147 35876 641417 55870n.r. 1224 487 90 344 78 1000 47 10 92 32

estd. no. of persons (’00) 375823 123491 274042 655024 1428380 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 32326 11355 23082 60782 127545 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same day trips for each broad activity status

all-India male urban

all 2967 263 86 192 459 1000 1052557 95219 1428380 127545

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 122

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 3063 231 92 191 486 1000 20724 2114 26965 285012 5084 74 18 164 744 1000 454 77 491 9421 2753 293 68 174 465 1000 18797 1673 26599 250431 2886 272 87 218 424 1000 45859 4071 62967 551141 1892 222 260 87 431 1000 153 24 197 3551 2696 259 93 207 441 1000 22155 1808 29895 233511-51 2862 265 86 202 447 1000 108142 9767 147114 1332981 3285 218 106 210 466 1000 5314 723 6798 107291 1983 367 123 211 299 1000 213273 18960 336970 3093892 2341 319 97 211 373 1000 379971 35167 557890 4982893 2458 283 114 236 367 1000 58543 5742 81630 812094 2799 262 83 203 453 1000 11743 1170 15904 156395 1050 608 66 194 132 1000 2528 303 6443 60797 1766 426 119 198 256 1000 77998 6679 135914 1159899 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2173 344 108 211 337 1000 744056 68021 1134752 102654

n.r. 1733 335 33 262 371 1000 85 14 127 29

estd. no. of persons (’00) 431195 135911 270792 450893 1288791 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 38559 12662 23395 42468 117084 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India female urban

all 2258 335 105 210 350 1000 857596 78525 1288791 117084

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 123

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 4015 150 68 173 609 1000 232726 22329 273763 2630412 4073 209 41 198 552 1000 12487 1318 15787 157221 2957 241 84 212 463 1000 64252 6293 84645 832931 3350 222 71 183 523 1000 293283 26670 377102 3308941 2323 324 33 273 369 1000 1800 203 2662 29551 3361 189 70 201 540 1000 120623 10049 148679 1224911-51 3526 197 71 186 546 1000 725171 66862 902639 8183881 2750 301 81 204 414 1000 26648 2961 38144 420691 2092 355 116 210 320 1000 484774 42875 751232 6820392 2330 321 97 210 371 1000 385759 35690 568209 5072193 2454 284 115 234 368 1000 59541 5822 83113 8257

94 2978 249 80 218 453 1000 47214 4313 62861 555595 1583 498 77 179 246 1000 9863 851 19664 163097 1862 412 118 190 280 1000 171052 14346 291090 2415899 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2173 348 108 208 336 1000 1158203 103897 1776169 158524

n.r. 1519 399 57 297 248 1000 132 24 219 61

estd. no. of persons (’00) 807018 259402 544834 1105917 2717171 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70885 24017 46477 103250 244629 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same day trips for each broad activity status

all-India persons urban

all 2631 297 95 201 407 1000 1910153 173744 2717171 244629

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A- 124

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 5245 81 49 140 730 1000 971218 71696 1057350 7927212 6136 115 43 127 716 1000 31839 2694 35965 301521 3969 150 92 191 568 1000 306540 22817 360427 2702231 4261 163 60 167 609 1000 402125 35180 480570 4133341 4039 143 62 178 617 1000 7164 590 8359 74851 4768 91 58 161 689 1000 782831 43515 861169 4833711-51 4774 108 59 158 675 1000 2501716 176492 2803840 19972781 3168 240 89 208 462 1000 56618 5272 74543 692091 2323 331 111 206 352 1000 1006480 70228 1503884 108130

92 2287 343 113 205 340 1000 21300 1335 32406 214693 2281 355 106 144 395 1000 7995 571 12389 92194 3821 202 81 184 533 1000 69101 5433 86545 670195 2366 417 78 161 344 1000 27857 1818 47803 313497 2072 385 112 195 308 1000 415611 27090 676007 4381999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2306 344 109 201 346 1000 1548345 106475 2359035 164851

n.r. 1379 371 282 200 148 1000 619 71 984 152

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1131104 431164 931631 2744503 5238402 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 83340 31803 64322 192185 371650 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India male rural+urban

all 3639 216 82 178 524 1000 4107298 288310 5238402 371650

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A- 125

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 3974 164 83 182 571 1000 101269 8241 121109 1024612 6175 163 19 108 711 1000 4212 305 5030 34721 3010 213 101 217 469 1000 276049 17994 350787 2355331 3920 214 82 189 515 1000 76644 6624 97501 842641 3318 175 94 233 497 1000 3501 244 4244 31751 3509 171 86 212 531 1000 308839 15399 372676 1866511-51 3440 190 90 207 512 1000 770515 48807 951347 6155481 4386 172 81 171 577 1000 13959 1682 16849 229991 2078 357 122 210 310 1000 755344 53534 1174678 8681692 2551 301 100 210 389 1000 1001969 76950 1432472 108364

93 2690 273 122 220 385 1000 441655 30140 607196 4161394 3481 205 89 185 521 1000 37186 2693 46764 344595 1498 518 106 184 192 1000 12639 971 26229 195497 1944 409 115 196 280 1000 372396 24312 629613 4163099 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2337 331 113 209 348 1000 2621189 188600 3916952 283822

n.r. 1631 393 51 400 156 1000 1082 69 1781 165

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1480184 528205 1019812 1858727 4886928 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 108682 38443 69127 131588 347840 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India female rural+urban

all 2559 303 108 209 380 1000 3406745 239158 4886928 347840

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A- 126

activity statusaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)11 5115 90 53 144 713 1000 1072488 79937 1178458 8951812 6141 121 40 125 715 1000 36051 2999 40995 336221 3496 181 96 204 519 1000 582589 40811 711214 5057531 4204 172 64 171 593 1000 478769 41804 578072 4975941 3796 154 73 197 577 1000 10665 834 12603 106551 4388 115 67 177 642 1000 1091670 58914 1233845 6700211-51 4436 129 67 170 634 1000 3272231 225299 3755186 261281

81 3392 228 88 201 484 1000 70576 6954 91392 921991 2215 342 116 208 334 1000 1761825 123762 2678562 194946

92 2545 301 101 210 388 1000 1023268 78285 1464878 110510

93 2682 274 121 219 385 1000 449650 30711 619586 4253494 3702 203 84 185 529 1000 106287 8126 133309 1014695 2059 453 88 169 290 1000 40496 2789 74032 508897 2010 396 114 195 294 1000 788007 51402 1305620 8544999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 091-99 2325 336 111 206 347 1000 4169534 295075 6275987 448673

n.r. 1531 389 132 326 152 1000 1701 140 2784 318

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2611306 959369 1951443 4603231 10125349 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 192023 70246 133449 323773 719491 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 36: Per 1000 distribution of persons by numbe r of same d for each broad activity status

all-India persons ru ral+urban

all 3118 258 95 193 455 1000 7514043 527468 10125349 719491

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educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 3570 227 82 176 515 1000 881484 48303 1139929 63477literate without any schooling 5010 58 77 127 739 1000 17696 1107 18780 1256literate without formal schooling 3208 250 93 141 516 1000 23661 1289 31541 1864below primary 2967 280 102 187 430 1000 525594 32718 730045 45743primary 3834 188 87 174 552 1000 514206 32421 632997 40840middle 4438 149 68 168 615 1000 530441 35178 623169 42384secondary 4674 124 60 159 657 1000 298317 21073 340712 24621higher secondary 4725 119 64 165 651 1000 147460 11336 167372 13202diploma courses 6652 89 70 127 714 1000 20889 1524 22936 1733graduate 6386 70 50 150 730 1000 78613 6726 84535 7425post-graduate and above

7151 61 38 91 811 1000 16284 1391 17335 1509n..r.

934 858 46 9 88 1000 95 25 672 51

estd. no. of persons (’00) 755280 307673 657589 2089479 3810021 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 51014 20448 41240 131403 244105 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India male rural

all 3891 198 81 173 548 1000 3054741 193091 3810021 244105

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educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2521 310 108 208 374 1000 1166045 65913 1689685 96521literate without any schooling 2199 331 107 200 363 1000 10730 699 16030 1062literate without formal schooling 2572 345 79 174 402 1000 17041 1020 26033 1581below primary 2379 317 117 214 352 1000 431267 26974 631538 40468primary 2720 271 116 205 408 1000 363769 24331 498693 34397middle 3024 251 105 215 430 1000 308237 21830 411320 30336secondary 3240 223 104 207 466 1000 148737 11352 191468 15216higher secondary 3365 240 89 192 479 1000 64272 5281 84538 7028diploma courses 4848 139 93 130 639 1000 8170 629 9485 757graduate 4483 226 55 180 540 1000 24700 2136 31896 2787post-graduate and above

4950 150 59 139 652 1000 5989 451 7046 550n..r.

1560 526 268 24 182 1000 192 17 405 53

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1048989 392295 749019 1407834 3598138 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70123 25781 45732 89120 230756 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India female rural

all 2666 292 109 208 391 1000 2549149 160633 3598138 230756

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educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2944 276 98 195 431 1000 2047529 114216 2829614 159998literate without any schooling 3715 183 91 160 566 1000 28426 1806 34810 2318literate without formal schooling 2920 293 87 156 465 1000 40702 2309 57574 3445below primary 2695 297 109 200 394 1000 956861 59692 1361583 86211primary 3343 224 100 188 488 1000 877975 56752 1131690 75237middle 3876 189 82 187 542 1000 838679 57008 1034488 72720secondary 4158 160 76 176 588 1000 447054 32425 532179 39837higher secondary 4269 159 73 174 593 1000 211731 16617 251910 20230diploma courses 6124 104 76 128 692 1000 29059 2153 32422 2490graduate 5865 113 51 158 678 1000 103313 8862 116431 10212post-graduate and above

6515 86 44 105 765 1000 22273 1842 24381 2059n..r.

1149 738 127 14 121 1000 287 42 1096 105

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1804288 699968 1406608 3497314 7408178 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 121138 46229 86972 220523 474862 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India persons rural

all3296 244 94 190 472 1000 5603889 353724 7408178 474862

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educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2394 329 100 189 382 1000 159447 12838 237697 18807literate without any schooling 2198 360 142 142 356 1000 2921 298 4565 440literate without formal schooling 2475 339 109 160 393 1000 6828 529 10325 822below primary 2361 337 101 198 365 1000 129603 11489 195370 17273primary 2732 277 94 209 420 1000 143329 12245 198147 16946middle 3020 247 86 188 479 1000 180557 16208 239625 21728secondary 3193 236 80 189 494 1000 145246 14089 190183 17912higher secondary 3214 219 80 208 494 1000 106290 10271 136017 13041diploma courses 3894 152 54 223 570 1000 25567 2202 30153 2611graduate 3862 182 64 166 588 1000 118522 11703 144909 14028post-graduate and above

4492 173 48 157 622 1000 34090 3331 41227 3910n..r.

3188 34 204 12 750 1000 157 16 162 27

estd. no. of persons (’00) 375823 123491 274042 655024 1428380 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 32326 11355 23082 60782 127545 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day ips fo r each level of education

all-India male urban

all 2967 263 86 192 459 1000 1052557 95219 1428380 127545

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educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 1927 393 101 207 299 1000 206649 17756 340516 28018literate without any schooling 1438 454 197 160 189 1000 2379 294 4358 535literate without formal schooling 2070 432 91 192 285 1000 4705 458 8287 759below primary 2080 361 117 204 318 1000 117607 10168 184011 16239primary 2162 339 114 209 338 1000 115617 10754 174980 15967middle 2456 309 99 210 381 1000 129744 12242 187868 18233secondary 2511 275 108 216 401 1000 110132 10208 151926 14476higher secondary 2427 305 105 204 386 1000 70256 6898 101058 9856diploma courses 2770 271 91 235 403 1000 8685 892 11911 1162graduate 2732 274 100 215 411 1000 68226 6671 93962 8977post-graduate and above

3067 209 77 269 445 1000 23457 2172 29659 2840n..r.

1015 450 202 290 58 1000 140 12 255 22

estd. no. of persons (’00) 431195 135911 270792 450893 1288791 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 38559 12662 23395 42468 117084 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India female urban

all 2258 335 105 210 350 1000 857596 78525 1288791 117084

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A- 132

educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2119 367 101 199 333 1000 366097 30594 578213 46825literate without any schooling 1827 406 169 151 274 1000 5300 592 8923 975literate without formal schooling 2295 380 101 174 345 1000 11533 987 18612 1581below primary 2224 348 109 201 342 1000 247210 21657 379380 33512primary 2465 306 103 209 382 1000 258946 22999 373127 32913middle 2772 274 92 198 436 1000 310300 28450 427493 39961secondary 2890 254 93 201 453 1000 255378 24297 342109 32388higher secondary 2878 255 91 206 448 1000 176546 17169 237074 22897diploma courses 3576 186 65 226 523 1000 34252 3094 42064 3773graduate 3418 218 78 185 518 1000 186748 18374 238872 23005post-graduate and above

3896 188 60 204 548 1000 57546 5503 70887 6750n..r.

1860 288 203 182 327 1000 297 28 417 49

estd. no. of persons (’00) 807018 259402 544834 1105917 2717171 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70885 24017 46477 103250 244629 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India perso ns urban

all 2631 297 95 201 407 1000 1910153 173744 2717171 244629

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A- 133

educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 3367 244 85 178 492 1000 1040931 61141 1377626 82284literate without any schooling 4460 117 90 130 664 1000 20618 1405 23344 1696literate without formal schooling 3027 272 97 145 486 1000 30489 1818 41866 2686below primary 2839 292 102 189 416 1000 655197 44207 925414 63016primary 3571 209 89 182 520 1000 657535 44666 831144 57786middle 4044 176 73 174 578 1000 710998 51386 862794 64112secondary 4143 165 67 170 599 1000 443563 35162 530895 42533higher secondary 4048 164 71 184 581 1000 253749 21607 303388 26243diploma courses 5085 125 61 182 632 1000 46456 3726 53090 4344graduate 4792 141 59 160 640 1000 197135 18429 229444 21453post-graduate and above

5279 140 45 137 678 1000 50373 4722 58563 5419n..r.

1372 698 76 9 216 1000 252 41 834 78

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1131104 431164 931631 2744503 5238402 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 83340 31803 64322 192185 371650 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India male rural+urban

all 3639 216 82 178 524 1000 4107298 288310 5238402 371650

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A- 134

educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2422 324 107 208 361 1000 1372694 83669 2030201 124539literate without any schooling 2036 357 126 191 326 1000 13109 993 20388 1597literate without formal schooling 2451 366 82 178 374 1000 21746 1478 34320 2340below primary 2312 327 117 212 344 1000 548873 37142 815549 56707primary 2575 288 115 206 390 1000 479386 35085 673673 50364middle 2846 269 103 213 414 1000 437981 34072 599187 48569secondary 2917 246 106 211 437 1000 258869 21560 343394 29692higher secondary 2854 275 98 198 428 1000 134528 12179 185596 16884diploma courses 3691 212 92 188 508 1000 16854 1521 21396 1919graduate 3176 262 88 206 444 1000 92926 8807 125859 11764post-graduate and above

3429 198 73 244 485 1000 29446 2623 36705 3390n..r.

1349 497 243 127 134 1000 332 29 660 75

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1480184 528205 1019812 1858727 4886928 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 108682 38443 69127 131588 347840 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India female rural+urban

all 2559 303 108 209 380 1000 3406745 239158 4886928 347840

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A- 135

educational level

average no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

not literate 2804 292 98 196 414 1000 2413626 144810 3407827 206823literate without any schooling 3330 229 107 158 506 1000 33726 2398 43732 3293literate without formal schooling 2767 314 90 160 435 1000 52235 3296 76186 5026below primary 2592 308 109 200 383 1000 1204071 81349 1740963 119723primary 3125 244 101 193 462 1000 1136922 79751 1504817 108150middle 3553 214 85 190 511 1000 1148979 85458 1461981 112681secondary 3662 197 82 186 535 1000 702432 56722 874289 72225higher secondary 3595 206 81 190 523 1000 388277 33786 488984 43127diploma courses 4685 150 70 184 596 1000 63311 5247 74486 6263graduate 4220 184 69 177 571 1000 290061 27236 355303 33217post-graduate and above

4566 162 56 178 603 1000 79819 7345 95268 8809n..r.

1345 614 148 60 178 1000 584 70 1512 154

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2611306 959369 1951443 4603231 10125349 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 192023 70246 133449 323773 719491 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 37 : Per 1000 distributio n of persons by number of same day trips fo r each level of education

all-India persons rural+urban

all 3118 258 95 193 455 1000 7514043 527468 10125349 719491

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A- 136

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 5615 49 32 137 782 1000 48839 3615 51359 3853professionals (2) 6939 57 60 154 729 1000 43624 4073 46245 4399associate professionals (3) 7080 52 38 106 804 1000 32194 3028 33969 3290clerks (4) 5940 68 22 150 760 1000 18063 1622 19372 1762service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 5337 96 61 137 706 1000 103635 7164 114692 7875skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 5141 84 58 144 714 1000 805327 54325 879147 60388craft and related trades workers (7) 5362 79 50 146 725 1000 132440 8678 143799 9345plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 5580 92 35 140 733 1000 57504 3784 63320 4093elementary occupations (9) 4889 76 60 158 706 1000 639182 32775 691979 35764NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 5188 80 56 148 716 1000 1880810 119064 2043881 130769others 2389 335 109 201 354 1000 1173931 74027 1766140 113336

estd. no. of persons (’00) 755280 307673 657589 2089479 3810021 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 51014 20448 41240 131403 244105 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India male rural

all 3891 198 81 173 548 1000 3054741 193091 3810021 244105

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A- 137

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 3669 153 130 160 557 1000 8649 626 10216 727professionals (2) 5398 119 110 114 656 1000 7770 734 8822 843associate professionals (3) 6003 109 78 143 669 1000 12530 1042 14068 1186clerks (4) 4902 68 79 226 626 1000 2318 225 2487 260service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 4646 92 51 219 638 1000 17147 1213 18885 1406skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 3230 202 101 207 491 1000 300610 19590 376526 25059craft and related trades workers (7) 3889 162 76 208 554 1000 34158 2009 40741 2389plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 7239 240 17 243 500 1000 2886 235 3798 289elementary occupations (9) 3592 159 84 215 542 1000 275865 13293 328067 15949NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 3547 176 91 208 524 1000 661934 38967 803611 48108others 2413 325 114 208 353 1000 1887215 121666 2794526 182648

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1048989 392295 749019 1407834 3598138 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70123 25781 45732 89120 230756 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India female rural

all 2666 292 109 208 391 1000 2549149 160633 3598138 230756

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A- 138

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 5292 66 48 141 745 1000 57488 4241 61575 4580professionals (2) 6692 67 68 148 718 1000 51394 4807 55067 5242associate professionals (3) 6764 69 50 117 765 1000 44724 4070 48036 4476clerks (4) 5822 68 29 159 745 1000 20381 1847 21860 2022service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 5239 96 60 148 696 1000 120783 8377 133577 9281skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 4568 119 71 163 647 1000 1105937 73915 1255674 85447craft and related trades workers (7) 5037 97 56 160 687 1000 166599 10687 184541 11734plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 5674 100 34 146 720 1000 60390 4019 67118 4382elementary occupations (9) 4472 103 68 176 653 1000 915047 46068 1020045 51713NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 4725 107 66 165 662 1000 2542744 158031 2847492 178877others 2404 329 112 206 353 1000 3061146 195693 4560685 295985

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1804288 699968 1406608 3497314 7408178 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 121138 46229 86972 220523 474862 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India persons rural

all 3296 244 94 190 472 1000 5603889 353724 7408178 474862

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A- 139

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 3772 168 71 187 574 1000 83676 8015 100592 9307professionals (2) 4115 171 66 164 599 1000 56370 6013 67982 7140associate professionals (3) 4268 154 64 167 615 1000 34640 3635 40933 4304clerks (4) 3831 175 50 181 594 1000 35134 3353 42574 4016service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 3563 189 73 180 558 1000 104709 9979 129169 12094skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 4495 112 67 187 633 1000 28256 3084 31835 3662craft and related trades workers (7) 3564 190 56 187 567 1000 114232 9000 141010 10879plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 3546 189 87 176 549 1000 52648 4672 64897 5642elementary occupations (9) 3132 214 71 197 518 1000 106798 9231 135874 11301NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 3654 183 68 183 566 1000 616461 56982 754867 68345others 2197 353 107 202 339 1000 436096 38237 673514 59200

estd. no. of persons (’00) 375823 123491 274042 655024 1428380 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 32326 11355 23082 60782 127545 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India male urban

all2967 263 86 192 459 1000 1052557 95219 1428380 127545

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NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 2611 297 65 193 445 1000 8173 812 11630 1053professionals (2) 3674 173 110 215 503 1000 11932 1241 14428 1589associate professionals (3) 2821 295 107 176 422 1000 10980 1150 15585 1514clerks (4) 3050 224 64 245 467 1000 5819 566 7494 801service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 2690 300 81 183 436 1000 11717 1182 16744 1694skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 3311 263 57 197 483 1000 7384 686 10019 1061craft and related trades workers (7) 3041 229 100 197 474 1000 18673 1485 24214 2034plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 2440 268 64 337 330 1000 2189 145 2992 210elementary occupations (9) 2546 287 81 206 425 1000 31074 2472 43600 3324NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 2865 264 86 203 447 1000 107940 9739 146705 13280others 2180 344 108 211 337 1000 749656 68786 1142086 103804

estd. no. of persons (’00) 431195 135911 270792 450893 1288791 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 38559 12662 23395 42468 117084 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India female urban

all 2258 335 105 210 350 1000 857596 78525 1288791 117084

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NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 3652 182 70 188 560 1000 91849 8827 112222 10360professionals (2) 4038 171 74 173 582 1000 68302 7254 82409 8729associate professionals (3) 3869 193 76 170 562 1000 45620 4785 56518 5818clerks (4) 3714 182 52 191 575 1000 40953 3919 50068 4817service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 3463 202 74 181 544 1000 116426 11161 145913 13788skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 4211 148 65 189 598 1000 35640 3770 41854 4723craft and related trades workers (7) 3487 196 62 188 554 1000 132905 10485 165224 12913plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 3497 192 86 183 539 1000 54837 4817 67889 5852elementary occupations (9) 2989 232 73 199 495 1000 137872 11703 179474 14625NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 3526 197 71 186 546 1000 724402 66721 901572 81625others 2186 347 108 208 338 1000 1185752 107023 1815600 163004

estd. no. of persons (’00) 807018 259402 544834 1105917 2717171 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 70885 24017 46477 103250 244629 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India perso ns urban

all 2631 297 95 201 407 1000 1910153 173744 2717171 244629

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A- 142

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 4395 128 58 170 644 1000 132515 11630 151951 13160professionals (2) 5258 125 64 160 652 1000 99995 10086 114226 11539associate professionals (3) 5543 108 52 140 701 1000 66834 6663 74901 7594clerks (4) 4490 141 42 172 646 1000 53197 4975 61946 5778service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 4397 146 67 160 627 1000 208344 17143 243861 19969skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 5119 85 58 146 711 1000 833583 57409 910983 64050craft and related trades workers (7) 4472 134 53 166 647 1000 246672 17678 284809 20224plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 4550 141 61 158 640 1000 110152 8456 128217 9735elementary occupations (9) 4600 99 62 164 675 1000 745980 42006 827853 47065NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 4775 108 59 157 676 1000 2497271 176046 2798748 199114others 2336 340 109 201 350 1000 1610027 112264 2439654 172536

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1131104 431164 931631 2744503 5238402 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 83340 31803 64322 192185 371650 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO) all-India male rural+urban

all 3639 216 82 178 524 1000 4107298 288310 5238402 371650

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NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 3106 230 95 178 497 1000 16822 1438 21846 1780professionals (2) 4328 153 110 177 561 1000 19702 1975 23250 2432associate professionals (3) 4331 207 93 161 539 1000 23510 2192 29653 2700clerks (4) 3511 185 68 241 507 1000 8137 791 9981 1061service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 3727 190 65 202 543 1000 28864 2395 35629 3100skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 3232 203 100 207 491 1000 307994 20276 386545 26120craft and related trades workers (7) 3573 187 85 204 524 1000 52831 3494 64956 4423plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 5124 253 38 285 425 1000 5075 380 6790 499elementary occupations (9) 3469 174 84 214 528 1000 306939 15765 371666 19273NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 3441 190 90 207 513 1000 769874 48706 950316 61388others 2346 330 112 209 348 1000 2636870 190452 3936612 286452

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1480184 528205 1019812 1858727 4886928 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 108682 38443 69127 131588 347840 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same d y trips for each occupation (NCO)

all-India female rural+urban

all 2559 303 108 209 380 1000 3406745 239158 4886928 347840

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A- 144

NCO-1digitaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)legislators, senior officials and managers(1) 4233 141 63 171 626 1000 149337 13068 173797 14940professionals (2) 5101 129 72 163 636 1000 119696 12061 137476 13971associate professionals (3) 5199 136 64 146 655 1000 90344 8855 104554 10294clerks (4) 4355 147 45 181 626 1000 61334 5766 71928 6839service workers and shop & market sales workers (5) 4312 151 67 165 617 1000 237208 19538 279490 23069skilled agricultural and fishery workers(6) 4557 120 70 164 646 1000 1141577 77685 1297528 90170craft and related trades workers (7) 4305 144 59 173 624 1000 299504 21172 349765 24647plant and machine operators and assemblers(8) 4579 147 60 164 629 1000 115227 8836 135007 10234elementary occupations (9) 4250 122 69 180 629 1000 1052919 57771 1199519 66338NCO 1-digit (1) - (9) 4437 129 67 170 634 1000 3267145 224752 3749064 260502others 2342 334 111 206 349 1000 4246897 302716 6376285 458989

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2611306 959369 1951443 4603231 10125349 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 192023 70246 133449 323773 719491 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 38: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number of same day trips for each occupatio (NCO)

all-India persons rural+urban

all 3118 258 95 193 455 1000 7514043 527468 10125349 719491

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A- 145

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 5030 82 60 151 707 1000 1269269 76528 1382649 84611fishing 4490 158 102 132 608 1000 8544 581 10147 657mining and quarrying 5304 89 29 127 755 1000 13553 873 14871 954manufacturing 5412 91 46 162 701 1000 123912 7681 136337 8350electricity, gas and water supply 6998 74 30 109 787 1000 4249 400 4588 422construction 5236 57 45 132 766 1000 151042 9755 160121 10517wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 5061 91 57 156 696 1000 120698 8593 132711 9406hotels and restaurants 5713 59 54 101 786 1000 16819 1037 17873 1131transport, storage and communications 5291 80 42 134 744 1000 71139 4617 77309 5014financial intermediation 10368 52 22 76 850 1000 5968 438 6298 461real estate, renting and business activities 6487 67 49 124 759 1000 8590 526 9209 571public administration and defence; compulsory social security 6306 62 29 120 789 1000 21583 2584 23006 2909education 7506 36 44 120 800 1000 31983 3176 33178 3350health and social work 6521 18 39 152 790 1000 7388 583 7527 611other community, social and personal service activitie 5877 70 72 125 733 1000 25555 1687 27492 1786activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 4016 92 79 407 421 1000 3327 222 3665 258extraterritorial organizations and bodies 0 1000 0 0 0 1000 0 0 5 1n.r. 2387 336 109 201 354 1000 1171122 73810 1763036 113096

estd. no. of persons (’00) 755280 307673 657589 2089479 3810021 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 51014 20448 41240 131403 244105 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India male rural

all 3891 198 81 173 548 1000 3054741 193091 3810021 244105

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NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 3361 186 94 212 508 1000 540153 31059 663754 38846fishing 2817 66 258 49 627 1000 617 42 661 46mining and quarrying 3972 70 42 264 624 1000 2200 127 2365 154manufacturing 4027 161 84 205 550 1000 47552 2797 56678 3357electricity, gas and water supply 3620 32 209 180 579 1000 170 19 175 22construction 3953 128 89 192 591 1000 20184 1056 23153 1227wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 4462 130 47 217 605 1000 14103 1046 16213 1230hotels and restaurants 5017 30 41 245 684 1000 3435 236 3540 266transport, storage and communications 4812 45 33 252 670 1000 1157 52 1211 66financial intermediation 7088 17 62 73 847 1000 776 60 789 62real estate, renting and business activities 4921 11 1 170 818 1000 833 36 843 39public administration and defence; compulsory social security 6362 162 48 74 715 1000 2211 334 2640 422education 6007 92 96 107 705 1000 14503 1221 15981 1380health and social work 5768 15 65 152 768 1000 4499 344 4566 371other community, social and personal service activitie 3502 185 111 217 487 1000 5472 319 6716 381activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private hous olds 4276 69 80 223 628 1000 4279 248 4597 281extraterritorial organizations and bodies 5000 0 0 0 1000 1000 1 1 1 1n.r. 2413 325 114 208 353 1000 1887003 121636 2794255 182605

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1048989 392295 749019 1407834 3598138 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 70123 25781 45732 89120 230756 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India female rural

all 2666 292 109 208 391 1000 2549149 160633 3598138 230756

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A- 147

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 4489 116 71 171 643 1000 1809422 107587 2046403 123457fishing 4387 152 111 127 609 1000 9162 623 10808 703mining and quarrying 5122 86 31 146 737 1000 15753 1000 17236 1108manufacturing 5006 112 57 174 657 1000 171464 10478 193015 11707electricity, gas and water supply 6874 72 37 112 779 1000 4418 419 4763 444construction 5074 66 51 140 744 1000 171227 10811 183274 11744wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 4996 95 56 163 686 1000 134801 9639 148923 10636hotels and restaurants 5598 54 52 125 769 1000 20254 1273 21413 1397transport, storage and communications 5284 79 42 136 743 1000 72296 4669 78520 5080financial intermediation 10003 49 26 76 849 1000 6743 498 7087 523real estate, renting and business activities 6356 62 45 128 764 1000 9423 562 10051 610public administration and defence; compulsory social security 6312 72 31 115 782 1000 23794 2918 25646 3331education 7019 54 61 116 769 1000 46486 4397 49159 4730health and social work 6236 17 49 152 782 1000 11887 927 12093 982other community, social and personal service activitie 5411 93 79 143 684 1000 31026 2006 34208 2167activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private hous olds 4161 79 79 305 536 1000 7606 470 8262 539extraterritorial organizations and bodies 727 855 0 0 145 1000 1 1 6 2n.r. 2403 329 112 205 353 1000 3058125 195446 4557309 295702

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1804288 699968 1406608 3497314 7408178 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 121138 46229 86972 220523 474862 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India persons rural

all 3296 244 94 190 472 1000 5603889 353724 7408178 474862

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A- 148

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 4238 117 70 176 637 1000 38242 3686 43292 4319fishing 4204 261 72 139 527 1000 2930 329 3967 396mining and quarrying 3783 66 144 170 620 1000 5735 627 6143 685manufacturing 3358 223 64 176 537 1000 132610 11070 170680 13496electricity, gas and water supply 4482 144 43 110 703 1000 3769 467 4403 540construction 3519 185 54 209 552 1000 69584 5788 85353 7017wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 3579 178 76 193 552 1000 151009 14492 183795 17319hotels and restaurants 3469 188 61 149 602 1000 22145 1815 27277 2141transport, storage and communications 3820 153 84 186 576 1000 68645 5881 81072 7046financial intermediation 4011 161 67 189 583 1000 16080 1312 19175 1544real estate, renting and business activities 3493 237 71 185 507 1000 23533 2187 30844 2641public administration and defence; compulsory social security 3949 175 47 188 590 1000 32766 4172 39736 5118education 4718 103 61 149 688 1000 22014 2394 24548 2710health and social work 3921 178 38 152 632 1000 8292 896 10089 1071other community, social and personal service activitie 3527 187 65 162 585 1000 16526 1625 20331 1904activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 2756 361 16 203 420 1000 2812 284 4402 442extraterritorial organizations and bodies 2524 17 7 854 121 1000 31 11 32 13n.r. 2196 353 107 202 338 1000 435831 38183 673240 59143

estd. no. of persons (’00) 375823 123491 274042 655024 1428380 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 32326 11355 23082 60782 127545 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India male urban

all 2967 263 86 192 459 1000 1052557 95219 1428380 127545

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A- 149

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 2713 297 58 192 453 1000 14107 1219 20055 1732fishing 11107 19 0 39 942 1000 346 26 353 29mining and quarrying 2091 43 190 528 239 1000 1080 38 1129 45manufacturing 2906 230 102 204 464 1000 26658 2188 34627 2943electricity, gas and water supply 1808 560 53 75 311 1000 263 33 598 53construction 3061 261 43 220 476 1000 5797 522 7840 698wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, torcycles and personal and household goods 2570 327 83 158 432 1000 11470 1202 17045 1739hotels and restaurants 2551 284 97 201 417 1000 2690 260 3759 319transport, storage and communications 3050 346 41 176 437 1000 2168 172 3315 235financial intermediation 3125 250 63 201 485 1000 1730 174 2308 220real estate, renting and business activities 2770 322 92 144 442 1000 3070 266 4530 375public administration and defence; compulsory social security 3259 219 75 210 496 1000 4012 582 5138 866education 3512 188 100 224 489 1000 14707 1465 18109 1820health and social work 3088 228 72 233 467 1000 4714 489 6103 614other community, social and personal service activitie 2952 183 90 223 504 1000 8083 558 9888 754activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private hous olds 1864 411 104 210 275 1000 7149 557 12138 854extraterritorial organizations and bodies 0 1000 0 0 0 1000 0 0 26 1n.r. 2180 344 108 211 337 1000 749550 68774 1141827 103787

estd. no. of persons (’00) 431195 135911 270792 450893 1288791 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 38559 12662 23395 42468 117084 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India female urban

all 2258 335 105 210 350 1000 857596 78525 1288791 117084

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A- 150

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 3755 174 67 181 579 1000 52350 4905 63347 6051fishing 4768 242 66 131 561 1000 3276 355 4321 425mining and quarrying 3521 63 151 225 561 1000 6816 665 7272 730manufacturing 3282 224 71 181 525 1000 159267 13258 205307 16439electricity, gas and water supply 4162 194 44 106 656 1000 4033 500 5001 593construction 3480 191 54 210 546 1000 75382 6310 93194 7715wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 3494 191 77 190 542 1000 162479 15694 200841 19058hotels and restaurants 3358 200 66 155 579 1000 24835 2075 31036 2460transport, storage and communications 3789 161 83 186 571 1000 70813 6053 84387 7281financial intermediation 3916 171 67 190 572 1000 17810 1486 21484 1764real estate, renting and business activities 3400 248 74 180 498 1000 26603 2453 35375 3016public administration and defence; compulsory social security 3870 180 50 190 579 1000 36779 4754 44874 5984education 4206 139 77 180 603 1000 36721 3859 42657 4530health and social work 3607 197 51 183 570 1000 13006 1385 16192 1685other community, social and personal service activitie 3339 186 74 182 559 1000 24610 2183 30219 2658activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private hous olds 2101 398 81 208 314 1000 9961 841 16540 1296extraterritorial organizations and bodies 1382 462 4 468 66 1000 31 11 58 14n.r. 2186 347 108 208 338 1000 1185381 106957 1815067 162930

estd. no. of persons (’00) 807018 259402 544834 1105917 2717171 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 70885 24017 46477 103250 244629 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all-India perso ns urban

all 2631 297 95 201 407 1000 1910153 173744 2717171 244629

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A- 151

all-India male rural+urban

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 5006 83 60 152 705 1000 1307511 80214 1425941 88930fishing 4409 187 93 134 586 1000 11474 910 14115 1053mining and quarrying 4860 82 62 140 716 1000 19289 1500 21014 1639manufacturing 4270 164 56 170 610 1000 256522 18751 307017 21846electricity, gas and water supply 5766 108 36 110 746 1000 8018 867 8991 962construction 4639 101 48 159 692 1000 220626 15543 245474 17534wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 4200 142 68 177 613 1000 271707 23085 316506 26725hotels and restaurants 4357 137 58 130 675 1000 38965 2852 45150 3272transport, storage and communications 4538 117 64 161 658 1000 139784 10498 158381 12060financial intermediation 5583 134 56 161 649 1000 22047 1750 25473 2005real estate, renting and business activities 4181 198 66 171 565 1000 32123 2713 40053 3212public administration and defence; compulsory social security 4813 134 41 163 663 1000 54350 6756 62742 8027education 6321 65 51 132 752 1000 53997 5570 57726 6060health and social work 5032 110 38 152 700 1000 15680 1479 17616 1682other community, social and personal service activitie 4878 120 69 141 670 1000 42081 3312 47823 3690activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 3328 239 45 296 420 1000 6139 506 8067 700extraterritorial organizations and bodies 2180 151 6 738 105 1000 31 11 37 14n.r. 2334 340 109 201 350 1000 1606953 111993 2436276 172239

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1131104 431164 931631 2744503 5238402 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 83340 31803 64322 192185 371650 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all 3639 216 82 178 524 1000 4107298 288310 5238402 371650

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A- 152

all-India female rural+urban

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 3342 189 93 211 507 1000 554261 32278 683809 40578fishing 5704 50 168 46 737 1000 964 68 1014 75mining and quarrying 3364 61 90 349 500 1000 3280 165 3494 199manufacturing 3602 187 91 204 518 1000 74210 4985 91305 6300electricity, gas and water supply 2218 441 89 99 372 1000 433 52 773 75construction 3727 162 77 199 562 1000 25982 1578 30994 1925wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 3492 231 66 187 516 1000 25573 2248 33258 2969hotels and restaurants 3747 161 70 222 547 1000 6125 496 7299 585transport, storage and communications 3522 265 39 196 500 1000 3325 224 4526 301financial intermediation 4135 191 63 169 577 1000 2506 234 3098 282real estate, renting and business activities 3107 274 78 148 501 1000 3903 302 5373 414public administration and defence; compulsory social security 4312 200 66 164 570 1000 6223 916 7778 1288education 4682 143 98 169 590 1000 29211 2686 34090 3200health and social work 4235 136 69 198 596 1000 9213 833 10669 985other community, social and personal service activitie 3174 184 99 221 497 1000 13555 877 16604 1135activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 2527 317 97 214 372 1000 11428 805 16735 1135extraterritorial organizations and bodies 157 969 0 0 31 1000 1 1 27 2n.r. 2346 330 112 209 348 1000 2636553 190410 3936081 286392

estd. no. of persons (’00) 1480184 528205 1019812 1858727 4886928 xxx xxx xxx xxx

sample no. of persons 108682 38443 69127 131588 347840 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all 2559 303 108 209 380 1000 3406745 239158 4886928 347840

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A- 153

all-India persons rural+urban

NICaverage no. of trips per 1000 persons

number of same day trips number of same day visitors

number of persons

no trip one trip two trips more than two trips

total estd.(’00) sample estd.(’00) sample

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)agriculture, hunting and forestry 4467 118 71 171 641 1000 1861772 112492 2109750 129508fishing 4496 178 98 128 596 1000 12438 978 15129 1128mining and quarrying 4647 79 66 170 685 1000 22569 1665 24508 1838manufacturing 4117 170 64 178 589 1000 330732 23736 398322 28146electricity, gas and water supply 5485 135 41 109 716 1000 8451 919 9765 1037construction 4537 108 52 163 677 1000 246608 17121 276468 19459wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods 4133 150 68 178 604 1000 297279 25333 349764 29694hotels and restaurants 4272 140 60 143 657 1000 45089 3348 52449 3857transport, storage and communications 4510 122 63 162 654 1000 143109 10722 162907 12361financial intermediation 5426 141 57 162 641 1000 24553 1984 28571 2287real estate, renting and business activities 4054 207 68 168 557 1000 36027 3015 45426 3626public administration and defence; compulsory social security 4758 141 43 163 653 1000 60573 7672 70521 9315education 5712 94 68 146 692 1000 83208 8256 91816 9260health and social work 4731 120 50 170 660 1000 24893 2312 28285 2667other community, social and personal service activitie 4439 136 77 161 625 1000 55636 4189 64427 4825activities of private households as employers and undifferentiated production activities of private households 2787 292 80 240 388 1000 17566 1311 24802 1835extraterritorial organizations and bodies 1322 498 4 425 74 1000 32 12 64 16n.r. 2341 334 111 206 349 1000 4243506 302403 6372376 458632

estd. no. of persons (’00) 2611306 959369 1951443 4603231 10125349 xxx xxx xxx xxxsample no. of persons 192023 70246 133449 323773 719491 xxx xxx xxx xxx

Table 39: Per 1000 distribution of persons by number o f same day trips for each NIC section

all 3118 258 95 193 455 1000 7514043 527468 10125349 719491

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A- 154

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight

visitor-tripsbusiness holidaying,

le isure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior offic ials and managers 73 23 673 121 6 71 8 26 0 1000 191497 1401professionals 91 31 566 92 13 148 5 54 0 1000 196520 1838associate professionals 49 45 654 95 48 47 10 52 0 1000 122924 1487

clerks 71 30 667 123 22 55 3 30 0 1000 72101 712service workers and shop & market sales workers 63 14 661 92 4 115 11 40 0 1000 322127 2598skilled agricultural and fishery workers 25 13 737 105 4 76 8 32 1 1000 2357117 18604craft and related trades workers 38 19 721 93 1 95 3 31 0 1000 391898 2982plant and machine operators and assemblers 43 31 672 136 1 69 3 45 0 1000 177825 1315elementary occupations 21 10 759 94 1 79 3 32 0 1000 1569011 10358n.r. 25 1 566 75 0 285 17 30 0 1000 5826 113

total employed 33 15 724 101 4 82 6 34 0 1000 5406846 41408unemployed 21 21 549 98 99 49 1 160 0 1000 89999 849

out of labour force 2 24 802 80 10 53 1 28 0 1000 3077026 19381n.r. 0 0 620 1 41 334 0 4 0 1000 675 11

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 192514 155392 6419722 804526 62420 615981 36881 284922 2189 8574547 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 2060 1312 43997 5547 675 5102 610 2299 47 61649 xxx xxx

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India male rural

all 22 18 749 94 7 72 4 33 0 1000 8574547 61649

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A- 155

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight

visitor-trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

train ing

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 5 36 684 142 9 117 2 6 0 1000 34954 246

professionals 33 68 656 73 20 97 19 33 0 1000 27739 275associate professionals 6 32 771 87 21 67 0 15 0 1000 46734 392clerks 10 15 778 44 0 16 2 134 0 1000 8382 77

service workers and shop & market sales workers 36 33 687 95 9 86 0 54 0 1000 48863 399skilled agricultural and fishery workers 4 8 808 94 2 69 4 11 0 1000 847871 5703craft and related trades workers 2 25 772 80 1 84 1 35 0 1000 97363 644plant and machine operators and assemblers 6 1 789 46 0 142 0 16 0 1000 6772 65elementary occupations 5 14 778 105 1 72 0 24 0 1000 740133 4307

n.r. 7 0 922 37 11 21 0 1 0 1000 1585 28total employed 6 14 786 98 3 73 2 20 0 1000 1860397 12136unemployed 0 9 731 106 15 70 1 68 0 1000 37882 364out of labour force 1 16 812 80 3 65 1 21 0 1000 5083536 35664n.r. 0 0 139 2 0 860 0 0 0 1000 1583 14

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 14339 109014 5612780 593445 19612 473683 10770 148625 1131 6983398 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 230 1004 37737 3904 196 3760 163 1144 40 48178 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India female rural

all 2 16 804 85 3 68 2 21 0 1000 6983398 48178

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principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight visitor-

trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 63 25 674 124 7 78 7 23 0 1000 226451 1647

professionals 85 36 576 89 13 142 7 51 0 1000 224259 2113associate professionals 38 41 685 92 41 52 7 43 0 1000 169658 1879clerks 65 28 678 115 20 51 3 40 0 1000 80483 789service workers and shop & market sales workers 59 17 664 92 5 111 10 42 0 1000 370990 2997

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 20 12 755 102 3 74 7 27 1 1000 3204988 24307craft and related trades workers 31 20 731 90 1 93 3 32 0 1000 489261 3626

plant and machine operators and assemblers 42 30 676 133 1 71 3 44 0 1000 184597 1380elementary occupations 16 11 765 97 1 77 2 30 0 1000 2309144 14665n.r. 21 1 639 67 2 231 14 24 0 1000 7411 141

total employed 26 15 739 100 4 80 5 30 0 1000 1841263 23709unemployed 15 17 604 101 74 55 1 132 0 1000 51159 686out of labour force 1 19 808 80 6 61 1 24 0 1000 1250816 13332n.r. 0 0 211 2 6 780 0 1 0 1000 60 2

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 206853 264406 12032502 1397971 82032 1089664 47651 433547 3320 15557945 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 2290 2316 81734 9451 871 8862 773 3443 87 109827 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India person rural

all 13 17 773 90 5 70 3 28 0 1000 3143299 37729

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principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight

visitor-trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

training

health &

medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 77 64 630 160 9 26 4 31 0 1000 250267 3378professionals 70 66 659 131 34 19 3 19 0 1000 213240 3002associate professionals 117 50 591 146 19 22 1 55 0 1000 136553 1856clerks 34 40 732 121 16 28 2 28 0 1000 124463 1582service workers and shop & market sales workers 56 40 705 135 3 34 3 25 0 1000 301258 3858skilled agricultural and fishery workers 45 17 752 102 2 33 2 48 0 1000 69637 1032craft and related trades workers 36 20 696 166 2 52 2 26 0 1000 294464 3530plant and machine operators and assemblers 17 22 777 128 3 23 0 29 0 1000 184695 1948elementary occupations 25 15 797 103 1 30 2 28 0 1000 265134 3483n.r. 271 36 461 203 0 1 0 27 0 1000 1553 40

total employed 52 37 703 136 9 31 2 29 0 1000 1841263 23709unemployed 4 70 551 210 29 22 0 115 0 1000 51159 686out of labour force 3 60 729 158 11 24 1 14 0 1000 1250816 13332n.r. 0 0 310 0 0 690 0 0 0 1000 60 2

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 97323 148069 2235704 459808 31898 88213 5050 77175 59 3143299 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 1642 1962 26166 4880 503 1414 101 1050 11 37729 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India male urban

all 31 47 711 146 10 28 2 25 0 1000 3143299 37729

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A- 158

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight visitor-

trips

business holidaying, le isure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

training

health &

medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 16 60 591 295 5 14 0 18 0 1000 32007 360

professionals 17 87 718 119 9 36 1 14 0 1000 38546 589associate professionals 31 66 684 162 5 38 6 10 0 1000 32545 513clerks 3 49 719 188 23 8 2 9 0 1000 14983 227service workers and shop & market sales workers 16 20 735 77 1 134 1 16 0 1000 48532 513skilled agricultural and fishery workers 1 2 785 125 0 63 0 25 0 1000 16140 213craft and related trades workers 2 17 826 105 1 24 0 25 0 1000 50216 565plant and machine operators and assemblers 0 2 867 103 0 11 0 16 0 1000 3309 50elementary occupations 1 11 711 248 0 21 0 7 0 1000 90048 994n.r. 0 204 321 431 0 43 0 0 0 1000 1088 9

total employed 10 34 723 172 3 42 1 14 0 1000 327415 4033unemployed 2 66 712 149 22 14 3 33 0 1000 14844 289out of labour force 1 48 753 146 5 33 0 14 0 1000 2130803 26159n.r. 0 0 92 908 0 0 0 0 0 1000 151 5

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 5736 115036 1849960 370540 11124 84126 1425 35008 258 2473213 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 146 1547 22656 4127 181 1201 45 570 13 30486 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India female urban

all 2 47 748 150 4 34 1 14 0 1000 2473213 30486

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A- 159

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight

visitor-trips

business holidaying, le isure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

training

health &

medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 69 63 625 177 9 24 3 30 0 1000 282274 3738professionals 61 69 669 129 29 22 2 18 0 1000 251786 3591associate professionals 98 53 611 149 16 25 2 45 0 1000 169098 2369clerks 30 41 730 129 17 25 2 26 0 1000 139446 1809service workers and shop & market sales workers 49 37 710 126 2 50 2 24 0 1000 349790 4371

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 36 14 759 107 2 39 1 43 0 1000 85777 1245craft and related trades workers 30 20 718 156 2 47 2 26 0 1000 344680 4095

plant and machine operators and assemblers 17 22 779 127 3 23 0 29 0 1000 188004 1998elementary occupations 19 14 773 144 1 27 1 22 0 1000 355182 4477

n.r. 150 112 399 306 0 20 0 15 0 1000 2641 49total employed 45 37 707 142 8 33 2 27 0 1000 2168678 27742unemployed 3 69 587 196 27 20 1 97 0 1000 66003 975out of labour force 2 53 744 150 7 30 1 14 0 1000 3381619 39491n.r. 0 0 137 722 0 141 0 0 0 1000 211 7

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 103059 263105 4085664 830348 43022 172339 6475 112183 317 5616512 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 1788 3509 48822 9007 684 2615 146 1620 24 68215 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India person urban

all 18 47 728 148 8 31 1 20 0 1000 5616512 68215

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all-India male rural+urbanprincipal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight visitor-

trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious &

pilgrimage

education &

train ing

health &

medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 75 47 647 144 8 44 6 29 0 1000 441764 4779professionals 80 50 616 113 24 78 4 35 0 1000 409760 4840associate professionals 86 48 619 123 32 33 5 54 0 1000 259477 3343clerks 47 36 710 121 18 37 2 29 0 1000 196564 2294service workers and shop & market sales workers 59 27 683 114 3 74 7 32 0 1000 623385 6456skilled agricultural and fishery workers 26 13 738 105 4 75 7 33 1 1000 2426754 19636craft and related trades workers 37 20 710 126 1 75 3 29 0 1000 686362 6512plant and machine operators and assemblers 30 26 728 132 2 44 2 36 0 1000 362520 3263

elementary occupations 22 11 765 95 1 71 3 32 0 1000 1834145 13841n.r. 81 9 543 104 0 221 13 29 0 1000 7379 153

total employed 38 21 718 111 6 68 5 33 0 1000 7248109 65117unemployed 14 42 549 145 70 38 1 142 0 1000 141158 1535out of labour force 2 36 777 106 11 43 1 23 0 1000 4327842 32713n.r. 0 0 613 1 40 342 0 4 0 1000 735 13

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 289837 303461 8655426 1264334 94318 704194 41931 362097 2248 11717846 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 3702 3274 70163 10427 1178 6516 711 3349 58 99378 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose fo r each broad principal activity status

all 25 27 738 109 8 59 3 31 0 1000 11717846 99378

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A- 161

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight visitor-

tripsbusiness holidaying,

leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 11 49 633 226 7 60 1 13 0 1000 66961 606professionals 22 81 696 103 13 57 7 20 0 1000 66285 864associate professionals 18 48 729 123 13 53 3 13 0 1000 79279 905clerks 5 39 737 146 16 10 2 46 0 1000 23365 304service workers and shop & market sales workers 25 26 714 85 4 113 1 33 0 1000 97395 912skilled agricultural and fishery workers 3 8 807 95 2 69 4 12 0 1000 864011 5916craft and related trades workers 2 22 794 90 1 59 1 31 0 1000 147579 1209plant and machine operators and assemblers 4 1 820 69 0 90 0 16 0 1000 10081 115elementary occupations 5 13 769 125 1 65 0 22 0 1000 830181 5301n.r. 4 98 634 226 6 32 0 1 0 1000 2673 37

total employed 6 18 774 112 3 67 2 19 0 1000 2187812 16169unemployed 1 27 725 120 18 52 2 56 0 1000 52726 653

out of labour force 1 27 792 102 3 54 1 19 0 1000 7214339 61823n.r. 0 0 138 15 0 847 0 0 0 1000 1734 19all 2 25 787 105 3 58 1 19 0 1000 9456611 78664estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 20075 224050 7462740 963985 30736 557809 12195 183633 1389 9456611 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 376 2551 60393 8031 377 4961 208 1714 53 78664 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India female rural+urban

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A- 162

principal activity status

NCOpurpose no. of overnight visitor-

tripsbusiness holidaying,

le isure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all estd.*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and managers 66 47 645 155 8 47 5 27 0 1000 508725 5385professionals 71 54 628 111 22 75 4 33 0 1000 476045 5704associate professionals 70 48 645 123 28 38 5 44 0 1000 338756 4248clerks 42 37 713 124 18 34 2 31 0 1000 219929 2598service workers and shop & market sales workers 54 27 688 109 4 80 6 32 0 1000 720780 7368skilled agricultural and fishery workers 20 12 755 102 3 73 6 27 0 1000 3290765 25552craft and related trades workers 31 20 725 119 1 72 2 29 0 1000 833941 7721plant and machine operators and assemblers 29 26 731 130 2 46 2 36 0 1000 372601 3378elementary occupations 17 11 766 104 1 70 2 29 0 1000 2664326 19142n.r. 59 34 568 138 2 169 10 21 0 1000 10052 190

total employed 31 20 731 111 5 68 4 30 0 1000 9435921 81286unemployed 10 38 598 138 56 42 1 118 0 1000 193884 2188out of labour force 1 30 786 104 6 50 1 21 0 1000 11542181 94536n.r. 0 0 210 13 6 770 0 1 0 1000 2469 32

estd no. of visitor-trips(’00) 309912 527511 16118166 2228319 125054 1262003 54126 545730 3637 21174457 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 4078 5825 130556 18458 1555 11477 919 5063 111 178042 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 40: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India person rural+urban

all 15 26 760 107 6 58 2 26 0 1000 21174457 178042

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A- 163

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-trips

within the district

outside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra P radesh 698 260 41 1000 771991 3844Arunachal Pradesh 583 183 220 1000 6118 650Assam 550 417 32 1000 128082 2536Bihar 690 247 59 1000 586372 3467Chhattisgarh 742 215 39 1000 209892 1120Delhi 0 60 940 1000 5961 108Goa 364 374 262 1000 6481 114Gujarat 655 314 31 1000 364973 2175Haryana 439 349 212 1000 251041 1409Himachal P radesh 721 178 101 1000 105196 1400Jammu & Kashmir 778 183 39 1000 85685 801Jharkhand 671 282 47 1000 203362 1358Karnataka 528 374 98 1000 376221 2129Kerala 529 370 100 1000 272925 2948Madhya Pradesh 707 236 56 1000 635059 3749Maharashtra 630 320 50 1000 628979 4123Manipur 334 566 91 1000 4192 1037Meghalaya 684 259 51 1000 10762 656Mizoram 729 269 2 1000 1995 339Nagaland 476 478 42 1000 3837 479Orissa 815 161 24 1000 417505 2802Punjab 433 407 161 1000 206337 1232Rajasthan 675 242 84 1000 580299 3146Sikkim 285 482 233 1000 3866 481Tamil Nadu 423 493 84 1000 396897 3026Tripura 783 178 36 1000 21095 1506Uttarakhand 625 152 223 1000 77766 525Uttar P radesh 613 328 59 1000 1573194 9318West Bengal 802 174 24 1000 628341 4500A & N Islands 638 309 53 1000 3039 191Chandigarh 0 0 1000 1000 824 104Dadra & Nagar Haveli 483 157 360 1000 957 108Daman & Diu 137 1 862 1000 305 101Lakshadweep 125 0 875 1000 172 23Puducherry 106 65 829 1000 4825 144

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 5504842 2495360 570118 8574547 xxx xxxsample no. of visitor-trips 37809 18829 4937 61649 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separate ly for each State/UT of origin

all-India male rural

all India 642 291 66 1000 8574547 61649

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A- 164

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 742 221 36 1000 730751 3841Arunachal Pradesh 668 122 207 1000 3208 207Assam 611 367 21 1000 99575 1655Bihar 782 182 33 1000 360544 1997Chhattisgarh 797 161 37 1000 171038 810Delhi 0 92 908 1000 4408 87Goa 309 398 293 1000 5981 99Gujarat 672 310 18 1000 292822 1751Haryana 442 386 172 1000 195245 1105Himachal Pradesh 808 112 80 1000 91879 1077Jammu & Kashmir 787 162 51 1000 85639 777Jharkhand 652 322 26 1000 163899 949Karnataka 542 397 60 1000 353839 2135Kerala 658 268 74 1000 295224 3322Madhya Pradesh 713 242 44 1000 459540 2473Maharashtra 630 341 29 1000 557380 3454Manipur 316 581 90 1000 1866 461Meghalaya 673 297 29 1000 6601 501Mizoram 721 277 1 1000 722 125Nagaland 585 394 11 1000 1886 152Orissa 832 156 12 1000 335773 1915Punjab 493 399 107 1000 179999 1263Rajasthan 711 213 76 1000 453903 2241Sikkim 308 534 158 1000 2807 327Tamil Nadu 493 439 68 1000 384019 2938Tripura 845 126 23 1000 22229 1523Uttarakhand 600 175 225 1000 64561 321Uttar Pradesh 629 317 55 1000 1073613 5648West Bengal 828 148 24 1000 576674 4455A & N Islands 678 249 73 1000 1929 148Chandigarh 0 0 1000 1000 611 74Dadra & Nagar Haveli 694 3 303 1000 659 84Daman & Diu 199 0 801 1000 238 97Lakshadweep 138 0 862 1000 115 20Puducherry 160 12 828 1000 4222 146

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 4721544 1889967 369668 6983398 xxx xxxsample no. of visitor-trips 31588 13362 3185 48178 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by ma in destination separately for e ach State/UT of origin

all-India female rural

all India 676 271 53 1000 6983398 48178

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A- 165

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 720 241 39 1000 1502742 7685Arunachal Pradesh 605 168 217 1000 9326 857Assam 573 399 28 1000 227657 4191Bihar 724 223 49 1000 946916 5464Chhattisgarh 766 192 38 1000 380930 1930Delhi 0 73 927 1000 10369 195Goa 337 386 277 1000 12462 213Gujarat 663 312 25 1000 657795 3926Haryana 441 365 194 1000 446286 2514Himachal Pradesh 760 148 91 1000 197075 2477Jammu & Kashmir 783 172 45 1000 171324 1578Jharkhand 663 300 38 1000 367261 2307Karnataka 535 386 79 1000 730060 4264Kerala 598 316 86 1000 568149 6270Madhya Pradesh 710 238 51 1000 1094599 6222Maharashtra 630 329 40 1000 1186359 7577Manipur 329 570 91 1000 6058 1498Meghalaya 680 273 42 1000 17363 1157Mizoram 727 271 2 1000 2717 464Nagaland 508 453 33 1000 5723 631Orissa 822 159 19 1000 753278 4717Punjab 464 403 133 1000 386336 2495Rajasthan 690 230 80 1000 1034202 5387Sikkim 294 504 202 1000 6673 808Tamil Nadu 458 466 76 1000 780916 5964Tripura 815 151 29 1000 43324 3029Uttarakhand 616 161 224 1000 142327 846Uttar Pradesh 619 324 57 1000 2646807 14966West Bengal 815 161 24 1000 1205015 8955A & N Islands 656 282 62 1000 4968 339Chandigarh 0 0 1000 1000 1435 178Dadra & Nagar Haveli 565 97 338 1000 1616 192Daman & Diu 170 1 830 1000 543 198Lakshadweep 131 0 869 1000 287 43Puducherry 132 40 828 1000 9047 290all India 657 282 60 1000 15557945 109827estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 10226386 4385327 939786 15557945

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 69397 32191 8122 109827 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main de stination separately for each State/UT of origin

a ll-India persons rural

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A- 166

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 372 537 91 1000 325041 2569Arunachal Pradesh 220 329 449 1000 881 214Assam 196 685 107 1000 19330 580Bihar 491 356 146 1000 67018 707Chhattisgarh 353 419 219 1000 44779 520Delhi 2 94 905 1000 91800 1462Goa 185 212 604 1000 6901 212Gujarat 322 507 171 1000 221261 2139Haryana 248 338 413 1000 89270 847Himachal Pradesh 424 231 345 1000 12034 273Jammu & Kashmir 412 333 255 1000 18939 475Jharkhand 145 388 465 1000 36899 770Karnataka 216 506 278 1000 235107 2043Kerala 411 456 134 1000 89600 1530Madhya Pradesh 352 449 183 1000 187922 2156Maharashtra 232 588 179 1000 361620 4649Manipur 348 491 138 1000 1280 437Meghalaya 237 297 463 1000 1610 241Mizoram 381 530 84 1000 1131 500Nagaland 268 589 115 1000 1518 187Orissa 362 580 58 1000 75011 817Punjab 223 404 373 1000 107861 1037Rajasthan 324 442 233 1000 180250 1551Sikkim 22 297 681 1000 592 131Tamil Nadu 213 642 144 1000 335726 2949Tripura 675 260 59 1000 5003 531Uttarakhand 308 320 372 1000 20634 369Uttar Pradesh 229 478 293 1000 412727 3841West Bengal 328 481 191 1000 172586 2837A & N Islands 508 213 279 1000 609 110Chandigarh 0 0 1000 1000 7782 341Dadra & Nagar Haveli 56 65 878 1000 398 118Daman & Diu 50 8 942 1000 262 85Lakshadweep 495 0 505 1000 120 131Puducherry 37 33 931 1000 9795 370all India 283 499 217 1000 3143299 37729estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 888100 1569989 680844 3143299

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 9762 17327 10551 37729 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by ma in destination separately for e ach State/UT of origin

a ll-India male urban

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A- 167

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 418 500 81 1000 273533 2378Arunachal Pradesh 241 350 408 1000 425 83Assam 280 583 110 1000 11783 379Bihar 550 302 136 1000 34721 394Chhattisgarh 462 416 118 1000 34360 459Delhi 6 113 880 1000 68807 909Goa 264 205 530 1000 6153 183Gujarat 288 530 180 1000 165988 1803Haryana 209 320 472 1000 69061 710Himachal Pradesh 445 284 271 1000 10393 212Jammu & Kashmir 499 276 224 1000 15459 380Jharkhand 154 335 509 1000 26634 503Karnataka 246 511 243 1000 196927 2001Kerala 476 409 115 1000 99350 1613Madhya Pradesh 422 408 152 1000 136711 1589Maharashtra 236 590 173 1000 297596 3847Manipur 368 454 136 1000 464 268Meghalaya 285 355 354 1000 1259 205Mizoram 364 551 80 1000 522 245Nagaland 342 550 80 1000 648 76Orissa 416 522 61 1000 48030 578Punjab 204 452 343 1000 88649 858Rajasthan 321 462 217 1000 121277 1048Sikkim 21 387 592 1000 552 112Tamil Nadu 253 635 112 1000 305581 2829T ripura 725 224 40 1000 5100 476Uttarakhand 247 286 467 1000 16595 326Uttar Pradesh 275 419 306 1000 279028 2554West Bengal 405 440 155 1000 140854 2502A & N Islands 500 127 374 1000 572 105Chandigarh 7 1 992 1000 5344 275Dadra & Nagar Haveli 83 41 877 1000 178 60Daman & Diu 30 16 954 1000 239 93Lakshadweep 218 0 782 1000 96 97Puducherry 54 7 939 1000 10322 336

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 773246 1201784 494046 2473213

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 8940 13789 7685 30486 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

all-India female urban

all India 313 486 200 1000 2473213 30486

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A- 168

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 393 521 87 1000 598574 4947Arunachal Pradesh 227 336 436 1000 1306 297Assam 225 651 108 1000 31113 959Bihar 512 337 142 1000 101739 1101Chhattisgarh 408 418 167 1000 79139 979Delhi 4 101 895 1000 160607 2371Goa 223 209 569 1000 13054 395Gujarat 307 517 175 1000 387249 3942Haryana 231 330 439 1000 158331 1557Himachal Pradesh 433 253 313 1000 22427 485Jammu & Kashmir 453 307 240 1000 34398 855Jharkhand 148 367 482 1000 63533 1273Karnataka 231 508 261 1000 432034 4044Kerala 443 432 124 1000 188950 3143Madhya Pradesh 384 430 168 1000 324633 3745Maharashtra 234 589 177 1000 659216 8496Manipur 356 478 137 1000 1744 705Meghalaya 261 325 410 1000 2869 446Mizoram 375 538 83 1000 1653 745Nagaland 291 577 104 1000 2166 263Orissa 384 557 60 1000 123041 1395Punjab 215 426 360 1000 196510 1895Rajasthan 323 450 227 1000 301527 2599Sikkim 22 344 634 1000 1144 243Tamil Nadu 232 639 129 1000 641307 5778Tripura 699 243 50 1000 10103 1007Uttarakhand 278 303 418 1000 37229 695Uttar Pradesh 248 454 298 1000 691755 6395West Bengal 365 461 174 1000 313440 5339A & N Islands 504 171 325 1000 1181 215Chandigarh 3 0 996 1000 13126 616Dadra & Nagar Haveli 65 57 878 1000 576 178Daman & Diu 40 12 948 1000 501 178Lakshadweep 371 0 629 1000 216 228Puducherry 46 19 935 1000 20117 706

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 1661346 2771773 1174890 5616512

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 18702 31116 18236 68215 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination se parately for each State/UT of origin

all-India persons urban

all India 296 493 209 1000 5616512 68215

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A- 169

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 585 356 59 1000 1097032 6413Arunachal Pradesh 520 208 260 1000 6999 864Assam 502 454 42 1000 147412 3116Bihar 665 261 70 1000 653390 4174Chhattisgarh 649 264 82 1000 254671 1640Delhi 2 91 907 1000 97761 1570Goa 242 264 494 1000 13382 326Gujarat 486 412 102 1000 586234 4314Haryana 394 347 260 1000 340311 2256Himachal Pradesh 696 183 121 1000 117230 1673Jammu & Kashmir 691 218 90 1000 104624 1276Jharkhand 586 299 114 1000 240261 2128Karnataka 394 431 175 1000 611328 4172Kerala 498 393 109 1000 362525 4478Madhya Pradesh 627 284 84 1000 822981 5905Maharashtra 463 432 105 1000 990599 8772Manipur 337 551 100 1000 5472 1474Meghalaya 617 264 113 1000 12372 897Mizoram 594 371 34 1000 3126 839Nagaland 414 511 64 1000 5355 666Orissa 729 240 31 1000 492516 3619Punjab 364 406 230 1000 314198 2269Rajasthan 575 299 126 1000 760549 4697Sikkim 247 456 298 1000 4458 612Tamil Nadu 314 571 115 1000 732623 5975Tripura 763 193 40 1000 26098 2037Uttarakhand 545 194 260 1000 98400 894Uttar Pradesh 540 357 103 1000 1985921 13159West Bengal 689 247 64 1000 800927 7337A & N Islands 608 287 105 1000 3648 301Chandigarh 0 0 1000 1000 8606 445Dadra & Nagar Haveli 378 135 487 1000 1355 226Daman & Diu 93 4 903 1000 567 186Lakshadweep 268 0 732 1000 292 154Puducherry 54 41 905 1000 14620 514

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 6392942 4065349 1250962 11717846

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 47571 36156 15488 99378 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

all-India male rural+urban

all India 535 353 111 1000 11717846 99378

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A- 170

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 642 308 50 1000 1004284 6219Arunachal Pradesh 573 173 252 1000 3633 290Assam 572 393 31 1000 111358 2034Bihar 755 196 45 1000 395265 2391Chhattisgarh 698 237 61 1000 205398 1269Delhi 6 112 882 1000 73215 996Goa 280 271 450 1000 12134 282Gujarat 480 420 99 1000 458810 3554Haryana 387 370 243 1000 264306 1815Himachal Pradesh 780 125 94 1000 102272 1289Jammu & Kashmir 732 184 84 1000 101098 1157Jharkhand 585 323 91 1000 190533 1452Karnataka 413 447 140 1000 550766 4136Kerala 614 302 84 1000 394574 4935Madhya Pradesh 634 287 74 1000 596251 4062Maharashtra 465 445 89 1000 854976 7301Manipur 329 549 101 1000 2330 729Meghalaya 592 309 97 1000 7860 706Mizoram 550 409 39 1000 1244 370Nagaland 510 442 32 1000 2534 228Orissa 758 221 21 1000 383803 2493Punjab 412 414 173 1000 268648 2121Rajasthan 610 277 112 1000 575180 3289Sikkim 249 504 247 1000 3359 439Tamil Nadu 375 536 90 1000 689600 5767Tripura 827 141 26 1000 27329 1999Uttarakhand 483 212 305 1000 81156 647Uttar Pradesh 552 339 109 1000 1352641 8202West Bengal 734 213 53 1000 717528 6957A & N Islands 633 218 149 1000 2501 253Chandigarh 7 1 992 1000 5955 349Dadra & Nagar Haveli 569 11 420 1000 837 144Daman & Diu 121 8 872 1000 477 190Lakshadweep 167 0 833 1000 211 117Puducherry 79 8 913 1000 14544 482

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 5494790 3091751 863714 9456611

xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 40528 27151 10870 78664 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

all-India female rural+urban

all India 566 336 97 1000 9456611 78664

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A- 171

State/UTmain destination no. of overnight visitor-

tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)Andhra Pradesh 612 333 55 1000 2101316 12632Arunachal Pradesh 534 199 258 1000 10632 1154Assam 528 431 38 1000 258770 5150Bihar 698 237 61 1000 1048655 6565Chhattisgarh 671 251 72 1000 460069 2909Delhi 3 99 897 1000 170976 2566Goa 260 267 472 1000 25516 608Gujarat 483 416 101 1000 1045044 7868Haryana 391 357 252 1000 604617 4071Himachal Pradesh 734 157 109 1000 219502 2962Jammu & Kashmir 713 200 87 1000 205722 2433Jharkhand 586 310 104 1000 430794 3580Karnataka 404 439 158 1000 1162094 8308Kerala 559 345 96 1000 757099 9413Madhya Pradesh 630 285 80 1000 1419232 9967Maharashtra 464 438 97 1000 1845575 16073Manipur 335 550 101 1000 7802 2203Meghalaya 607 282 106 1000 20232 1603Mizoram 580 382 36 1000 4370 1209Nagaland 443 490 54 1000 7889 894Orissa 741 232 27 1000 876319 6112Punjab 388 410 202 1000 582846 4390Rajasthan 590 290 120 1000 1335729 7986Sikkim 248 476 276 1000 7817 1051Tamil Nadu 343 554 103 1000 1422223 11742Tripura 796 166 33 1000 53427 4036Uttarakhand 519 202 279 1000 179556 1541Uttar Pradesh 545 350 106 1000 3338562 21361West Bengal 711 230 58 1000 1518455 14294A & N Islands 620 255 125 1000 6149 554Chandigarh 3 0 996 1000 14561 794Dadra & Nagar Haveli 450 88 462 1000 2192 370Daman & Diu 107 6 887 1000 1044 376Lakshadweep 221 0 779 1000 503 271Puducherry 66 24 909 1000 29164 996

estd. no. of visitor-trips(’00) 11887732 7157100 2114676 21174556 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 88099 63307 26358 178042 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 41: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by main destination separately for each State/UT of origin

all-India persons rural+urban

all India 549 345 105 1000 21174556 178042

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A- 172

State/UT(of main

destinatio n)

purpose no. o f o vernight visito r-trip s

business ho lid aying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

educatio n & training

health & med ical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 20 22 701 135 3 78 1 40 1000 901961 3898Arunachal Pradesh 100 13 368 41 39 106 159 159 1000 7161 524Assam 80 24 630 71 14 127 12 40 1000 84103 2750Bihar 36 9 772 46 8 102 9 15 1000 460938 3391Chhattisgarh 20 16 816 55 8 50 13 23 1000 146147 1122Delhi 81 64 549 31 44 56 61 115 1000 44868 357Goa 18 210 584 105 70 11 2 0 1000 5357 105Gujarat 17 16 789 104 5 57 2 10 1000 215522 2298Haryana 16 1 856 36 4 57 1 31 1000 246122 1281Himachal Pradesh 31 21 685 140 13 54 17 38 1000 157833 1384Jammu & Kashmir 19 26 739 116 22 29 8 41 1000 72556 862Jharkhand 20 34 747 90 10 72 5 22 1000 132129 1446Karnataka 35 18 675 193 4 42 1 33 1000 305103 2232Kerala 27 13 680 99 11 96 0 74 1000 510664 2798Madhya Pradesh 19 7 818 85 4 48 4 15 1000 660473 3644Maharashtra 18 15 688 146 4 104 3 23 1000 734166 4200Manip ur 113 22 431 74 19 124 132 81 1000 3968 917Meghalaya 96 78 549 70 17 107 12 70 1000 8206 673Mizoram 245 17 438 51 27 75 97 50 1000 3278 347Nagaland 271 36 238 26 76 172 19 162 1000 4363 464Orissa 29 38 753 30 3 105 8 35 1000 323578 2811Punjab 22 5 779 111 6 49 0 27 1000 182818 1211Rajasthan 13 3 768 94 10 75 2 34 1000 604395 3217Sikkim 67 69 482 48 25 106 8 195 1000 2241 378Tamil Nadu 21 35 651 210 5 48 1 28 1000 418963 3174Tripura 6 45 800 18 4 91 1 32 1000 16398 1403Uttarakhand 17 12 626 186 6 43 34 75 1000 71845 596Uttar Pradesh 15 11 807 65 11 50 4 38 1000 1612211 9135West Bengal 24 48 774 29 2 91 1 32 1000 616740 4549A & N Islands 25 51 704 37 33 67 37 47 1000 2031 179Chand igarh 2 26 474 5 102 318 0 73 1000 9714 76Dadra & Nagar Haveli 3 4 974 2 1 15 0 0 1000 482 70Daman & Diu 0 341 161 498 0 0 0 1 1000 107 12Lakshadweep 0 382 618 0 0 0 0 0 1000 91 5Puducherry 0 32 808 79 0 56 0 24 1000 4221 68n.r. 82 31 363 129 1 100 4 96 1000 3794 72

estd. no. of visitor-trip s (’00) 192514 155392 6419722 804526 62420 615981 36881 284922 8574547 xxx xxx

sample no. of visitor-trips 2060 1312 43997 5547 675 5102 610 2299 61649 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of destination

all India male rural

all-India 22 18 749 94 7 72 4 33 1000 8574547 61649

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A- 173

all India female rural

State/UT(of main

destinatio n)

purpose no. o f o vernight visito r-trip s

business ho lid aying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

educatio n & training

health & med ical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 3 4 791 107 2 64 3 26 1000 906095 3873Arunachal Pradesh 103 44 368 36 37 152 106 140 1000 1900 175Assam 3 13 809 60 8 89 3 16 1000 49718 1747Bihar 0 9 788 62 2 133 1 6 1000 236560 2035Chhattisgarh 1 28 852 59 7 49 0 5 1000 109572 802Delhi 0 82 756 12 1 127 2 21 1000 16825 168Goa 0 54 700 146 90 11 0 0 1000 5122 82Gujarat 10 18 815 79 16 53 1 8 1000 178758 1843Haryana 0 2 854 39 0 75 1 30 1000 208878 1018Himachal Pradesh 0 25 799 101 11 41 8 15 1000 135696 1065Jammu & Kashmir 1 23 890 35 14 21 3 12 1000 91138 792Jharkhand 1 21 809 60 6 100 1 0 1000 107033 979Karnataka 1 28 743 164 5 35 0 24 1000 286559 2207Kerala 1 11 765 49 1 96 0 77 1000 655117 3126Madhya Pradesh 1 12 885 60 1 33 0 6 1000 429377 2443Maharashtra 4 6 743 145 1 85 3 13 1000 625714 3531Manip ur 199 4 412 77 59 156 57 32 1000 1500 415Meghalaya 16 88 636 71 2 114 9 65 1000 5462 517Mizoram 192 0 511 31 21 190 33 22 1000 1111 129Nagaland 46 11 447 242 12 24 25 192 1000 980 148Orissa 9 34 794 59 1 87 7 9 1000 258983 1958Punjab 0 1 876 74 6 28 0 15 1000 230596 1284Rajasthan 1 9 821 75 2 71 0 20 1000 442202 2271Sikkim 0 1 609 47 24 95 5 219 1000 1471 253Tamil Nadu 2 31 704 196 2 45 1 19 1000 425388 3113Tripura 0 40 862 11 0 66 0 14 1000 21442 1445Uttarakhand 0 19 804 112 0 42 7 15 1000 38388 351Uttar Pradesh 1 8 851 64 1 50 1 22 1000 816820 5588West Bengal 0 39 823 34 2 84 1 18 1000 678879 4437A & N Islands 11 53 774 31 0 86 15 29 1000 1790 138Chand igarh 0 1 692 5 0 301 0 0 1000 8315 53Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 1 973 2 0 24 0 0 1000 321 66Daman & Diu 0 0 343 657 0 0 0 0 1000 89 11Lakshadweep 0 0 988 0 12 0 0 0 1000 48 7Puducherry 0 6 737 103 13 129 0 13 1000 4241 66n.r. 10 0 301 330 0 17 0 59 1000 1310 42

estd. no. of visitor-trip s (’00) 14339 109014 5612780 593445 19612 473683 10770 148625 6983398 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips

230 1004 37737 3904 196 3760 163 1144 48178 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of destination

all-India 2 16 804 85 3 68 2 21 1000 6983398 48178

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A- 174

State/UT(of main

destination)

purpose no. o f o vernight visitor-trip s

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 11 13 745 121 2 71 2 33 1000 1808056 7771Arunachal Pradesh 101 21 368 40 38 118 145 154 1000 9061 699Assam 51 20 698 67 12 113 9 31 1000 133821 4497Bihar 22 9 778 52 6 114 6 12 1000 697498 5426Chhattisgarh 12 21 831 56 7 50 7 15 1000 255719 1924Delhi 56 69 612 25 31 77 43 86 1000 61693 525Goa 10 142 634 123 78 11 1 0 1000 10479 187Gujarat 14 17 801 92 10 55 1 9 1000 394280 4141Haryana 9 1 855 37 2 65 1 31 1000 455000 2299Himachal Pradesh 17 23 736 123 12 48 13 27 1000 293529 2449Jammu & Kashmir 10 24 816 75 18 25 5 27 1000 163694 1654Jharkhand 12 28 774 77 9 84 4 12 1000 239162 2425Karnataka 18 23 709 179 4 39 0 29 1000 591662 4439Kerala 13 12 725 73 6 96 0 75 1000 1165781 5924Madhya Pradesh 12 9 845 75 3 42 2 12 1000 1089850 6087Maharashtra 11 11 714 146 2 95 3 18 1000 1359880 7731Manipur 138 17 426 75 31 133 110 67 1000 5468 1332Meghalaya 64 82 584 70 11 110 11 68 1000 13668 1190Mizo ram 230 12 458 45 26 107 79 42 1000 4389 476Nagaland 213 29 291 82 60 134 20 170 1000 5343 612Orissa 21 36 770 43 2 97 7 24 1000 582561 4769Punjab 11 3 830 92 6 38 0 21 1000 413414 2495Rajasthan 8 6 791 86 6 73 1 28 1000 1046597 5488Sikkim 39 40 536 48 24 101 7 206 1000 3712 631Tamil N adu 12 33 677 204 4 46 1 24 1000 844351 6287Tripura 3 42 833 15 2 78 1 22 1000 37840 2848Uttarakhand 11 15 692 159 4 43 24 53 1000 110233 947Uttar Pradesh 10 10 823 65 7 50 3 32 1000 2429031 14723West Bengal 12 44 798 31 2 87 1 25 1000 1295619 8986A & N Islands 19 52 735 34 18 76 27 39 1000 3821 317Chandigarh 1 14 577 5 54 310 0 39 1000 18029 129Dadra & N agar Haveli 2 3 974 2 1 19 0 0 1000 803 136Daman & Diu 0 194 239 566 0 0 0 1 1000 196 23Lakshadweep 0 235 760 0 4 0 0 0 1000 139 12Puducherry 0 20 774 90 6 91 0 19 1000 8462 134

57 20 342 197 1 72 3 84 1000 5104 114

estd. no. of visitor-trip s (’00)

206853 264406 12032502 1397971 82032 1089664 47651 433547 15557945 XXX XXX

samp le no. o f visito r-trip s 2290 2316 81734 9451 871 8862 773 3443 109827 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose of trip separately for each State/UT of destinatio n

all India persons rural

all-India 13 17 773 90 5 70 3 28 1000 15557945 109827

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A- 175

A ll India male urban

State/UT(of main

destinatio n)

purpose no. o f o vernight visito r-trip s

business ho lid aying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & med ical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)Andhra Pradesh 33 40 698 158 6 29 0 36 1000 392791 2867Arunachal Pradesh 71 46 373 324 61 21 9 94 1000 1186 138Assam 122 40 628 36 35 73 3 61 1000 14433 762Bihar 29 49 666 169 15 49 0 23 1000 94016 1402Chhattisgarh 59 61 760 70 9 35 0 6 1000 36454 487Delhi 93 49 685 18 62 28 2 62 1000 54914 850Goa 110 197 450 211 0 10 0 21 1000 6882 136Gujarat 25 20 729 194 6 18 1 6 1000 205173 2017Haryana 23 12 861 43 4 31 0 26 1000 65631 791Himachal Pradesh 31 144 519 251 1 16 9 28 1000 23231 466Jammu & Kashmir 23 54 492 384 23 6 3 15 1000 20034 545Jharkhand 34 50 682 159 7 40 3 25 1000 22240 585Karnataka 26 59 678 180 11 24 1 21 1000 163294 2023Kerala 17 49 712 138 6 24 0 55 1000 206505 1624Madhya Pradesh 33 22 812 78 10 23 1 21 1000 165072 2032Maharashtra 27 36 686 209 9 21 1 11 1000 393965 4159Manip ur 216 50 508 43 14 113 29 27 1000 787 358Meghalaya 172 186 504 35 27 42 8 27 1000 731 156Mizoram 192 186 466 51 31 37 4 34 1000 1749 456Nagaland 274 77 338 39 45 78 4 144 1000 1259 174Orissa 63 101 650 77 17 32 15 44 1000 76836 957Punjab 40 15 786 90 10 28 0 31 1000 78280 971Rajasthan 19 24 768 121 13 18 2 34 1000 216753 1994Sikkim 70 447 171 251 0 0 0 60 1000 627 66Tamil Nadu 19 61 685 184 5 31 1 14 1000 357760 3364Tripura 9 78 837 1 8 30 0 35 1000 3776 475Uttarakhand 47 75 284 557 15 3 4 15 1000 54758 503Uttar Pradesh 32 41 805 51 8 38 3 22 1000 307495 4494West Bengal 36 108 723 44 15 43 1 30 1000 156318 2412A & N Islands 117 347 465 6 18 9 0 37 1000 540 89Chand igarh 20 122 676 56 8 38 1 79 1000 12532 126Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 0 944 0 0 56 0 0 1000 104 19Daman & Diu 0 625 375 0 0 0 0 0 1000 77 12Lakshadweep 27 118 698 21 4 59 0 72 1000 596 64Puducherry 0 69 675 170 70 14 0 3 1000 3049 76n.r. 10 11 692 211 13 57 0 0 1000 3453 79

estd. no. of visitor-trip s (’00) 97323 148069 2235704 459808 31898 88213 5050 77175 3143299 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips 1642 1962 26166 4880 503 1414 101 1050 37729 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Pe r 1000 distribution of overnight visito r-trips by purpose of trip separately for each State/UT of destination

all-India 31 47 711 146 10 28 2 25 1000 3143299 37729

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A- 176

State/UT(of main

destination)

purpose no. of overnight visito r-trips

business ho lidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religio us & pilgrimage

educatio n & training

health & medical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)And hra Pradesh 4 46 731 161 5 24 0 29 1000 323268 2646Arunachal Pradesh 133 71 365 257 63 40 6 65 1000 390 62Assam 5 45 745 47 9 113 0 35 1000 5515 446B ihar 0 39 802 67 2 75 0 16 1000 35069 759C hhattisgarh 3 50 825 95 4 20 0 2 1000 36241 444Delhi 3 21 811 21 12 66 1 66 1000 35883 549Goa 23 262 354 353 0 9 0 0 1000 6165 111Gujarat 1 29 751 186 3 21 1 8 1000 147569 1728Haryana 0 24 877 48 3 46 0 1 1000 47300 630H imachal Pradesh 9 214 524 225 0 12 0 15 1000 23129 389Jammu & K ashmir 0 77 599 289 5 9 3 19 1000 17048 433Jharkhand 0 50 745 125 6 60 4 10 1000 9734 340K arnataka 2 39 744 175 6 21 0 12 1000 171552 1937K erala 0 64 778 87 1 36 0 33 1000 215510 1688Madhya Pradesh 2 21 820 60 4 87 0 7 1000 123968 1511Maharashtra 2 38 695 229 4 28 0 3 1000 332489 3499Manip ur 11 13 521 85 5 310 4 46 1000 264 232Meghalaya 15 204 680 0 0 50 37 15 1000 741 145Mizoram 89 180 580 40 18 48 23 22 1000 890 230N agaland 24 0 502 190 10 111 29 133 1000 395 74O rissa 1 118 666 112 4 65 0 33 1000 37777 686Punjab 11 18 850 101 1 14 0 5 1000 69556 863Rajasthan 0 18 788 155 7 19 0 11 1000 135733 1392Sikkim 1 263 259 351 40 5 0 80 1000 433 45Tamil Nadu 2 41 721 189 2 32 1 12 1000 328406 3232Trip ura 1 89 884 3 2 15 0 2 1000 2990 438Uttarakhand 0 95 309 573 10 2 5 7 1000 37910 416Uttar Pradesh 2 31 847 53 9 40 1 17 1000 171155 2919West Bengal 0 106 789 49 2 46 2 6 1000 135454 2271A & N Islands 0 454 528 0 0 0 0 18 1000 483 73C hand igarh 18 164 654 112 18 25 2 8 1000 9619 99Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 0 1000 71 8Daman & Diu 0 855 145 0 0 0 0 0 1000 37 6Lakshadweep 0 295 616 10 0 57 0 22 1000 616 34Puducherry 0 90 756 146 0 8 0 1 1000 6503 86n.r. 1 11 745 110 3 57 0 11 1000 3350 65

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 5736 115036 1849960 370540 11124 84126 1425 35008 2473213 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips 146 1547 22656 4127 181 1201 45 570 30486 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of des ation

all India female urban

all-India 2 47 748 150 4 34 1 14 1000 2473213 30486

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A- 177

State/UT(of main

destination)

purpose no. of overnight visitor-trips

business ho lidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religio us & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)And hra Pradesh 20 43 713 160 6 27 0 33 1000 716059 5513Arunachal Pradesh 91 54 370 303 61 27 8 85 1000 1576 200Assam 83 42 667 40 27 86 2 52 1000 19948 1208B ihar 19 46 713 134 11 58 0 21 1000 129085 2161C hhattisgarh 29 55 794 83 6 27 0 4 1000 72695 931Delhi 55 37 739 19 41 44 2 64 1000 90797 1399Goa 67 229 402 281 0 9 0 10 1000 13047 247Gujarat 15 24 739 190 4 19 1 7 1000 352742 3745Haryana 13 17 868 45 4 38 0 15 1000 112931 1421H imachal Pradesh 20 179 522 238 1 14 5 22 1000 46360 855Jammu & K ashmir 13 64 539 343 15 7 3 17 1000 37082 978Jharkhand 23 50 703 147 7 47 3 20 1000 31974 925K arnataka 14 49 712 178 9 22 0 17 1000 334846 3960K erala 9 56 743 114 4 30 0 44 1000 422015 3312Madhya Pradesh 18 21 815 69 7 53 0 15 1000 289040 3543Maharashtra 15 37 690 219 7 24 1 7 1000 726454 7658Manip ur 147 38 513 57 11 180 21 33 1000 1051 590Meghalaya 93 195 592 17 13 46 23 21 1000 1472 301Mizoram 155 184 507 47 26 41 11 30 1000 2639 686N agaland 201 55 386 83 35 87 11 141 1000 1654 248O rissa 38 108 657 91 12 45 9 40 1000 114613 1643Punjab 27 16 816 95 6 22 0 19 1000 147836 1834Rajasthan 12 21 776 135 11 19 1 25 1000 352486 3386Sikkim 41 369 208 294 17 2 0 69 1000 1060 111Tamil Nadu 11 52 701 186 4 31 1 13 1000 686166 6596Trip ura 5 83 858 2 5 23 0 20 1000 6766 913Uttarakhand 26 84 295 564 12 2 4 12 1000 92668 919Uttar Pradesh 20 37 821 52 8 39 2 20 1000 478650 7413West Bengal 19 107 755 47 9 45 1 18 1000 291772 4683A & N Islands 61 398 495 3 9 5 0 28 1000 1023 162C hand igarh 19 138 667 78 12 33 1 51 1000 22151 225Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 0 969 0 0 31 0 0 1000 175 27Daman & Diu 0 686 314 0 0 0 0 0 1000 114 18Lakshadweep 13 209 656 15 2 58 0 47 1000 1212 98Puducherry 0 82 725 155 26 10 0 1 1000 9552 162n.r. 6 11 718 161 8 57 0 5 1000 6803 144

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 103059 263105 4085664 830348 43022 172339 6475 112183 5616512 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips 1788 3509 48822 9007 684 2615 146 1620 68215 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of des ation

a ll India perso ns urban

all-India 18 47 728 148 8 31 1 20 1000 5616512 68215

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A- 178

State/UT(of main

destinatio n)

purpose no. o f o vernight visitor-trip s

business ho lidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religious & pilgrimage

educatio n & training

health & medical

shopping others all estd . * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)And hra Pradesh 24 28 700 143 4 60 1 39 1000 1294752 6765Arunachal Pradesh 95 19 369 94 43 90 131 147 1000 8347 662Assam 86 27 630 66 17 120 11 43 1000 98536 3512B ihar 34 16 753 68 10 92 8 17 1000 554954 4793C hhattisgarh 29 26 803 58 8 47 10 19 1000 182601 1609Delhi 88 55 630 23 55 39 26 84 1000 99782 1207Goa 74 202 504 169 28 11 1 12 1000 12239 241Gujarat 21 18 760 148 6 38 1 8 1000 420695 4315Haryana 17 4 857 37 4 51 0 30 1000 311753 2072H imachal Pradesh 31 40 660 158 11 49 16 36 1000 181064 1850Jammu & Kashmir 20 34 668 193 23 22 6 34 1000 92590 1407Jharkhand 23 36 736 101 10 67 5 22 1000 154369 2031K arnataka 31 34 676 188 6 35 1 28 1000 468397 4255K erala 24 24 690 110 10 74 0 68 1000 717169 4422Madhya Pradesh 22 11 816 83 6 43 3 16 1000 825545 5676Maharashtra 22 23 687 171 6 71 2 18 1000 1128131 8359Manip ur 134 28 448 67 18 121 110 70 1000 4755 1275Meghalaya 104 89 544 67 18 100 12 65 1000 8937 829Mizoram 222 89 450 51 29 59 58 43 1000 5027 803N agaland 272 47 265 29 68 147 15 158 1000 5622 638O rissa 36 51 731 40 6 90 9 37 1000 400414 3768Punjab 27 8 781 105 7 43 0 28 1000 261098 2182Rajasthan 15 9 768 102 11 59 2 34 1000 821148 5211Sikkim 68 182 389 108 18 74 6 155 1000 2868 444Tamil Nadu 20 48 668 197 5 39 1 21 1000 776723 6538Trip ura 7 51 807 15 5 79 1 32 1000 20174 1878Uttarakhand 31 41 469 357 10 25 20 48 1000 126603 1099Uttar Pradesh 18 17 806 63 11 48 4 35 1000 1919706 13629West Bengal 26 60 763 32 5 81 1 32 1000 773058 6961A & N Islands 49 128 641 29 29 52 27 44 1000 2571 268C hand igarh 13 82 592 35 47 154 1 77 1000 22246 202Dadra & Nagar Haveli 2 3 970 2 1 21 0 0 1000 586 89Daman & Diu 0 484 269 246 0 0 0 1 1000 184 24Lakshadweep 22 165 683 18 3 49 0 60 1000 687 69Puducherry 0 47 754 116 28 39 0 16 1000 7270 144n.r. 44 20 537 172 8 77 2 45 1000 7247 151

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 289837 303461 8655426 1264334 94318 704194 41931 362097 11717846 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips

3702 3274 70163 10427 1178 6516 711 3349 99378 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of des ation

all India male rural+urban

all-India 25 27 738 109 8 59 3 31 1000 11717846 99378

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A- 179

State/UT(of main

destination)

purpose no. of overnight visito r-trips

business ho lidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religio us & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)And hra Pradesh 3 18 772 125 3 51 2 27 1000 1229363 6519Arunachal Pradesh 110 51 367 88 43 126 82 122 1000 2290 237Assam 3 17 801 58 8 92 3 19 1000 55233 2193B ihar 0 14 790 63 2 124 1 7 1000 271629 2794C hhattisgarh 1 35 844 70 6 40 0 4 1000 145813 1246Delhi 2 39 795 18 8 83 2 53 1000 52708 717Goa 15 191 472 282 31 9 0 0 1000 11287 193Gujarat 6 23 784 130 10 38 1 8 1000 326327 3571Haryana 0 7 859 41 1 68 1 23 1000 256178 1648H imachal Pradesh 2 59 750 123 9 36 6 15 1000 158825 1454Jammu & K ashmir 1 36 823 94 12 18 3 14 1000 108186 1225Jharkhand 1 24 802 68 6 96 2 1 1000 116767 1319K arnataka 1 33 744 169 6 29 0 19 1000 458111 4144K erala 1 25 768 59 1 81 0 65 1000 870627 4814Madhya Pradesh 2 15 867 60 2 48 0 7 1000 553345 3954Maharashtra 3 19 724 179 2 62 2 9 1000 958203 7030Manip ur 152 6 439 79 46 195 44 36 1000 1764 647Meghalaya 16 106 643 60 1 104 13 57 1000 6203 662Mizoram 138 94 547 36 20 117 28 22 1000 2001 359N agaland 40 7 464 226 12 50 26 174 1000 1375 222O rissa 8 50 770 69 2 83 5 14 1000 296760 2644Punjab 3 5 869 81 5 24 0 12 1000 300152 2147Rajasthan 1 12 812 97 4 57 0 18 1000 577935 3663Sikkim 0 79 504 138 28 68 3 178 1000 1904 298Tamil Nadu 2 36 712 193 2 39 1 15 1000 753794 6345Trip ura 0 47 866 10 1 58 0 12 1000 24432 1883Uttarakhand 0 60 536 362 5 20 6 11 1000 76298 767Uttar Pradesh 1 13 850 62 3 48 1 21 1000 987975 8507West Bengal 0 53 815 37 2 76 1 15 1000 814333 6708A & N Islands 8 167 704 22 0 62 11 26 1000 2273 211C hand igarh 9 84 672 59 9 161 1 4 1000 17934 152Dadra & Nagar Haveli 0 1 978 1 0 20 0 0 1000 392 74Daman & Diu 0 278 279 444 0 0 0 0 1000 126 17Lakshadweep 0 262 658 9 1 51 0 20 1000 664 41Puducherry 0 53 747 127 6 62 0 6 1000 10744 152n.r. 4 8 604 180 2 44 0 26 1000 4660 107

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 20075 224050 7462740 963985 30736 557809 12195 183633 9456611 XXX XXX

sample no. of visitor-trips 376 2551 60393 8031 377 4961 208 1714 78664 XXX XXX

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of destination

all India female rural+urban

all-India 2 25 787 105 3 58 1 19 1000 9456611 78664

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A- 180

State/UT(of main

destination)

purpose no. o f overnight visito r-trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & med ical

shopping others all estd. * Samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)And hra Pradesh 14 23 734 134 4 56 1 33 1000 2524115 13284Arunachal Pradesh 99 28 369 93 43 100 118 140 1000 10637 899Assam 55 23 694 63 14 109 8 34 1000 153769 5705B ihar 22 15 767 66 7 104 5 13 1000 826583 7587C hhattisgarh 16 30 822 63 7 44 5 12 1000 328414 2855Delhi 55 49 693 21 37 56 16 72 1000 152490 1924Goa 46 197 489 222 29 10 0 7 1000 23526 434Gujarat 14 21 771 140 7 38 1 8 1000 747022 7886Haryana 10 5 858 39 2 58 0 27 1000 567931 3720H imachal Pradesh 18 49 701 142 10 43 12 26 1000 339889 3304Jammu & K ashmir 11 35 743 145 18 20 5 24 1000 200776 2632Jharkhand 13 31 764 87 8 79 3 14 1000 271136 3350K arnataka 16 34 710 178 6 32 0 24 1000 926508 8399K erala 12 24 730 84 5 78 0 67 1000 1587796 9236Madhya Pradesh 13 12 838 73 4 45 2 12 1000 1378890 9630Maharashtra 13 21 704 175 4 67 2 14 1000 2086334 15389Manip ur 140 21 445 71 26 144 90 60 1000 6519 1922Meghalaya 68 96 585 64 11 102 12 62 1000 15140 1491Mizoram 196 90 480 46 26 77 48 36 1000 7028 1162N agaland 210 36 318 82 53 121 18 162 1000 6997 860O rissa 24 51 747 52 4 87 8 27 1000 697174 6412Punjab 15 7 826 93 6 33 0 20 1000 561250 4329Rajasthan 9 10 787 100 8 58 1 27 1000 1399083 8874Sikkim 39 138 438 121 22 72 5 165 1000 4772 742Tamil Nadu 11 42 689 195 4 39 1 18 1000 1530517 12883Trip ura 3 49 837 12 3 68 0 22 1000 44606 3761Uttarakhand 18 49 496 359 8 23 14 33 1000 202901 1866Uttar Pradesh 12 15 823 62 8 48 3 30 1000 2907681 22136West Bengal 13 57 789 35 3 78 1 24 1000 1587391 13669A & N Islands 30 146 670 26 16 57 20 36 1000 4844 479C hand igarh 11 83 627 45 31 157 1 45 1000 40180 354Dadra & Nagar Haveli 1 2 973 2 1 21 0 0 1000 978 163Daman & Diu 0 410 272 317 0 0 0 0 1000 310 41Lakshadweep 11 213 671 13 2 50 0 40 1000 1351 110Puducherry 0 50 750 122 16 51 0 10 1000 18014 296n.r. 27 15 566 175 5 63 1 37 1000 11907 258

estd. no. of visitor-trips (’00) 309912 527511 16118166 2228319 125054 1262003 54126 545730 21174457 xxx xxxsample no. of visitor-trips 4078 5825 130556 18458 1555 11477 919 5063 178042 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 42: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by purpose o f trip separately fo r each State/UT of des ation

all India persons rural+urban

all-India 15 26 760 107 6 58 2 26 1000 21174457 178042

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A- 181

quintile-

class in

MPCE (%)

major mode of travel no. of overnight visitor-

trip s

on foot bus train ship/

boat

air own transport tansport-equip ment

rental

others n.r. all estd.*

(’00)samp le**

bicycle two

wheeler

rickshaw auto

rickshaw

car/ jeep tractor/

truck

animal

driven

transport

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19)

0-20 71 613 59 1 0 88 23 4 15 11 5 0 106 4 0 1000 1995145 13453

20-40 30 697 61 1 0 51 25 1 10 12 4 3 101 5 0 1000 2477655 16362

40-60 25 702 78 2 0 37 31 2 7 11 4 1 95 5 0 1000 2802014 1941360-80 24 702 70 1 0 25 39 1 5 14 5 1 109 6 0 1000 3268170 23994

80-100 11 655 88 2 0 16 64 0 5 46 4 0 100 8 0 1000 5014961 36605

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

all 27 674 74 1 0 36 41 1 8 23 5 1 102 6 0 1000 15557945 109827

estd.no. o f

visitor-trips

(’00) 418451 10492800 1157927 19401 1342 565284 639734 19503 118576 358125 71971 16296 1589213 89006 315 15557945 xxx xxx

sample no.

of visitor-

trips 2587 75346 7931 332 94 2955 4003 114 721 2506 357 92 12181 603 5 109827 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 43: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by major mode of travel for each quintile class o f MPCE(%)

all-India rural

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A- 182

quintile-class in

MPC E (%)

major mode of travel no. o f o vernight visitor-trip s

on

foot

bus train ship/

boat

air own transport tansport-

equipment

rental

others n.r. all estd.*

(’00)

sample**

bicycle two

wheeler

rickshaw auto

rickshaw

car/

jeep

tractor/

truck

animal

driven

transport

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19)

0-20 4 648 209 0 0 15 20 0 29 8 2 0 64 1 0 1000 702616 7073

20-40 6 596 207 1 0 2 19 0 101 11 0 0 52 6 0 1000 953399 9838

40-60 2 657 246 1 0 3 22 0 5 17 1 0 42 3 0 1000 953567 12734

60-80 1 607 263 0 0 1 33 1 1 32 0 0 56 3 0 1000 1216056 16923

80-100 2 454 353 0 10 2 17 0 1 111 0 0 43 4 1 1000 1790874 21647n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

all 3 570 273 0 3 4 22 0 22 48 1 0 50 4 0 1000 5616512 68215

estd.no. of

visito r-trips (’00) 15554 3201464 1531321 2343 18029 19766 124471 2593 124826 270676 2863 0 279443 20823 2341 5616512 xxx xxx

samp le no.

of visito r-

trips 167 36710 20287 318 402 185 1435 31 201 3959 73 0 4231 208 8 68215 xxx xxx

*last 365 day s **last 30 day s

Table 43: Per 1000 distribution o f overnight visito r-trips by major mode of travel for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India urban

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A- 183

quintile-class in MPCE (%) major type o f stay no. of overnight visitor-trips

hotel private guest

ho use

govt guest

house

dharamshala rented

house

friends &

relatives

others includ ing

carriages/coaches

n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

0-20 6 4 5 18 2 903 62 0 1000 1995145 13453

20-40 8 7 3 23 2 895 62 0 1000 2477655 16362

40-60 8 4 3 26 8 874 76 2 1000 2802014 19413

60-80 11 6 2 31 4 867 79 1 1000 3268170 23994

80-100 23 9 3 50 6 786 123 0 1000 5014961 36605

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

all 13 6 3 33 5 851 88 1 1000 15557945 109827

estd.no. of visitor-trips (’00) 205702 97431 46047 516936 73819 13244127 1362365 11517 15557945 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 2582 952 512 3626 509 92240 9326 80 109827 xxx xxx

*last 365 days ** last 30 days

Table 44: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by major type of stay for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India rural

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A- 184

quintile-class in MPCE (%) major type o f stay no. of overnight visitor-trips

hotel private guest

ho use

govt guest

house

dharamshala rented

house

friends &

relatives

others includ ing

carriages/coaches

n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)

0-20 3 8 3 39 0 874 72 0 1000 702616 7073

20-40 22 6 1 35 4 849 82 0 1000 953399 9838

40-60 28 10 2 50 2 843 66 0 1000 953567 12734

60-80 37 10 3 43 3 800 103 0 1000 1216056 16923

80-100 94 16 6 47 3 718 116 0 1000 1790874 21647

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

all 47 11 4 44 3 799 93 0 1000 5616512 68215

estd.no. of visitor-trips (’00) 263130 60849 20852 244884 15178 4487028 523788 801 5616512 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 4025 899 501 3134 235 52465 6941 15 68215 xxx xxx

*last 365 d ays **last 30 days

Table 44: Per 1000 distribution of overnight visitor-trips by ma jo r type of stay for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India urban

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A- 185

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day visitor-trips

business holidaying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religio us

&

pilgrimage

education

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senio r o fficials and

managers 133 35 411 80 1 96 186 58 0 1000 321938 1949

professionals 181 24 306 73 11 124 208 72 0 1000 327262 2241

associate professionals 133 31 315 54 18 109 256 85 0 1000 248402 1756

clerks 68 29 448 86 33 79 180 76 0 1000 121240 874

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 130 27 371 66 1 150 172 83 0 1000 652351 3788

skilled agricultural and fishery

workers 51 18 374 52 3 151 282 68 0 1000 4768611 25877

craft and related trades workers 96 36 406 73 2 142 169 75 0 1000 741890 4056

plant and machine operators and

assemb lers 64 42 373 69 2 145 148 157 0 1000 359783 1881

elementary occupations 38 21 377 68 1 167 263 64 0 1000 3063041 14401

n.r. 198 24 181 33 19 55 405 84 0 1000 19057 156

total employed 64 23 375 62 3 150 251 72 0 1000 10623576 56979

unemployed 12 54 360 45 59 95 176 199 0 1000 203983 1063

out o f labour fo rce 5 48 408 101 17 232 115 74 0 1000 3995168 14142

n.r. 0 0 294 0 0 101 589 17 0 1000 1244 25

all 52 28 382 69 7 166 223 74 0 1000 14823971 72209

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 765910 418998 5658650 1029633 97705 2464103 3298811 1089644 516 14823971 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 4400 2081 28418 4810 667 12512 13880 5435 6 72209 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India male rural

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If a visitor completed more than one sam e-day trip then here he should be counted the no. of times he has completed sam e-day trips within the reference period

A- 186

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day visitor-trips

business holidaying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religious

&

pilgrimage

educatio n

& training

health &

med ical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senio r o fficials and

managers 29 7 462 102 3 111 161 126 0 1000 44960 268

professio nals 67 27 397 76 16 177 208 32 0 1000 54038 324

associate professionals 166 13 355 51 39 177 121 77 0 1000 116189 572

clerks 16 75 513 181 6 46 82 81 0 1000 17928 118

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 68 14 372 118 8 240 114 66 0 1000 104662 543

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 8 10 453 97 1 192 177 62 0 1000 1224471 5568

craft and related trades workers 94 11 349 203 7 192 65 79 0 1000 187131 760

plant and machine operators and

assemb lers 0 68 274 49 0 77 296 235 0 1000 38704 107

elementary occupations 20 14 405 127 0 205 180 49 0 1000 1062529 4030

n.r. 49 0 441 348 8 32 76 47 0 1000 682 28

total employed 28 13 419 113 3 194 168 62 0 1000 2851294 12318

unemployed 0 33 412 110 29 127 46 243 0 1000 85588 475

out o f labour fo rce 3 27 430 106 9 259 103 62 0 1000 6654709 27404

n.r. 0 31 230 55 0 159 522 2 0 1000 2685 15

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 108697 216384 4088160 1040463 72084 2272765 1183018 612113 594 9594276 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 468 931 17750 4033 286 9468 4643 2627 6 40212 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Note:

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India female rural

all 11 23 426 108 8 237 123 64 0 1000 9594276 40212

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A- 187

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day visitor-trips

business ho lid aying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religious &

pilgrimage

education

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senio r o fficials

and managers 122 32 416 82 2 98 183 65 0 1000 366898 2217

professio nals 167 25 317 74 12 131 208 67 0 1000 381300 2565

associate professionals 142 26 327 53 24 128 217 83 0 1000 364591 2328

clerks 62 35 456 97 30 75 169 77 0 1000 139168 992

service workers and shop

& market sales workers 122 26 371 72 2 161 165 81 0 1000 757013 4331

skilled agricultural and

fishery workers 43 17 389 60 2 159 263 67 0 1000 5993082 31445

craft and related trades

workers 95 32 396 96 3 151 151 76 0 1000 929021 4816

plant and machine

operators and assemb lers 59 44 364 67 2 139 161 163 0 1000 398487 1988

elementary occupations 34 20 384 82 1 176 244 60 0 1000 4125570 18431

n.r. 194 24 189 43 19 55 395 83 0 1000 19739 184

total employed 58 21 383 71 3 159 235 70 0 1000 13474870 69297

unemployed 9 47 376 66 50 105 134 213 0 1000 289571 1538

out o f labour fo rce 4 34 422 104 12 249 107 67 0 1000 10649877 41546

n.r. 0 11 271 20 0 122 565 11 0 1000 3929 40

all 37 26 398 84 7 192 187 70 0 1000 24418247 112421

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 874607 635382 9746810 2070096 169789 4736868 4481829 1701757 1110 24418247 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 4868 3012 46168 8843 953 21980 18523 8062 12 112421 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India persons rural

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A- 188

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day

visitor-trips

business ho lid aying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religio us &

pilgrimage

educatio n

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior o fficials and

managers 147 55 529 132 6 45 49 37 0 1000 367318 2636

professionals 115 75 508 131 9 59 56 46 0 1000 315575 2073

associate professionals 122 46 522 105 6 67 100 32 0 1000 206377 1410

clerks 67 58 532 182 6 50 72 34 0 1000 155615 1058

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 138 40 513 100 6 81 72 50 0 1000 487871 3326

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 85 25 564 64 3 100 63 95 0 1000 160432 1160

craft and related trades workers 92 68 553 114 0 69 55 50 0 1000 457037 2923

plant and machine operators and

assemb lers 51 34 608 140 2 62 60 43 0 1000 219004 1430

elementary occupations 42 28 596 125 0 88 92 31 0 1000 386710 2655

n.r. 385 21 377 0 66 53 83 15 0 1000 5582 54

total employed 101 49 545 119 4 69 68 45 0 1000 2761520 18725

unemployed 21 53 493 129 55 43 69 138 0 1000 91019 593

out o f labour fo rce 2 83 535 160 31 91 58 39 0 1000 1385541 7168

n.r. 0 0 1000 0 0 0 0 0 0 1000 113 4

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 302315 248942 2292800 556041 54289 318577 275225 190003 0 4238193 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 2169 1540 14382 3336 337 1988 1405 1333 0 26490 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India male urban

all 71 59 541 131 13 75 65 45 0 1000 4238193 26490

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A- 189

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day

visitor-trips

business ho lid aying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religio us &

pilgrimage

educatio n

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior o fficials and

managers 53 47 652 137 7 77 21 6 0 1000 36632 247

professionals 66 96 537 126 16 43 54 62 0 1000 46833 380

associate professionals 11 103 533 130 35 37 66 85 0 1000 46756 357

clerks 1 86 439 189 0 240 13 33 0 1000 32880 176

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 78 59 447 215 2 133 24 42 0 1000 51544 402

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 2 28 614 125 0 201 24 6 0 1000 30046 199

craft and related trades workers 16 31 536 192 0 109 33 83 0 1000 75258 442

plant and machine operators and

assemb lers 3 0 648 134 0 144 21 50 0 1000 8931 43

elementary occupations 7 13 644 164 0 80 55 36 0 1000 91912 637

n.r. 191 182 581 0 0 10 0 36 0 1000 231 11

total employed 27 51 559 163 6 105 39 49 0 1000 421022 2894

unemployed 2 59 507 49 31 95 190 67 0 1000 31239 269

out o f labour fo rce 3 53 583 176 8 94 53 29 0 1000 2457308 15048

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1000 0 1000 221 1

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 19956 153627 1683359 501920 23298 279901 152305 95417 6 2909789 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 139 956 10728 3128 151 1640 883 586 1 18212 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India fe male urban

all 7 53 579 172 8 96 52 33 0 1000 2909789 18212

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A- 190

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day

visitor-trips

business ho lid aying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religio us &

pilgrimage

educatio n

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior o fficials and

managers 138 55 541 132 6 48 46 34 0 1000 403950 2883

professionals 109 78 512 130 10 57 56 48 0 1000 362408 2453

associate professionals 101 57 524 110 12 61 94 42 0 1000 253133 1767

clerks 55 63 515 183 5 85 61 34 0 1000 188495 1234

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 132 42 506 112 5 86 67 49 0 1000 539415 3728

skilled agricultural and fishery workers 72 26 572 75 2 117 56 80 0 1000 190478 1359

craft and related trades workers 80 62 550 125 0 75 52 55 0 1000 532295 3365

plant and machine operators and

assemb lers 49 33 610 140 2 65 58 44 0 1000 227935 1473

elementary occupations 35 25 605 133 0 86 84 32 0 1000 478622 3292

n.r. 377 27 386 0 63 51 79 16 0 1000 5813 65

total employed 91 49 547 126 4 74 64 45 0 1000 3182542 21619

unemployed 16 54 497 107 48 57 102 118 0 1000 122258 862

out o f labour fo rce 3 63 567 171 16 93 55 32 0 1000 3842849 22216

n.r. 0 0 961 0 0 0 0 39 0 1000 334 5

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 322271 402569 3976159 1057961 77587 598478 427530 285420 6 7147982 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 2308 2496 25110 6464 488 3628 2288 1919 1 44702 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India persons urban

all 45 56 556 148 11 84 60 40 0 1000 7147982 44702

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A- 191

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. of same-day visitor-trips

business holidaying,

leisure and

recreatio n

Social religious &

pilgrimage

education

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senio r o fficials

and managers 139 43 459 101 3 75 131 49 0 1000 689256 4585

professio nals 157 43 380 94 11 100 153 63 0 1000 642837 4314

associate professionals 129 36 383 71 14 95 205 67 0 1000 454779 3166

clerks 68 42 485 128 21 66 133 58 0 1000 276855 1932

service workers and shop

& market sales workers 132 31 415 76 2 129 141 73 0 1000 1140222 7114

skilled agricultural and

fishery workers 51 18 378 53 3 150 278 69 0 1000 4929043 27037

craft and related trades

workers 95 45 446 84 2 122 139 68 0 1000 1198927 6979

plant and machine

operators and assemb lers 61 40 435 88 2 123 125 127 0 1000 578787 3311

elementary occupations 38 22 393 72 1 161 251 62 0 1000 3449751 17056

n.r. 226 24 210 28 26 55 357 74 0 1000 24639 210

total employed 69 26 398 69 3 140 226 68 0 1000 13385096 75704

unemployed 15 53 392 66 58 82 150 184 0 1000 295002 1656

out o f labour fo rce 4 55 433 113 20 204 104 67 0 1000 5380709 21310

n.r. 0 0 433 0 0 81 472 13 0 1000 1357 29

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 1068225 667940 7951450 1585674 151994 2782680 3574036 1279647 516 19062164 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 6569 3621 42800 8146 1004 14500 15285 6768 6 98699 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India male rura l+urban

all 55 33 405 79 8 153 199 69 0 1000 19062164 98699

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 192

principal

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. o f same-day visitor-trips

business holidaying,

leisure and

recreation

Social religious &

pilgrimage

education

&

training

health &

med ical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

employed

legislators, senior officials and

managers 38 22 533 115 4 98 108 81 0 1000 81592 515

professio nals 67 54 452 96 16 125 148 44 0 1000 100871 704

associate professio nals 131 34 396 69 38 145 108 79 0 1000 162945 929

clerks 7 81 470 185 3 158 42 53 0 1000 50808 294

service workers and shop & market

sales workers 71 26 392 144 6 212 90 59 0 1000 156206 945

skilled agricultural and fishery

workers 8 10 456 97 1 193 174 61 0 1000 1254517 5767

craft and related trades workers 76 15 392 200 6 173 58 80 0 1000 262389 1202

plant and machine operators and

assemblers 0 58 328 62 0 87 256 208 0 1000 47635 150

elementary occupatio ns 19 14 420 129 0 197 173 48 0 1000 1154441 4667

n.r. 77 36 469 278 6 28 61 45 0 1000 913 39

total employed 28 17 432 118 3 185 155 60 0 1000 3272316 15212

unemployed 1 38 431 97 29 121 75 207 0 1000 116827 744

out of labour fo rce 3 32 461 120 9 225 93 56 0 1000 9112017 42452

n.r. 0 31 226 55 0 156 513 20 0 1000 2906 16

estd no. of visitor-trips (’00) 128653 370011 5771519 1542383 95382 2552666 1335323 707530 600 12504065 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f visitor-trips 607 1887 28478 7161 437 11108 5526 3213 7 58424 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Pe r 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India female rural+urban

all 11 28 453 120 8 212 111 58 0 1000 12504065 58424

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Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 193

princip al

activity

status

NCO

purpose no. o f same-day visitor-trips

business ho lid aying,

leisure and

recreatio n

Social religio us &

pilgrimage

educatio n

& training

health &

medical

shopping others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

emp lo yed

legislators, senior officials

and managers 128 41 466 102 3 78 128 53 0 1000 770848 5100

professionals 145 44 389 94 11 104 152 60 0 1000 743708 5018

associate professio nals 130 35 387 70 20 108 180 70 0 1000 617724 4095

clerks 59 47 482 136 18 79 120 57 0 1000 327663 2226

service workers and shop

& market sales workers 125 31 412 84 3 139 135 71 0 1000 1296428 8059

skilled agricultural and

fishery workers 44 17 392 61 2 158 259 67 0 1000 6183560 32804

craft and related trades

workers 91 40 436 104 2 131 125 70 0 1000 1461316 8181

plant and machine

operators and assemb lers 56 41 427 86 2 120 135 133 0 1000 626422 3461

elementary occupatio ns 34 20 399 85 1 170 233 59 0 1000 4604192 21723

n.r. 221 24 218 36 26 54 348 73 0 1000 25552 249

to tal emp lo yed 62 25 404 78 3 148 213 67 0 1000 16657412 90916

unemp lo yed 10 49 404 75 49 94 127 191 0 1000 411829 2400

out of labour force 4 40 451 118 13 218 97 60 0 1000 14492726 63762

n.r. 0 10 368 17 0 105 485 15 0 1000 4263 45

all 38 31 423 94 8 175 167 65 0 1000 31566229 157123

estd no. o f visito r-trip s (’00) 1196878 1037951 13722969 3128057 247376 5335346 4909359 1987177 1116 31566229 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 7176 5508 71278 15307 1441 25608 20811 9981 13 157123 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 45: Per 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by purpose for each broad principal activity status

all-India pe rsons rural+urban

Page 256: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 194

State/UT

main destinatio n no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 897 85 16 1000 1287703 4065

Arunachal Pradesh 734 99 165 1000 9152 639

Assam 914 75 5 1000 268978 2930

B ihar 903 67 16 1000 944169 3413

C hhattisgarh 957 35 3 1000 326103 1230

Delhi 293 696 11 1000 15995 106

Goa 878 113 9 1000 10886 88Gujarat 878 117 6 1000 650100 2360

Haryana 762 188 50 1000 345330 981

H imachal Pradesh 927 49 24 1000 187914 1729

Jammu & K ashmir 779 204 10 1000 191615 1401

Jharkhand 903 82 7 1000 370290 1496

K arnataka 886 105 9 1000 539564 2437

K erala 833 157 10 1000 788300 5948

Madhya Pradesh 950 37 6 1000 1222839 4784

Maharashtra 896 95 7 1000 1016327 4698

Manip ur 625 341 8 1000 10233 800

Meghalaya 816 160 8 1000 17911 890

Mizoram 890 55 18 1000 1830 256N agaland 908 46 26 1000 7471 725

O rissa 959 33 6 1000 977593 4735

Punjab 832 133 35 1000 379056 1547

Rajasthan 916 70 14 1000 821614 3285

Sikkim 732 229 39 1000 6899 539

Tamil Nadu 870 126 4 1000 781995 3497

Trip ura 943 49 3 1000 30708 1338

Uttarakhand 838 95 68 1000 118989 474Uttar Pradesh 893 100 7 1000 2312873 9645

West Bengal 924 67 2 1000 1160826 5371

A & N Islands 996 4 0 1000 6879 292

C hand igarh 0 0 1000 1000 1391 26

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 820 84 96 1000 2249 174

Daman & D iu 780 0 219 1000 1229 191

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000 172 12

Puducherry 514 25 461 1000 8790 107

estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)13283511 1345065 153369 14823971 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 62989 7850 1135 72209 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination separate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India male rural

all India 896 91 10 1000 14823971 72209

Page 257: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 195

State/UT

main destination no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 902 83 13 1000 966868 2975

Arunachal Pradesh 807 100 76 1000 5134 319

Assam 898 73 11 1000 162928 1354

B ihar 897 53 26 1000 411784 1008

C hhattisgarh 961 31 2 1000 217679 560

Delhi 177 814 9 1000 10651 49

Goa 918 64 18 1000 9665 69

Gujarat 900 96 3 1000 411904 1262

Haryana 749 213 38 1000 222872 550

H imachal Pradesh 916 62 21 1000 154148 1281

Jammu & K ashmir 862 123 2 1000 138083 817

Jharkhand 914 73 5 1000 218207 642K arnataka 878 115 7 1000 428358 1770

K erala 871 115 14 1000 723690 5890

Madhya Pradesh 943 45 5 1000 634570 1540

Maharashtra 871 117 10 1000 703576 2405

Manip ur 553 439 0 1000 8035 671

Meghalaya 769 208 10 1000 14833 798

Mizoram 977 6 17 1000 696 90

N agaland 938 29 8 1000 3755 391O rissa 967 26 7 1000 636496 1611

Punjab 776 172 52 1000 295479 1138

Rajasthan 911 79 10 1000 501260 1345

Sikkim 792 145 57 1000 5181 375Tamil Nadu 881 112 7 1000 666376 2948

Trip ura 964 16 7 1000 23954 1000

Uttarakhand 811 137 52 1000 81966 194

Uttar Pradesh 906 89 5 1000 1127138 3122

West Bengal 934 54 5 1000 794061 3483

A & N Islands 987 13 0 1000 3834 196

C hand igarh 45 0 955 1000 668 19

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 958 22 20 1000 1171 76

Daman & D iu 650 0 350 1000 1021 162

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000 34 6

Puducherry 493 26 481 1000 8199 96

estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00) 8568985 883515 112862 9594276

xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 34894 4505 684 40212 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India female rural

all India 893 92 12 1000 9594276 40212

Page 258: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 196

State/UT

main destinatio n no. o f same-day visito r-

trip s

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd .*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 899 84 15 1000 2254571 7040Arunachal Pradesh 762 99 132 1000 14286 958Assam 909 74 7 1000 431906 4284B ihar 902 64 19 1000 1355953 4421C hhattisgarh 958 33 3 1000 543782 1790Delhi 250 740 10 1000 26646 155Goa 899 88 14 1000 20551 157Gujarat 885 110 5 1000 1062004 3622Haryana 758 197 46 1000 568202 1531H imachal Pradesh 923 55 23 1000 342062 3010Jammu & K ashmir 812 171 7 1000 329698 2218Jharkhand 907 79 7 1000 588497 2138K arnataka 882 109 8 1000 967922 4207K erala 852 136 12 1000 1511990 11838Madhya Pradesh 949 39 6 1000 1857409 6324Maharashtra 888 103 8 1000 1719903 7103Manip ur 593 384 5 1000 18268 1471Meghalaya 794 183 9 1000 32744 1688Mizoram 913 42 18 1000 2526 346N agaland 917 40 20 1000 11226 1116O rissa 961 31 7 1000 1614089 6346Punjab 808 150 42 1000 674535 2685Rajasthan 915 73 13 1000 1322874 4630Sikkim 758 192 47 1000 12080 914Tamil Nadu 875 120 6 1000 1448371 6445Trip ura 952 35 5 1000 54662 2338Uttarakhand 830 108 63 1000 200955 668Uttar Pradesh 896 97 6 1000 3440011 12767West Bengal 928 61 3 1000 1954887 8854A & N Islands 993 7 0 1000 10713 488C hand igarh 17 0 983 1000 2059 45Dadra & Nagar Haveli 862 65 73 1000 3420 250Daman & D iu 724 0 276 1000 2250 353Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000 206 18Puducherry 504 26 471 1000 16989 203

24418247 112421estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)21852496 2228580 266231 24418247 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 97883 12355 1819 112421 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India persons rural

all India 895 91 11 1000

Page 259: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 197

State/UT

main destination no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 726 265 9 1000 329937 1440

Arunachal Pradesh 580 127 290 1000 1219 192

Assam 754 206 34 1000 35024 536

B ihar 782 215 4 1000 78338 399C hhattisgarh 635 360 1 1000 57479 353

Delhi 35 883 82 1000 224479 1338

Goa 694 306 0 1000 14059 205

Gujarat 623 371 6 1000 299665 1293

Haryana 433 364 203 1000 111379 448

H imachal Pradesh 808 92 100 1000 16681 231

Jammu & K ashmir 755 230 14 1000 30025 405

Jharkhand 762 216 22 1000 46301 322K arnataka 671 296 33 1000 245032 1279

K erala 779 204 17 1000 211037 2453

Madhya Pradesh 648 333 19 1000 244090 1418

Maharashtra 568 399 33 1000 441388 2224

Manip ur 413 587 0 1000 3409 316

Meghalaya 372 446 167 1000 2683 173

Mizoram 899 70 30 1000 931 322

N agaland 788 203 9 1000 2631 247O rissa 792 195 10 1000 134414 695

Punjab 508 405 88 1000 146796 710

Rajasthan 614 353 33 1000 175037 888

Sikkim 553 253 194 1000 679 94Tamil Nadu 682 303 15 1000 537228 2474

Trip ura 790 197 10 1000 5509 221

Uttarakhand 586 227 187 1000 26383 216

Uttar Pradesh 569 294 137 1000 490019 2342

West Bengal 561 435 3 1000 295638 2381

A & N Islands 998 2 0 1000 1794 132

C hand igarh 2 0 998 1000 10585 215

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 571 93 337 1000 718 167

Daman & D iu 415 0 585 1000 697 155

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000 8 8

Puducherry 243 20 737 1000 16901 198

estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)2638648 1411509 186168 4238193 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 15630 9226 1611 26490 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India male urban

all India 623 333 44 1000 4238193 26490

Page 260: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 198

State/UT

main destination no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 760 229 11 1000 251287 1210

Arunachal Pradesh 484 417 95 1000 574 61

Assam 662 252 79 1000 20320 301

B ihar 931 69 0 1000 30851 130C hhattisgarh 582 413 0 1000 35947 171

Delhi 26 861 114 1000 157329 830

Goa 604 388 7 1000 11063 207

Gujarat 596 398 5 1000 191369 904Haryana 465 332 203 1000 78356 274

H imachal Pradesh 890 63 47 1000 13726 164

Jammu & K ashmir 862 126 13 1000 18619 270

Jharkhand 818 155 27 1000 24931 102K arnataka 681 286 33 1000 200402 1005

K erala 815 171 14 1000 196342 2420

Madhya Pradesh 583 399 17 1000 124041 576

Maharashtra 569 378 52 1000 310572 1518

Manip ur 533 467 0 1000 3907 348

Meghalaya 529 340 131 1000 1955 164

Mizoram 937 51 0 1000 310 115

N agaland 837 145 18 1000 1116 139O rissa 762 236 2 1000 69827 282

Punjab 492 448 60 1000 113286 608

Rajasthan 527 437 36 1000 92306 444

Sikkim 751 119 130 1000 650 57Tamil Nadu 704 285 11 1000 456048 2259

Trip ura 953 43 0 1000 4694 248

Uttarakhand 602 227 171 1000 18760 144

Uttar Pradesh 472 338 190 1000 259291 896West Bengal 584 413 1 1000 196761 1657

A & N Islands 1000 0 0 1000 1410 134

C hand igarh 2 0 934 1000 7225 152

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 890 0 110 1000 284 57

Daman & D iu 415 0 585 1000 588 156

Lakshadweep 0 0 0 0 6 0

Puducherry 410 15 575 1000 15637 209

estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)1850003 933104 124876 2909789 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 10977 6123 1092 18212 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination separate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India female urban

all India 636 321 43 1000 2909789 18212

Page 261: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 199

State/UT

main destination no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 741 250 10 1000581224 2650

Arunachal Pradesh 551 212 233 10001793 253

Assam 721 222 50 100055344 837

B ihar 822 176 3 1000109189 529

C hhattisgarh 619 376 1 100093426 524

Delhi 31 874 94 1000381808 2168

Goa 646 350 4 100025122 412

Gujarat 612 382 6 1000491034 2197

Haryana 446 351 203 1000189735 722

H imachal Pradesh 845 79 76 100030407 395

Jammu & K ashmir 801 185 14 100048644 675

Jharkhand 774 203 23 100071232 424

K arnataka 676 292 33 1000445434 2284

K erala 797 187 15 1000407379 4873

Madhya Pradesh 628 353 18 1000368131 1994

Maharashtra 569 391 40 1000751960 3742

Manip ur 474 526 0 10007316 664

Meghalaya 450 393 149 10004638 337

Mizoram 908 65 23 10001241 437

N agaland 804 184 12 10003747 386

O rissa 784 206 8 1000204241 977

Punjab 500 426 74 1000260082 1318

Rajasthan 584 382 34 1000267343 1332

Sikkim 602 220 178 10001329 151

Tamil Nadu 692 295 13 1000993276 4733

Trip ura 884 108 4 100010203 469

Uttarakhand 592 227 181 100045143 360

Uttar Pradesh 543 306 151 1000749310 3238

West Bengal 570 426 2 1000492399 4038

A & N Islands 999 1 0 10003204 266

C hand igarh 2 0 970 100017810 367

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 644 72 285 10001002 224

Daman & D iu 415 0 585 10001285 311

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 100014 8

Puducherry 332 17 651 100032538 407

7147982 44702estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)4488651 2344613 311044 7147982 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 26607 15349 2703 44702 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India persons urban

all India 628 328 44 1000

Page 262: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

Appendix A

NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 200

State/UT

main destinatio n no. o f same-day visito r-

trip s

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd .*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 876 107 15 10001617640 5505

Arunachal Pradesh 712 103 183 100010371 831

Assam 897 89 8 1000304002 3466

B ihar 898 74 16 10001022507 3812

C hhattisgarh 929 63 3 1000383582 1583

Delhi 56 868 77 1000240474 1444

Goa 759 238 3 100024945 293

Gujarat 828 166 6 1000949765 3653

Haryana 711 215 74 1000456709 1429

H imachal Pradesh 919 52 29 1000204595 1960

Jammu & K ashmir 777 206 11 1000221640 1806

Jharkhand 895 90 8 1000416591 1818

K arnataka 848 139 13 1000784596 3716

K erala 823 165 11 1000999337 8401

Madhya Pradesh 920 66 7 10001466929 6202

Maharashtra 833 154 12 10001457715 6922

Manip ur 586 385 7 100013642 1116

Meghalaya 788 179 18 100020594 1063

Mizoram 893 60 22 10002761 578

N agaland 877 86 22 100010102 972

O rissa 947 44 7 10001112007 5430

Punjab 792 167 41 1000525852 2257

Rajasthan 891 93 16 1000996651 4173

Sikkim 718 231 51 10007578 633

Tamil Nadu 811 182 7 10001319223 5971

Trip ura 934 58 4 100036217 1559

Uttarakhand 802 113 85 1000145372 690

Uttar Pradesh 855 123 22 10002802892 11987

West Bengal 866 126 2 10001456464 7752

A & N Islands 996 4 0 10008673 424

C hand igarh 2 0 998 100011976 241

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 761 86 153 10002967 341

Daman & D iu 662 0 338 10001926 346

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000180 20

Puducherry 359 22 618 100025691 305

19062164 98699estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)15922159 2756574 339537 19062164 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 78619 17076 2746 98699 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India male rura l+urban

all India 855 127 15 1000

Page 263: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 201

State/UT

main destinatio n no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 884 102 13 10001218155 4185

Arunachal Pradesh 773 133 78 10005708 380

Assam 867 96 20 1000183248 1655

B ihar 899 54 24 1000442635 1138

C hhattisgarh 933 60 2 1000253626 731

Delhi 37 857 106 1000167980 879

Goa 710 279 11 100020728 276

Gujarat 832 165 4 1000603273 2166

Haryana 696 235 68 1000301228 824

H imachal Pradesh 915 62 23 1000167874 1445

Jammu & K ashmir 862 123 3 1000156702 1087

Jharkhand 911 76 6 1000243138 744

K arnataka 843 145 12 1000628760 2775

K erala 861 124 14 1000920032 8310

Madhya Pradesh 901 87 6 1000758611 2116

Maharashtra 804 175 19 10001014148 3923

Manip ur 548 445 0 100011942 1019

Meghalaya 752 217 18 100016788 962

Mizoram 965 19 12 10001006 205

N agaland 913 58 11 10004871 530

O rissa 953 41 7 1000706323 1893

Punjab 732 215 53 1000408765 1746

Rajasthan 874 114 12 1000593566 1789

Sikkim 790 144 60 10005831 432

Tamil Nadu 825 167 9 10001122424 5207

Trip ura 963 19 6 100028648 1248

Uttarakhand 770 154 75 1000100726 338

Uttar Pradesh 850 121 29 10001386429 4018

West Bengal 877 113 4 1000990822 5140

A & N Islands 990 10 0 10005244 330

C hand igarh 4 0 935 10007893 171

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 946 18 36 10001455 133

Daman & D iu 561 0 439 10001609 318

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 100040 6

Puducherry 442 19 539 100023836 305

12504065 58424estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00)10418988 1816619 237738 12504065 xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 45871 10628 1776 58424 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per 1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India female rural+urban

all India 849 132 17 1000

Page 264: Domestic Tourism in India - NSSO 2009

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 202

State/UT

main destinatio n no. of same-day visitor-trips

within the

district

outside the d istrict

but w ithin the

State

outside State total estd.*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

And hra Pradesh 879 105 14 10002835795 9690

Arunachal Pradesh 734 114 145 100016079 1211

Assam 888 91 11 1000487250 5121

B ihar 898 69 18 10001465142 4950

C hhattisgarh 930 62 2 1000637208 2314

Delhi 49 864 88 1000408454 2323

Goa 733 259 7 100045673 569

Gujarat 829 165 5 10001553038 5819

Haryana 706 223 72 1000757937 2253

H imachal Pradesh 917 56 26 1000372469 3405

Jammu & K ashmir 811 172 8 1000378342 2893

Jharkhand 900 86 7 1000659729 2562

K arnataka 846 142 13 10001413356 6491

K erala 842 145 13 10001919369 16711

Madhya Pradesh 915 72 7 10002225540 8318

Maharashtra 823 161 15 10002471863 10845

Manip ur 569 413 4 100025584 2135

Meghalaya 771 197 18 100037382 2025

Mizoram 912 49 19 10003767 783

N agaland 889 77 18 100014973 1502

O rissa 949 43 7 10001818330 7323

Punjab 765 188 46 1000934617 4003

Rajasthan 886 99 15 10001590217 5962

Sikkim 749 194 55 100013409 1065

Tamil Nadu 817 175 8 10002441647 11178

Trip ura 947 40 5 100064865 2807

Uttarakhand 792 126 82 1000246098 1028

Uttar Pradesh 854 122 24 10004189321 16005

West Bengal 870 120 3 10002447286 12892

A & N Islands 994 6 0 100013917 754

C hand igarh 3 0 971 100019869 412

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 814 66 119 10004422 474

Daman & D iu 616 0 384 10003535 664

Lakshadweep 1000 0 0 1000220 26

Puducherry 402 21 577 100049527 610

estd. no. of visito r-trips

(’00) 26341147 4573193 577275 31566229

xxx xxx

sample no. of vis itor-trips 124490 27704 4522 157123 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 46: Per1000 distribution of same -day visitor-trips by main destination se parate ly for each State /UT of origin

all-India persons rural+urban

all India 853 129 16 1000 31566229 157123

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A- 203

quintile-class

in MPCE (%)

major mode of travel no. o f same day

visito r-trip s

on foot bus train ship/

boat

air own transport tansport-

equip ment

rental

others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

bicycle two

wheeler

rickshaw auto

rickshaw

car/

jeep

tractor/

truck

animal

driven

transport

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19)

0-20 156 433 14 1 0 220 32 2 15 16 4 3 99 6 0 1000 3390268 14002

20-40 92 546 18 3 0 137 31 2 23 15 4 2 120 7 0 1000 3798775 1610340-60 71 584 21 1 0 105 48 4 12 15 1 1 131 7 0 1000 4205762 19196

60-80 46 619 17 1 0 68 74 3 12 11 5 1 139 6 0 1000 5270705 24260

80-100 32 616 15 1 0 27 116 1 15 48 1 1 122 6 0 1000 7752738 38860

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

estd.no. o f

visitor-trips

(’00)

1664722 14031308 403905 30237 1409 2271599 1716356 48458 365873 602667 72996 30172 3022209 153046 3225 24418247 xxx xxx

sample no. of

visitor-trips6790 65094 1937 141 5 8899 7525 292 1609 3140 361 140 15730 734 23 112421 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 47: Pe r 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by major mode of trave l for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India rural

all 68 575 17 1 0 93 70 2 15 25 3 1 124 6 0 1000 24418247 112421

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A- 204

quintile-class in

MPCE (%)

major mode of travel no. o f same day

visito r-trip s

on foot bus train ship/

boat

air own transport tansport-

equip ment

rental

others n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

samp le**

bicycle two

wheeler

rickshaw auto

rickshaw

car/ jeep tractor/

truck

animal

driven

transport

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19)

0-20 10 734 75 3 0 46 24 1 11 9 1 1 86 1 0 1000 910540 5066

20-40 11 696 68 0 0 16 69 2 48 12 2 0 74 3 0 1000 1277628 7402

40-60 11 679 89 1 0 13 84 2 7 27 0 0 81 7 0 1000 1481743 9332

60-80 6 597 105 0 0 6 114 1 7 70 0 0 87 6 0 1000 1556365 11101

80-100 2 443 89 0 0 5 110 1 9 242 0 0 93 4 0 1000 1921707 11801

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

estd.no. of

visitor-trips (’00)53048 4345037 621310 4111 951 99549 621984 10347 111008 636796 4872 565 605984 32250 171 7147982 xxx xxx

sample no. of

visitor-trips377 26310 4086 46 9 564 3463 72 485 4121 63 5 4881 219 1 44702 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 47: Per 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by major mode of trave l for each quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India urban

all 7 608 87 1 0 14 87 1 16 89 1 0 85 5 0 1000 7147982 44702

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A- 205

quintile-class in MPCE (%) type o f stay no. of same-day visitor-trips

hotel private

guest ho use

govt guest

house

dharamshala rented

ho use

friends &

relatives

did not stay

at all

others

including

carriages/

coaches

n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

0-20 0 3 0 1 0 122 853 21 0 1000 3390268 14002

20-40 0 1 1 1 0 135 839 22 0 1000 3798775 1610340-60 1 0 1 2 0 147 829 21 0 1000 4205762 19196

60-80 1 1 0 1 2 153 821 20 0 1000 5270705 24260

80-100 1 1 1 1 0 161 798 36 0 1000 7752738 38860

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

estd.no. of visitor-trips (’00) 15586 33197 16340 31441 10654 3602926 20077742 630362 0 24418247 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 302 201 90 230 41 18761 89861 2935 0 112421 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 48: Per 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by type of stay for e ach quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India rural

all 1 1 1 1 0 148 822 26 0 1000 24418247 112421

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A- 206

quintile-class in MPCE (%)

type o f stay no. of same-day visitor-trips

hotel private

guest house

go vt guest

ho use

dharamshala rented

ho use

friends &

relatives

did not stay

at all

others

including

carriages/

coaches

n.r. all estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)

0-20 0 2 0 12 0 205 765 14 0 1000 910540 5066

20-40 2 2 0 3 0 259 711 23 0 1000 1277628 7402

40-60 3 2 0 5 0 220 741 29 0 1000 1481743 9332

60-80 1 2 1 3 0 209 754 29 0 1000 1556365 11101

80-100 2 3 1 2 0 218 736 37 0 1000 1921707 11801

n.r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

estd.no. of visitor-trips (’00) 13540 16310 4914 31447 690 1588672 5291967 200442 0 7147982 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f vis itor-trips 136 111 45 196 3 10560 32533 1118 0 44702 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 48: Per 1000 distribution of same-day visitor-trips by type of stay for e ach quintile class of MPCE(%)

all-India urban

all 2 2 1 4 0 222 740 28 0 1000 7147982 44702

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A- 207

State/UT* sample estimated(’00)

number of overnight

trips

number of same day trips number o f o vernight trip s number o f same day

trips

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)

Andhra Pradesh 30713 54465 676289 1230501

Arunachal Pradesh 4393 7210 6147 10675

Assam 12217 25834 108112 244586

Bihar 21613 37810 460585 860454

Chhattisgarh 7292 12224 136821 239953

Delhi 473 1327 3259 10721

Goa 729 1323 4317 9740

Gujarat 15877 28129 281110 528602

Haryana 10822 15292 184134 270297

Himachal Pradesh 16501 32156 108588 215557

Jammu & Kashmir 14828 33743 102455 217409

Jharkhand 8232 16596 139169 280479

Karnataka 15539 24209 293535 462823

Kerala 21175 57598 250750 788466

Madhya Pradesh 29038 60620 461111 1018039

Maharashtra 30672 52464 557725 961034

Manipur 5813 13989 5781 17743

Meghalaya 4722 8490 10923 19754

Mizo ram 2109 2202 2234 2294

Nagaland 4067 7499 4924 10076Orissa 26607 63340 383828 969157

Punjab 10504 20841 167631 334007

Rajasthan 26240 39088 462386 703505

Sikkim 4330 8285 3820 7890

Tamil Nadu 18830 38764 307541 704035

Tripura 9136 13300 20746 31886

Uttarakhand 4418 6865 60548 99715

Uttar Pradesh 73141 118121 1218632 2022360

West Bengal 32572 62016 533943 1062032

A & N Islands 1132 2560 2238 5434

Chandigarh 249 324 545 973

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 440 1029 552 1636

Daman & Diu 333 1452 208 1337

Lakshadweep 101 101 112 133

Puducherry 1097 1856 3877 7553

Table 49: Number of ove rnight trips and numbe r of same day trips, both surveye d and e stimate d, se parately for each State/UT of origin

rural

all-India 465955 871122 6964576 13350857

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A- 208

State/UT* sample estimated(’00)

number of overnight

trips

number of same day trips number o f o vernight trip s number o f same day

trips

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)

Andhra Pradesh 16357 19325 267058 285072

Arunachal Pradesh 1118 1475 865 1310

Assam 3023 5613 16524 32699

Bihar 4170 5350 55752 71866

Chhattisgarh 3150 4437 30988 42888Delhi 8211 20776 60030 163262

Goa 1178 2327 4673 11672

Gujarat 12440 17419 161627 242986

Haryana 5740 7475 61523 84027Himachal Pradesh 2787 4138 10243 15974

Jammu & Kashmir 6600 10869 19840 31352

Jharkhand 4037 5597 27429 36805Karnataka 11749 14283 169906 190162

Kerala 12016 25899 90702 207544

Madhya Pradesh 15079 23147 142329 207587

Maharashtra 20783 27251 264076 357763

Manipur 1922 7164 1623 7103

Meghalaya 1394 2055 1660 2963

Mizo ram 3109 2345 1458 1118

Nagaland 1411 2549 1815 3501

Orissa 6364 11238 63394 118339

Punjab 7618 12296 89060 139766

Rajasthan 11545 12728 139319 152580

Sikkim 1002 1363 577 839Tamil Nadu 17542 28993 264699 448680

Tripura 3178 3410 4947 5659

Uttarakhand 1877 2805 14932 21818

Uttar Pradesh 26696 33231 298346 389961

West Bengal 17155 29614 144928 270990

A & N Islands 501 1351 476 1531

Chandigarh 1555 1984 5493 7326

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 548 1065 301 549

Daman & Diu 493 1426 234 764

Lakshadweep 655 67 120 14

Puducherry 2379 3617 8796 14042

Table 49: Number of ove rnight trips and numbe r of same day trips, both surveye d and e stimate d, se parately for each State/UT of origin

urban

all-India 235382 354682 2425746 3570512

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A- 209

State/UT* sample estimated(’00)

number of overnight

trips

number of same day trips number o f o vernight trip s number o f same day

trips

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)

Andhra Pradesh 47070 73790 943347 1515574

Arunachal Pradesh 5511 8685 7012 11985

Assam 15240 31447 124635 277285

Bihar 25783 43160 516337 932320

Chhattisgarh 10442 16661 167809 282840

Delhi 8684 22103 63289 173983

Goa 1907 3650 8990 21412

Gujarat 28317 45548 442738 771588

Haryana 16562 22767 245657 354324

Himachal Pradesh 19288 36294 118831 231531

Jammu & Kashmir 21428 44612 122295 248761

Jharkhand 12269 22193 166599 317285

Karnataka 27288 38492 463440 652984

Kerala 33191 83497 341452 996010

Madhya Pradesh 44117 83767 603440 1225627

Maharashtra 51455 79715 821801 1318798

Manipur 7735 21153 7405 24846

Meghalaya 6116 10545 12583 22717

Mizo ram 5218 4547 3692 3412

Nagaland 5478 10048 6739 13577

Orissa 32971 74578 447221 1087496

Punjab 18122 33137 256691 473773

Rajasthan 37785 51816 601705 856085

Sikkim 5332 9648 4397 8730

Tamil Nadu 36372 67757 572240 1152715

Tripura 12314 16710 25693 37545

Uttarakhand 6295 9670 75480 121532

Uttar Pradesh 99837 151352 1516979 2412320

West Bengal 49727 91630 678871 1333023

A & N Islands 1633 3911 2714 6964

Chandigarh 1804 2308 6038 8299

Dadra & Nagar Haveli 988 2094 853 2186

Daman & Diu 826 2878 443 2101

Lakshadweep 756 168 233 147

Puducherry 3476 5473 12673 21594

Table 49: Number of ove rnight trips and numbe r of same day trips, both surveye d and e stimate d, se parately for each State/UT of origin

rural+urban

all-India 701337 1225804 9390321 16921369

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A- 210

leading purpose

type o f trip no. of overnight trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business

14 986 0 1000 163028 2038

ho lid aying, leisure and recreatio n

69 931 0 1000 130861 1218

social

1 999 0 1000 5224979 40675

religious & pilgrimage

39 961 0 1000 612210 4730

education & training

124 876 0 1000 62992 753

health & medical

4 996 0 1000 508224 4764

shopping

2 998 0 1000 31679 588

others

6 994 0 1000 228397 2262

n.r 26 974 0 1000 2205 51

estd no. of trip s 53418 6911158 0 6964576 xxx xxx

sample no. o f trips 478 56601 0 57079 xxx xxx

* last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 50: Per 1000 distribution of overnight trips by type of trip for each le ading purpose

all-India rura l

all 8 992 0 1000 6964576 57079

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A- 211

leading purpose

type o f trip no. of overnight trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business

7 993 0 1000 83156 1656

ho lid aying, leisure and recreatio n

91 909 0 1000 121415 1578

social

1 999 0 1000 1729901 22943

religious & pilgrimage

50 950 0 1000 301320 3683

education & training

75 925 0 1000 32714 577

health & medical

0 1000 0 1000 83907 1389

shopping

34 966 0 1000 4162 105

others

3 997 0 1000 68911 1076

n.r 0 1000 0 1000 263 16

estd no. of trip s 31047 2394696 3 2425746 xxx xxx

sample no. o f trips 416 32606 1 33023 xxx xxx

* last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 50: Per 1000 distribution of overnight trips by type of trip for each le ading purpose

all-India urban

all 13 987 0 1000 2425746 33023

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A- 212

leading purpose

type o f trip no. of overnight trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business

12 988 0 1000 246184 3694

ho lid aying, leisure and recreatio n

80 920 0 1000 252276 2796

social

1 999 0 1000 6954880 63618

religious & pilgrimage

43 957 0 1000 913530 8413

education & training

106 894 0 1000 95706 1330

health & medical

3 997 0 1000 592131 6153

shopping

6 994 0 1000 35841 693

others

5 995 0 1000 297308 3338

n.r 23 977 0 1000 2468 67

estd no. of trip s 84465 9305854 3 9390322 xxx xxx

sample no. o f trips 894 89207 1 90102 xxx xxx

* last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 50: Per 1000 distribution of overnight trips by type of trip for each le ading purpose

all-India rural+urban

all 9 991 0 1000 9390322 90102

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A- 213

all- Ind ia

C ategory of trip type of trip no. of trips

package no n-package n.r. Total estd* samp le**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

overnight trip 8 992 0 1000 6964576 57079

same day trip 3 997 0 1000 13350857 72919

overnight trip 13 987 0 1000 2425746 33023

same day trip 7 993 0 1000 3570512 25661

overnight trip 9 991 0 1000 9390322 90102

same day trip 4 996 0 1000 16921369 98580

* last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 51: Per 1000 distribution of trips by type of trip for overnight trips and same day trips

rural

urban

rural+urban

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A- 214

starting month ending month no. o f o vernight trip s

January February March April May June July August Septem-

ber

O ctober Novem-

ber

Decem-

ber

n.r. all estd. *

(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17)

January 2.36 8.86 46.28 90.35 0 165 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.14 533617 4891

February 0 2.11 8.68 64.59 0 0 153 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.71 557564 4666

March 0 0 2.16 9.65 49.25 0 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.9 497134 4293

April 0 0 0 2.25 8.7 53.57 88.19 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.96 621615 5030

May 0 0 0 0 2.38 11.59 68.66 100 120.32 0 0 0 0 3.23 821480 5544

June 0 0 0 0 0 2.23 10.36 62.5 90 0 0 0 0 3.35 382573 2984

July 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.48 8.74 54.07 90.76 120 0 0 2.87 695362 5709

August 154.8 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.46 8.88 63.64 97.85 0 0 3.1 677672 5184

September 130 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.37 7.76 55.1 111.56 0 3.07 434504 3815

October 0 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.51 9.07 68.89 0 3.34 652314 5225

November 59.22 74 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.26 8.97 2.21 2.91 588534 5027

December 7.33 47.58 87.22 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.38 7.57 3.05 483952 4519

n.r. 1.45 24.29 63.05 4.3 3.46 14.67 1.5 4.66 18.34 5.55 5.95 7.06 2.66 7.4 18256 192

estd no. of trip s (‘00) 537308 558554 497991 603652 822409 394352 716360 667483 433479 617999 625061 483441 6488 6964576 xxx xxx

samp le no. o f trips 4888 4716 4311 4922 5665 2896 5810 5138 3813 5099 5173 4571 77 57079 xxx xxx

*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 52: Ave rage duration (in te rms of night spe nt) per overnight trip by starting and ending month

all-India rural

all 2.94 2.72 2.96 3.01 2.88 3.77 3.32 2.79 3.16 3.11 3.32 3.02 2.9 3.06 6964576 57079

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A- 215

starting month ending month no. of overnight trips

January February March April May June July August Septem-ber

October Novem-ber

Decem-ber

n.r. all estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17)January 3.38 10.24 53 90 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.81 208779 2897

February 0 3.03 7.55 53.01 90 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.45 159557 2428March 0 0 2.77 8.93 61.08 78.06 0 150 0 0 0 0 0 3.63 172976 2454April 0 0 0 2.99 11.71 65.58 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4.6 205180 3027

May 0 0 0 0 3.29 9.65 43.71 60 124.27 0 0 0 0 4.15 243094 2997

June 0 0 0 0 0 2.86 30.38 59.66 85 0 0 0 0 4.71 64025 779July 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.39 12.93 62.71 90 0 0 0 5.63 83767 1363August 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.94 8.01 45 0 0 0 3.46 346769 4588September 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.76 21.22 46.73 93 0 5.01 253585 3163October 89.8 130 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.4 10.17 57.15 0 5.09 263550 3091November 60.67 78.25 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.71 9.75 0 3.6 199504 2955December 8.79 47.52 0 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.18 0 3.91 221184 3177

n.r. 53.54 47.56 39.79 1.09 20.35 18.12 11.78 13.57 14.25 7.48 24.78 14.19 2.59 18.34 3777 104

estd no. of trips (‘00) 219922 159037 168080 194045 251596 82095 70091 330500 258720 235516 236165 219387 591 2425746 xxx xxx

sample no. of trips 3013 2434 2371 2997 3089 1045 1052 4401 3500 2852 3016 3223 30 33023 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 52: Average duration (in terms of night spent) per overn ght trip by starting and ending month

all-India urban

all 4.14 3.73 3.45 3.73 4.36 5.61 5.21 3.54 3.76 5.71 4.57 3.93 2.59 4.19 2425746 33023

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A- 216

starting month ending month no. of overnight trips

January February March April May June July August Septem-ber

October Novem-ber

Decem-ber

n.r. all estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17)January 2.68 9.21 47.31 90.34 0 165 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.35 742396 7788February 0 2.34 8.38 62.78 90 0 153 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.89 717121 7094March 0 0 2.33 9.4 52.54 78.06 120 150 0 0 0 0 0 3.11 670110 6747

April 0 0 0 2.44 9.8 62.95 88.19 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.41 826795 8057

May 0 0 0 0 2.61 11.04 60.45 74.79 123.09 0 0 0 0 3.47 1064574 8541June 0 0 0 0 0 2.34 11.83 61.45 85.82 0 0 0 0 3.57 446598 3763July 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.57 10.41 57.04 90.73 120 0 0 3.21 779129 7072August 154.8 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.63 8.45 62.35 97.85 0 0 3.23 1024441 9772September 130 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.53 13.86 53.61 107.73 0 3.85 688089 6978October 89.8 121.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.77 9.57 59.98 0 3.9 915864 8316November 59.37 76.02 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.38 9.25 2.21 3.1 788038 7982December 7.89 47.57 87.22 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.66 7.57 3.35 705136 7696n.r. 3.9 29.76 43.5 2.03 5.04 14.96 4.25 7.09 17.72 6.69 7.7 7.29 2.65 9.52 22033 296

estd no. of trips (‘00) 757230 717591 666071 797697 1074005 476447 786451 997983 692199 853515 861226 702828 7079 9390322

xxx xxx

sample no. of trips 7901 7150 6682 7919 8754 3941 6862 9539 7313 7951 8189 7794 107 90102 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 52: Average duration (in terms of night spent) per overn ght trip by starting and ending month

all-India rural+urban

all 3.32 2.97 3.1 3.21 3.27 4.13 3.52 3.06 3.4 3.91 3.7 3.34 2.87 3.39 9390322 90102

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NSS Report No. 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09

A- 217

rural

State/UT[of destination]

main destination no. of overnight tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)Andhra Pradesh 1.1 1.3 1.9 676289 3530Arunachal Pradesh 1.0 1.2 1.0 6147 656Assam 1.1 1.3 1.5 108112 2242Bihar 1.0 1.3 1.3 460585 2904Chhattisgarh 1.1 1.1 1.2 136821 993Delhi 0.0 1.0 1.2 3259 72Goa 1.0 1.0 1.9 4317 93Gujarat 1.0 1.6 1.7 281110 1834Haryana 1.1 1.1 1.2 184134 1217Himachal Pradesh 1.0 1.1 2.0 108588 1448Jammu & Kashmir 1.1 1.1 2.0 102455 856Jharkhand 1.0 1.2 1.6 139169 1110Karnataka 1.0 1.2 1.8 293535 2061Kerala 1.1 1.2 2.3 250750 3029Madhya Pradesh 1.0 1.2 1.2 461111 3221Maharashtra 1.1 1.4 1.4 557725 3905Manipur 1.0 1.1 5.3 5781 1286Meghalaya 1.0 1.0 1.4 10923 685Mizoram 1.0 1.0 2.4 2234 410Nagaland 1.3 1.7 1.1 4924 547Orissa 1.0 1.1 1.3 383828 2547Punjab 1.0 1.1 1.1 167631 1185Rajasthan 1.0 1.1 1.6 462386 2884Sikkim 1.0 1.1 4.2 3820 501Tamil Nadu 1.0 1.1 1.7 307541 2622Tripura 1.0 1.0 1.9 20746 1634Uttarakhand 1.0 1.1 1.6 60548 522Uttar Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.4 1218632 8246West Bengal 1.0 1.1 1.7 533943 4301A & N Islands 1.1 1.2 0.0 2238 177Chandigarh 0.0 0.0 1.4 545 68Dadra & Nagar Haveli 1.0 1.0 1.0 552 93Daman & Diu 1.0 1.0 1.3 208 75Lakshadweep 1.0 0.0 1.0 112 21Puducherry 1.0 1.0 1.0 3877 104

estd. no. of trips (’00) 4510126 2004072 450378 xxx xxxsample no. of trips 35436 17149 4494 xxx xxx*last 365 days ** last 30 day s

Table 53: Average no. of places visited per overnight trip by main destination for each State/UT o f destination

all-India 1.0 1.2 1.5 6964576 57079

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State/UT[of destination]

main destination no. of overnight tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)Andhra Pradesh 1.1 1.1 1.3 267058 2117Arunachal Pradesh 1.2 1.1 1.7 865 233Assam 1.1 1.4 1.3 16524 550Bihar 1.0 1.2 1.4 55752 610Chhattisgarh 1.1 1.1 2.3 30988 460Delhi 1.3 1.0 1.2 60030 1130Goa 1.0 1.0 2.1 4673 147Gujarat 1.1 1.2 2.2 161627 1646Haryana 1.0 1.5 1.2 61523 711Himachal Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.8 10243 264Jammu & Kashmir 1.2 1.3 2.2 19840 438Jharkhand 1.0 1.0 1.5 27429 635Karnataka 1.1 1.3 1.5 169906 1793Kerala 1.0 1.2 1.5 90702 1525Madhya Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.5 142329 1833Maharashtra 1.0 1.3 2.1 264076 3863Manipur 1.0 1.0 1.2 1623 539Meghalaya 1.1 1.0 3.4 1660 272Mizoram 1.0 1.0 2.9 1458 628Nagaland 1.1 1.3 2.2 1815 231Orissa 1.1 1.3 1.8 63394 757Punjab 1.0 1.1 1.2 89060 884Rajasthan 1.0 1.1 1.5 139319 1353Sikkim 1.0 1.0 2.5 577 143Tamil Nadu 1.1 1.2 1.4 264699 2609Tripura 1.0 1.1 2.6 4947 543Uttarakhand 1.0 1.1 1.9 14932 295Uttar Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.2 298346 3209West Bengal 1.0 1.2 1.6 144928 2616A & N Islands 1.0 1.3 0.0 476 110Chandigarh 1.0 1.0 1.3 5493 289Dadra & Nagar Haveli 1.0 2.4 1.0 301 91Daman & Diu 1.0 1.0 1.0 234 68Lakshadweep 1.0 0.0 1.9 120 138Puducherry 1.1 1.2 1.4 8796 293

estd. no. of trips (’00) 729539 1198865 497342 xxx xxxsample no. of trips 9132 15055 8836 xxx xxx*last 365 day s ** last 30 day s

Table 53: Average no. of places visited per overnight trip by ain destination for each State/UT o f destination urban

all-India 1.1 1.2 1.5 2425746 33023

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State/UT[of destination]

main destination no. of overnight tripswithin the

districtoutside the district but

within the State

outside State estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)Andhra Pradesh 1.1 1.2 1.6 943347 5647Arunachal Pradesh 1.1 1.2 1.3 7012 889Assam 1.1 1.4 1.4 124636 2792Bihar 1.0 1.3 1.4 516337 3514Chhattisgarh 1.1 1.1 1.9 167809 1453Delhi 1.3 1.0 1.2 63289 1202Goa 1.0 1.0 2.0 8990 240Gujarat 1.0 1.4 2.0 442737 3480Haryana 1.1 1.2 1.2 245657 1928Himachal Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.9 118831 1712Jammu & Kashmir 1.1 1.2 2.1 122295 1294Jharkhand 1.0 1.2 1.5 166598 1745Karnataka 1.0 1.3 1.7 463441 3854Kerala 1.1 1.2 1.7 341452 4554Madhya Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.3 603440 5054Maharashtra 1.1 1.3 1.8 821801 7768Manipur 1.0 1.1 2.9 7404 1825Meghalaya 1.0 1.0 1.8 12583 957Mizoram 1.0 1.0 2.8 3692 1038Nagaland 1.3 1.6 1.4 6739 778Orissa 1.0 1.2 1.6 447222 3304Punjab 1.0 1.1 1.1 256691 2069Rajasthan 1.0 1.1 1.5 601705 4237Sikkim 1.0 1.1 2.9 4397 644Tamil Nadu 1.1 1.2 1.6 572240 5231Tripura 1.0 1.0 2.6 25693 2177Uttarakhand 1.0 1.1 1.8 75480 817Uttar Pradesh 1.0 1.1 1.3 1516978 11455West Bengal 1.0 1.1 1.6 678871 6917A & N Islands 1.1 1.3 0.0 2714 287Chandigarh 1.0 1.0 1.4 6038 357Dadra & Nagar Haveli 1.0 1.2 1.0 853 184Daman & Diu 1.0 1.0 1.2 442 143Lakshadweep 1.0 0.0 1.8 232 159Puducherry 1.1 1.1 1.2 12673 397

estd. no. of trips (’00) 5239665 3202937 947720 xxx xxxsample no. of trips 44568 32204 13330 xxx xxx*last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 53: Average no. of places visited per overnight trip by ain destination for each State/UT o f destination rural+urban

all-India 1.0 1.2 1.5 9390322 90102

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leading purposetype of trip no. of same-day trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business 1 999 0 1000 694213 4387

holidaying, leisure and recreation 17 983 0 1000 315695 1805social 2 998 0 1000 5059506 28528religious & pilgrimage 4 996 0 1000 792919 4255education & training 170 830 0 1000 120997 789health & medical 1 999 0 1000 2261265 12790shopping 1 999 0 1000 3097954 14734other 1 999 0 1000 1008185 5627n.r 7 61 932 1000 120 4

estd. no. of trips(’00) 44812 13304949 1097 13350857 xxx xxx

sample no. of trips 274 72634 11 72919 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 54: Per 1000 distribution of same-day trips by type of trip fo r each leading purpo se

all-India rural

all 3 997 0 1000 13350857 72919

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leading purposetype of trip no. of same-day trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business 0 1000 0 1000 272364 2189holidaying, leisure and recreation 79 921 0 1000 194366 1306social 1 999 0 1000 1948257 13982religious & pilgrimage 14 986 1 1000 392821 2773education & training 24 976 0 1000 54687 400health & medical 1 999 0 1000 299742 2085shopping 0 1000 0 1000 235937 1538other 6 994 0 1000 172332 1387

n.r 0 1000 0 1000 6 1

estd. no. of trips(’00) 25827 3544239 445 3570512 xxx xxx

sample no. of trips 150 25509 2 25661 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 54: Per 1000 distribution of same-day trips by type of trip fo r each leading purpo se

all-India urban

all 7 993 0 1000 3570512 25661

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all-India rural+urban

leading purposetype of trip no. of same-day trips

package non-package n.r. total estd .*(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

business 1 999 0 1000 966577 6576holidaying, leisure and recreation 34 966 0 1000 510061 3111social 2 998 0 1000 7007763 42510religious & pilgrimage 6 994 0 1000 1185740 7028education & training 138 862 0 1000 175684 1189health & medical 1 999 0 1000 2561007 14875shopping 1 999 0 1000 3333891 16272other 1 999 0 1000 1180517 7014n.r 7 88 906 1000 126 5all 4 996 0 1000 16921369 98580estd. no. of trips(’00) 70639 16849188 1542 16921369 xxx xxx

sample no. of trips 424 98143 13 98580 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 54: Per 1000 distribution of same-day trips by type of trip fo r each leading purpo se

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month of visitleading purpose no. of same day trips

business holidaying, le isure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)January 47 27 346 54 5 162 279 81 0 1000 1080792 5876

February 39 19 394 71 7 152 239 78 0 1000 1069165 5803March 45 20 374 61 9 171 254 65 0 1000 997996 5403April 39 18 405 48 25 151 230 84 0 1000 1121745 5546May 43 19 485 59 8 132 193 63 0 1000 1171146 6005June 86 28 396 34 11 181 205 59 0 1000 775693 4207July 51 23 365 76 10 189 221 64 0 1000 1493714 8582August 54 26 386 46 9 174 238 67 0 1000 1265051 7134September 62 19 355 52 8 186 239 80 0 1000 929640 5308October 56 38 317 77 5 185 236 86 0 1000 1239626 6733November 68 26 356 65 6 176 224 79 0 1000 1216323 6577December 44 19 379 55 5 170 228 101 0 1000 977442 5648n.r. 45 0 171 48 2 340 243 150 0 1000 12527 97

estd. no.of trips (’00) 694213 315695 5059506 792919 120997 2261265 3097954 1008185 120 13350857 xxx xxx

sample no.of trips 4387 1805 28528 4255 789 12790 14734 5627 4 72919 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 55: Per 1000 distribution of same day trips by leading purpo se fo r each month

all-India rural

all 52 24 379 59 9 169 232 76 0 1000 13350857 72919

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month of visitleading purpose no. of same day trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & train ing

health & medical

shopping other n.r. total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)January 88 66 507 140 10 81 65 43 0 1000 311275 2263

February 59 56 560 118 10 107 52 37 0 1000 280219 1927March 79 48 535 115 7 70 96 50 0 1000 279320 1878April 72 34 552 116 21 86 54 66 0 1000 336104 2378May 67 58 649 61 10 64 57 34 0 1000 337930 2172June 29 52 607 81 13 79 82 57 0 1000 129468 871July 64 46 496 126 31 99 68 70 0 1000 90675 830August 79 42 541 120 28 83 46 61 0 1000 452191 3432September 97 35 519 115 19 103 71 41 0 1000 424567 2977October 72 101 488 119 11 68 105 36 0 1000 312541 2177November 88 54 546 98 11 97 48 59 0 1000 312861 2418December 76 67 551 105 15 74 70 41 0 1000 301158 2306n.r. 199 37 676 38 1 17 29 3 0 1000 2202 32

estd. no.of trips (’00) 272364 194366 1948257 392821 54687 299742 235937 172332 6 3570512 xxx xxx

sample no.of trips 2189 1306 13982 2773 400 2085 1538 1387 1 25661 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 55: Per 1000 distribution of same day trips by leading purpo se fo r each month

all-India urban

all 76 54 546 110 15 84 66 48 0 1000 3570512 25661

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month of visitleading purpose no. of same day trips

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. total estd. *(’00)

sample**

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13)January 53 33 370 67 5 150 246 75 0 1000 1392067 8139

February 42 25 418 78 7 146 213 72 0 1000 1349384 7730March 50 24 398 69 9 156 231 63 0 1000 1277316 7281April 44 21 427 59 25 141 203 82 0 1000 1457849 7924May 46 25 509 59 8 122 172 58 0 1000 1509076 8177June 80 30 416 38 11 172 194 59 0 1000 905161 5078July 51 23 370 78 11 186 215 64 0 1000 1584389 9412August 59 29 414 59 13 157 204 66 0 1000 1717242 10566September 69 22 391 66 11 168 202 72 0 1000 1354207 8285October 58 47 340 82 5 169 218 80 0 1000 1552167 8910November 71 30 382 69 7 165 200 76 0 1000 1529184 8995December 49 26 406 63 7 155 203 91 0 1000 1278600 7954n.r. 60 4 221 47 2 308 222 136 0 1000 14729 129

estd. no.of trips (’00) 966577 510061 7007763 1185740 175684 2561007 3333891 1180517 126 16921369 xxx xxx

sample no.of trips 6576 3111 42510 7028 1189 14875 16272 7014 5 98580 xxx xxx *last 365 days **last 30 days

Table 55: Per 1000 distribution of same day trips by leading purpo se fo r each month

all-India ural+urban

all 55 28 403 67 10 157 209 72 0 1000 16921369 98580

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category of expenditure leading p urpose

business ho lid aying, leisure and recreation

social religio us & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

155943 2317657 248746 5095511 615338 141871 16938 57002 82523 8731529

1233049 1235114 923797 3640723 854867 6541874 115032 2366789 20219 16931463

3179906 2320280 20271393 10204889 924800 10893506 212839 4429793 25066 52462471

- railways 560853 650094 6386292 2681722 390351 1055091 53747 1708024 821 13486994- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 1939442 2094166 47700840 11845212 744059 6237748 367007 2482364 20545 73431383- water 83328 88076 95441 19440 1612 35903 2105 2954 0 328861- air 351421 58956 205278 96608 42913 58862 942 135950 0 950931-transport equip ment rental 529164 868063 11268041 5975717 131662 4796274 48156 1431819 6511 25055406- travel agency services

/tour operators 5973 6744 25751 43226 3150 13800 327 6091 496 105558- others and supporting

services 93003 53014 574995 278040 17793 122435 10002 31362 845 1181488

- clothing & garments 1188967 2550808 49185306 4976021 392856 959636 2963217 1401173 10607 63628591- processed food 598506 741921 19227882 3074394 328979 2316118 164965 1103208 2571 27558544-tobacco products 163857 82377 1773825 255393 18069 189116 23386 133113 182 2639318-alcohol 139835 48561 1128676 126355 1717 13308 30357 66331 228 1555369-travel relatedconsumer goods 76866 117720 945024 380207 53348 95936 53018 71383 421 1793923-footwear 158524 255465 3609946 305672 53895 101108 256040 113822 648 4855119-toiletries 63187 101577 1226772 296897 40138 266579 63239 123224 291 2181905-gems and jewellery 47884 228190 24480249 356500 24620 160567 547828 261286 5171 26112294- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 478896 287110 670366 313806 442797 139691 215006 127362 1545 2676577- others 7134072 621972 22864828 3332698 396467 1239529 3939548 1267933 4850 40801897

- recreation religio us, cultural and sporting activities 78176 544873 2468970 4350015 36108 52509 6481 113104 4174 7654410

edical and health-related activities 425442 220595 11143475 1597830 90680 136418714 595054 25002833 12993 175507616

779155 399226 17094181 1765150 668689 1762295 89567 1225635 16596 23800493

19465449 15892560 243520073 61012026 6274907 173612471 9774800 43662555 217299 573432140estd. no. of o vernight trips(‘00) 163028 130861 5224979 612210 62992 508224 31679 228397 2205 6964576estd. no. of o vernight visito r-trips (‘00) 210933 272138 12034296 1396680 82007 1093566 44739 420461 3124 15557945estd. expend iture per overnight trip(in Rs.) 1193.99 1214.46 466.07 996.59 996.14 3416.06 3085.58 1911.70 985.48 820.75

expend iture perovernight visitor-trip (in

Rs.)922.83 583.99 202.36 436.84 765.17 1587.58 2184.85 1038.44 695.58 368.58

Table 56: Estimated total expenditure(in Rs.‘000) by categori s of expenditure for e ach leading purpose of overnight trips

all-India rural

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

recreation re ligious, cultural , sporting and health-re lated activities

-m

others

total

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category of expenditure leading purpose

business ho lid aying, leisure and recreation

social religio us & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

98696 24805140 208465 3071490 468406 332 57006 25598 0 28735134

4089764 6658233 2053666 5674667 832822 1991036 21546 1350563 1488 22673784

4100467 6680651 14512927 9042679 924186 2078013 65895 1404283 5885 38814987

- railways 1942013 5036488 25672872 7919911 1230351 905923 40735 1123415 1126 43872833- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 1969107 4466150 35064228 9655143 686381 1544158 77714 1285563 5593 54754037- water 48970 19154 60416 15772 5920 10529 225 10790 0 171776- air 4521855 2501069 4741220 977936 716689 742126 0 207309 0 14408204-transport equipment rental 641230 3548875 7626350 6441117 163519 1151490 20847 703973 2801 20300203- travel agency services /tour operators 4605 97999 97545 67228 5052 2558 24 15119 0 290128- others and supporting services 13956 148119 271627 162000 14090 21628 1089 62760 450 695719

- clothing & garments 6530994 3616425 31155562 3069048 357496 264789 936439 482848 0 46413601- processed food 418272 959910 9001770 1847510 159514 445648 27619 270486 180 13130910-tobacco products 51643 67490 558920 83500 8503 18830 1644 20437 0 810967-alco ho l 44163 108150 260781 23890 1253 2072 780 17566 0 458654-travel relatedconsumer goods 88888 267012 904511 462043 59012 68260 8306 22156 563 1880750-footwear 150050 288527 1676289 227247 27134 23882 36482 39124 674 2469407-toiletries 69628 139634 623599 187846 24189 56608 7720 16891 404 1126520-gems and jewellery 289358 594304 9603698 384352 14154 24194 525275 84782 0 11520117- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 137386 173515 624290 232237 300001 29213 11585 60844 0 1569071- others 4104735 2086271 9961151 2350498 217595 438382 418659 376974 1161 19955425

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 66672 979026 1520748 3957622 47415 8649 2055 13243 900 6596331

edical and health-related activities 120308 166366 3072669 214559 70723 47985506 4729 3566458 25674 55226992

321017 778938 11743766 1751694 191112 548099 18818 391042 1122 15745609

estd. no. of overnight trip s(‘00) 83156 121415 1729901 301320 32714 83907 4162 68911 263 2425746estd. no. of overnight visitor-trips (‘00) 104821 262655 4090154 827145 43953 172930 5620 108912 322 5616512estd. expenditure per overnight trip (in R s.) 3585.67 5286.63 988.67 1918.89 1994.74 6955.59 5491.08 1676.41 1828.04 1636.33expenditure perovernight visito r-trip (in

Rs.) 2845.21 2443.79 418.12 699.03 1484.66 3374.89 4066.17 1060.69 1491.34 715.07

Table 56: Estimate d total expe nditure (in R s.‘000) by categories of expe nditure for each leading purpose of ove rnight trips

all-India urban

package compone nt

non-package compone nt

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

re creation religious, cultural , sporting and health-related activities

-m

othe rs

total 29823778 64187444 171017071 57819988 6525517 58361926 2285190 11552223 48021 401621157

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category of expenditure lead ing purpose

business holidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

254639 27122797 457212 8167001 1083744 142203 73944 82600 82523 37466663

5322812 7893347 2977463 9315390 1687689 8532910 136578 3717352 21706 39605247

7280373 9000931 34784321 19247568 1848986 12971518 278734 5834076 30952 91277458

- railways 2502866 5686582 32059164 10601632 1620703 1961014 94481 2831438 1946 57359827- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 3908550 6560316 82765067 21500355 1430440 7781906 444721 3767927 26138 128185420- water 132298 107230 155857 35213 7531 46433 2331 13744 0 500637- air 4873276 2560025 4946498 1074545 759602 800988 942 343259 0 15359135-transport eq uipment rental 1170394 4416937 18894391 12416834 295181 5947764 69003 2135792 9312 45355608- travel agency services /tour operators 10578 104743 123295 110454 8202 16358 351 21210 496 395686- others and supporting services 106958 201133 846621 440039 31884 144064 11090 94122 1295 1877206

- clothing & garments 7719961 6167233 80340868 8045068 750351 1224426 3899655 1884021 10607 110042191- processed food 1016778 1701831 28229652 4921904 488494 2761766 192584 1373694 2751 40689454-tobacco products 215501 149867 2332745 338893 26571 207947 25030 153550 182 3450285-alco ho l 183998 156711 1389457 150245 2970 15380 31137 83897 228 2014023-travel relatedconsumer goods 165754 384732 1849536 842250 112360 164196 61324 93540 983 3674673-footwear 308574 543992 5286235 532918 81029 124990 292522 152945 1322 7324526-to iletries 132816 241212 1850371 484744 64327 323187 70959 140116 695 3308425-gems and jewellery 337242 822494 34083947 740852 38775 184761 1073103 346068 5171 37632411- books , journal, magazines , statio nery, etc. 616282 460625 1294656 546043 742797 168904 226590 188206 1545 4245648- others 11238807 2708243 32825979 5683196 614062 1677911 4358207 1644907 6011 60757323

- recreatio n religious, cultural and sporting activities 144848 1523899 3989717 8307637 83523 61159 8537 126347 5074 14250741

ed ical and health-related activities 545750 386961 14216144 1812389 161403 184404220 599783 28569290 38666 230734608

1100172 1178164 28837947 3516844 859801 2310394 108385 1616678 17718 39546102

estd. no. of overnight trips(‘00) 246184 252276 6954880 913530 95706 592131 35841 297308 2468 9390322estd. no. of overnight visitor-trips (‘00) 315754 534793 16124450 2223825 125960 1266496 50359 529373 3446 21174457estd. expenditure per overnight trip (in Rs.) 2002.13 3174.30 596.04 1300.80 1337.47 3917.62 3364.86 1857.16 1075.04 1038.36expenditure perovernight visito r-trip (in

Rs.) 1561.00 1497.40 257.09 534.36 1016.23 1831.62 2394.80 1043.02 769.94 460.49

Table 56: Estimated total expenditure(in Rs.‘000) by categories o f expenditure for each leading purpose of overnight trips

all-India rural+urban

package compone nt

non-package compone nt

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

re creation religious, cultural , sporting and health-related activities

-m

othe rs

total 49289227 80080004 414537145 118832013 12800424 231974397 12059990 55214778 265320 975053297

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category of expend iture

leading purpose

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

9.57 177.11 0.48 83.23 97.68 2.79 5.35 2.50 374.32 12.57

75.63 94.38 1.77 59.47 135.71 128.72 36.31 103.63 91.71 24.16195.05 177.31 38.80 166.69 146.81 214.34 67.19 193.95 113.70 75.19

- railways 34.40 49.68 12.22 43.80 61.97 20.76 16.97 74.78 3.72 19.32- road(excl. transport eq uipment rental) 118.96 160.03 91.29 193.48 118.12 122.74 115.85 108.69 93.19 105.54- water 5.11 6.73 0.18 0.32 0.26 0.71 0.66 0.13 0.00 0.47- air 21.56 4.51 0.39 1.58 6.81 1.16 0.30 5.95 0.00 1.35-transport equipment rental 32.46 66.33 21.57 97.61 20.90 94.37 15.20 62.69 29.53 36.01- travel agency

services /to ur operators 0.37 0.52 0.05 0.71 0.50 0.27 0.10 0.27 2.25 0.15- others and

supporting services 5.70 4.05 1.10 4.54 2.82 2.41 3.16 1.37 3.83 1.70

- clothing & garments 72.93 194.92 94.13 81.28 62.37 18.88 935.40 61.35 48.11 91.37- processed food 36.71 56.70 36.80 50.22 52.23 45.57 52.07 48.30 11.66 39.57-tobacco products 10.05 6.29 3.39 4.17 2.87 3.72 7.38 5.83 0.82 3.79-alcohol 8.58 3.71 2.16 2.06 0.27 0.26 9.58 2.90 1.03 2.23-travel relatedconsumer goods 4.71 9.00 1.81 6.21 8.47 1.89 16.74 3.13 1.91 2.58-footwear 9.72 19.52 6.91 4.99 8.56 1.99 80.82 4.98 2.94 6.97-toiletries 3.88 7.76 2.35 4.85 6.37 5.25 19.96 5.40 1.32 3.13-gems and jew ellery 2.94 17.44 46.85 5.82 3.91 3.16 172.93 11.44 23.45 37.51- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 29.38 21.94 1.28 5.13 70.29 2.75 67.87 5.58 7.01 3.82- others 437.60 47.53 43.76 54.44 62.94 24.39 1243.60 55.51 22.00 58.48

- recreation religio us, cultural and sporting activities 4.80 41.64 4.73 71.05 5.73 1.03 2.05 4.95 18.93 11.09

edical and health- related activities 26.10 16.86 21.33 26.10 14.40 2684.22 187.84 1094.71 58.93 249.63

47.79 30.51 32.72 28.83 106.15 34.68 28.27 53.66 75.28 34.12

estd. no. of overnight trips(‘00) 163028 130861 5224979 612210 62992 508224 31679 228397 2205 6964576estd. no. of overnight visitor-trips (‘00) 210933 272138 12034296 1396680 82007 1093566 44739 420461 3124 15557945

Table 57: Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by c egories of expenditure fo r each leading purpose

all-India rural

package compone nt

non-package compone nt

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

re creation re ligious, cultural , sporting and health-re lated activities

-m

others

total 1193.99 1214.46 466.07 996.59 996.14 3416.06 3085.61 1911.69 985.65 820.75

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A- 230

category of expenditure

lead ing p urpose

business holidaying, leisure and recreatio n

social religio us & pilgrimage

education & training

health & med ical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

11.87 2043.01 1.21 101.93 143.18 0.04 136.98 3.71 0.00 114.67

491.82 548.39 11.87 188.33 254.58 237.29 51.77 195.99 56.63 91.63

493.11 550.23 83.89 300.10 282.51 247.66 158.34 203.78 224.04 158.50

- railways 233.54 414.82 148.41 262.84 376.10 107.97 97.88 163.03 42.85 180.34- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 236.80 367.84 202.69 320.43 209.82 184.03 186.74 186.56 212.91 225.42- water 5.89 1.58 0.35 0.52 1.81 1.25 0.54 1.57 0.00 0.70- air 543.78 205.99 27.41 32.46 219.08 88.45 0.00 30.08 0.00 58.85-transport equipment rental 77.11 292.29 44.09 213.76 49.99 137.23 50.09 102.16 106.62 82.90- travel agency

services /to ur operators 0.55 8.07 0.56 2.23 1.54 0.30 0.06 2.19 0.00 1.18- others and

supporting services 1.68 12.20 1.57 5.38 4.31 2.58 2.62 9.11 17.14 2.83

- clothing & garments 785.39 297.86 180.10 101.85 109.28 31.56 2250.17 70.07 0.00 191.54- processed food 50.30 79.06 52.04 61.31 48.76 53.11 66.37 39.25 6.86 54.10-tobacco products 6.21 5.56 3.23 2.77 2.60 2.24 3.95 2.97 0.00 3.34-alcohol 5.31 8.91 1.51 0.79 0.38 0.25 1.87 2.55 0.00 1.88-travel relatedconsumer goods 10.69 21.99 5.23 15.33 18.04 8.14 19.96 3.22 21.42 7.71-footwear 18.04 23.76 9.69 7.54 8.29 2.85 87.66 5.68 25.64 10.17-toiletries 8.37 11.50 3.60 6.23 7.39 6.75 18.55 2.45 15.39 4.62-gems and jew ellery 34.80 48.95 55.52 12.76 4.33 2.88 1262.18 12.30 0.00 47.73- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 16.52 14.29 3.61 7.71 91.71 3.48 27.84 8.83 0.00 6.43- others 493.62 171.83 57.58 78.01 66.52 52.25 1006.00 54.70 44.19 82.00

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 8.02 80.64 8.79 131.34 14.49 1.03 4.94 1.92 34.28 27.03

edical and health-related activities 14.47 13.70 17.76 7.12 21.62 5718.93 11.36 517.55 977.35 217.76

38.60 64.16 67.89 58.13 58.42 65.32 45.22 56.75 42.73 64.95

estd. no. of overnight trips(‘00) 83156 121415 1729901 301320 32714 83907 4162 68911 263 2425746estd. no. of overnight visitor-trips (‘00) 104821 262655 4090154 827145 43953 172930 5620 108912 322 5616512

Table 57: Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by categories of expenditure fo r each leading purpose

all-India urban

package compone nt

non-package compone nt

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

re creation re ligious, cultural , sporting and health-re lated activities

-m

others

total 3585.67 5286.63 988.67 1918.89 1994.74 6955.59 5491.08 1676.41 1828.04 1636.33

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A- 231

category of expend iture

leading purpose

business holidaying, leisure and recreation

social religious & pilgrimage

education & training

health & medical

shopping other n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)

10.34 1075.12 0.66 89.40 113.24 2.40 20.63 2.78 334.37 39.90

216.21 312.89 4.28 101.97 176.34 144.11 38.11 125.03 87.95 42.18295.73 356.79 50.01 210.69 193.19 219.07 77.77 196.23 125.41 97.20

- railways 101.67 225.41 46.10 116.05 169.34 33.12 26.36 95.24 7.89 61.08- road(excl. transport equip ment rental) 158.77 260.05 119.00 235.35 149.46 131.42 124.08 126.73 105.91 136.51- water 5.37 4.25 0.22 0.39 0.79 0.78 0.65 0.46 0.00 0.53- air 197.95 101.48 7.11 11.76 79.37 13.53 0.26 11.55 0.00 16.36-transport equip ment rental 47.54 175.08 27.17 135.92 30.84 100.45 19.25 71.84 37.73 48.30- travel agency

services /tour operators 0.43 4.15 0.18 1.21 0.86 0.28 0.10 0.71 2.01 0.42- others and

supporting services 4.34 7.97 1.22 4.82 3.33 2.43 3.09 3.17 5.25 2.00

- clothing & garments 313.59 244.46 115.52 88.07 78.40 20.68 1088.04 63.37 42.98 117.19- processed food 41.30 67.46 40.59 53.88 51.04 46.64 53.73 46.20 11.15 43.33-tobacco products 8.75 5.94 3.35 3.71 2.78 3.51 6.98 5.16 0.74 3.67-alcohol 7.47 6.21 2.00 1.64 0.31 0.26 8.69 2.82 0.92 2.14-travel relatedconsumer goods 6.73 15.25 2.66 9.22 11.74 2.77 17.11 3.15 3.98 3.91-footwear 12.53 21.56 7.60 5.83 8.47 2.11 81.62 5.14 5.36 7.80-to iletries 5.39 9.56 2.66 5.31 6.72 5.46 19.80 4.71 2.82 3.52-gems and jewellery 13.70 32.60 49.01 8.11 4.05 3.12 299.41 11.64 20.95 40.08- books , journal, magazines , statio nery, etc. 25.03 18.26 1.86 5.98 77.61 2.85 63.22 6.33 6.26 4.52- others 456.52 107.35 47.20 62.21 64.16 28.34 1215.98 55.33 24.35 64.70

- recreation religio us, cultural and sporting activities 5.88 60.41 5.74 90.94 8.73 1.03 2.38 4.25 20.56 15.18

ed ical and health-related activities 22.17 15.34 20.44 19.84 16.86 3114.25 167.35 960.93 156.67 245.72

44.69 46.70 41.46 38.50 89.84 39.02 30.24 54.38 71.79 42.11

estd. no. of o vernight trip s(‘00) 249231 261039 6944486 923709 96951 581371 35046 296078 2409 9390321estd. no. of o vernight visito r-trip s (‘00) 315754 534793 16124450 2223825 125960 1266496 50359 529373 3446 21174457

Table 57: Average expenditure(in Rs.) per o vernight trip by catego ries of expe diture for each leading purpose

all-India rural+urban

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

recreation religious, cultural , sporting and health-re lated activities

-m

others

total 2002.13 3174.30 596.04 1300.80 1337.47 3917.62 3364.86 1857.16 1075.04 1038.36

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A- 232

category of expenditure quintile class of MPCE(%)

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)

41539 12632 56262 187173 411134 0 708739

27124 22818 34918 101309 148670 0 334838

2496572 3011949 3664072 4688246 7996835 0 21857675

- railways 75134 109629 146289 222253 331072 0 884377- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 4168645 5735599 7176007 10452578 20551483 0 48084313- water 7631 22524 11905 20361 33491 0 95912- air 374 0 675 0 13713 0 14762-transport equipment rental 866795 1339199 2112716 2778220 8275810 0 15372740

- travel agency services /tour operators 4938 2375 2072 1894 19416 0 30694- others and supporting services 117949 101651 109044 124407 288871 0 741922

- clothing & garments 7332776 9530646 11790641 22085191 37978295 0 88717550

- processed food 4024799 5967163 5872696 7727388 11845996 0 35438042

-tobacco products 580618 798813 771626 994437 958122 0 4103615-alcohol 229045 239289 202369 258767 584863 0 1514333-travel related consumer goods 178844 146595 461984 323511 1285495 0 2396430-footwear 1214707 1427758 1994985 3099519 5689421 0 13426391

-toiletries 851256 1421807 1550359 2170567 3125522 0 9119511-gems and jewellery 588080 653191 792861 1480376 21296124 0 24810632- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 854244 904753 1178856 1332319 2414359 0 6684532- others 7382181 11667742 13340843 14797989 54409093 0 101597848

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 393687 491613 668954 803103 2575861 0 4933219

edical and health-related activities 1168011 1731862 2283457 3482974 9994950 0 18661255

7473022 9619917 12277968 18503413 40191301 0 88065622

estd. no. of same day trips(‘00) 1911276 2144627 2291341 2825628 4177985 0 13350857

estd. no. of same day visitor-trips (‘00) 4081158 4384124 4567822 5095780 6289362 0 24418247

estd. expenditure per same day trip (in Rs.) 210.58 254.17 288.40 333.86 534.47 0 358.39

expenditure per same day visitor-trip (in Rs.) 98.62 124.34 144.67 185.13 355.05 0 195.95

Table 58: Estimated total expenditure(in Rs. ‘000) by categories o f expenditure for each quintile class o f MPCE(%) of same-day trips

all-India rural

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

sho pping

recreatio n religio us, cultural and sporting activities

-m

o thers

total 40248033 54510833 66081430 94337024 223300913 0 478478237

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A- 233

category of expenditure quintile class of MPCE(%)

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)

25290 14281 69054 107827 1037033 0 1253485

2438 29230 64536 54789 499594 0 650587839216 1235056 1849694 2361512 4685712 0 10971190

- railways 175489 234065 357947 564629 832944 0 2165073- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 2229817 3616602 4849822 6251402 11919866 0 28867509- water 10636 2837 4228 4356 13328 0 35385- air 0 0 9 43250 508486 0 551745-transport equipment rental 450061 878643 1246513 1768527 4328913 0 8672658- travel agency services /tour operators 2617 3312 2443 1655 28360 0 38387- others and supporting services 37494 52997 41065 30902 159186 0 321645

- clothing & garments 1913673 2576508 4005458 5068969 12509244 0 26073852- processed food 1021763 1296594 1392333 2093761 3408963 0 9213414-tobacco products 143480 115042 104035 148674 108502 0 619733-alcohol 23952 25654 50054 41473 28825 0 169958-travel related consumer goods 100163 108522 59733 168706 147003 0 584125-footwear 200456 351045 489914 661341 1000874 0 2703631-toiletries 183586 156179 115024 290621 614373 0 1359783-gems and jewellery 150058 1541136 381560 1012684 2513560 0 5598999- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 65884 212156 174265 547790 1047411 0 2047507- others 1399713 1556581 2161945 3379198 5801903 0 14299341

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 306594 388955 537644 700763 2029526 0 3963483

edical and health-related activities 315232 662273 1237047 805675 1938763 0 4958991

1719287 2748804 3960739 4070683 6946452 0 19445964

estd. no. of same day trips(‘00) 462369 637769 735318 761373 973682 0 3570512estd. no. of same day visitor-trips (‘00) 1192106 1386488 1457632 1450596 1661159 0 7147982estd. expenditure per same day trip(in Rs.) 251.82 274.79 308.06 391.82 612.13 0 395.61expenditure per same day visitor-trip (in Rs.) 97.67 126.40 155.40 205.65 358.80 0 197.61

Table 58: Estimated total expenditure(in Rs. ‘000) by categories o f expenditure for each quintile class o f MPCE(%) of same-day trips

all-India urban

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

sho pping

recreation religious, cultural and spo rting activities

-m

o thers

total 11643188 17525565 22652089 29831845 59601724 0 141254408

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A- 234

Category of expenditure quintile class of MPCE(%)

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)

0.22 0.06 0.25 0.66 0.98 0.00 0.53

0.14 0.11 0.15 0.36 0.36 0.00 0.25

13.06 14.04 15.99 16.59 19.14 0.00 16.37

- railways 0.39 0.51 0.64 0.79 0.79 0.00 0.66- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 21.81 26.74 31.32 36.99 49.19 0.00 36.02- water 0.04 0.11 0.05 0.07 0.08 0.00 0.07- air 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.03 0.00 0.01-transport equipment rental 4.54 6.24 9.22 9.83 19.81 0.00 11.51- travel agency services /tour operators 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.05 0.00 0.02- others and supporting services 0.62 0.47 0.48 0.44 0.69 0.00 0.56

- clothing & garments 38.37 44.44 51.46 78.16 90.90 0.00 66.45- processed food 21.06 27.82 25.63 27.35 28.35 0.00 26.54-tobacco products 3.04 3.72 3.37 3.52 2.29 0.00 3.07-alcohol 1.20 1.12 0.88 0.92 1.40 0.00 1.13-travel relatedconsumer goods 0.94 0.68 2.02 1.14 3.08 0.00 1.79-footwear 6.36 6.66 8.71 10.97 13.62 0.00 10.06-toiletries 4.45 6.63 6.77 7.68 7.48 0.00 6.83-gems and jewellery 3.08 3.05 3.46 5.24 50.97 0.00 18.58- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 4.47 4.22 5.14 4.72 5.78 0.00 5.01

- others 38.62 54.40 58.22 52.37 130.23 0.00 76.10

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 2.06 2.29 2.92 2.84 6.17 0.00 3.70

edical and health-related activities 6.11 8.08 9.97 12.33 23.92 0.00 13.98

39.10 44.86 53.58 65.48 96.20 0.00 65.96

estd. no. of same day trips(‘00) 1911276 2144627 2291341 2825628 4177985 0 13350857

estd. no. of same day visitor-trips (‘00) 4081158 4384124 4567822 5095780 6289362 0 24418247

Table 59: Average expenditure (in Rs.) per same-day trip by catego ries of expenditure fo r each quintil class of MPCE (%)all-India rural

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

sho pping

recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities

-m

o thers

total 210.58 254.17 288.40 333.86 534.47 0.00 358.39

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A- 235

Category of expenditure quintile class of MPCE(%)

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)

0.55 0.22 0.94 1.42 10.65 0.00 3.51

0.05 0.46 0.88 0.72 5.13 0.00 1.82

18.15 19.37 25.16 31.02 48.12 0.00 30.73

- railways 3.80 3.67 4.87 7.42 8.55 0.00 6.06

- road(excl. transport equipment rental) 48.23 56.71 65.96 82.11 122.42 0.00 80.85

- water 0.23 0.04 0.06 0.06 0.14 0.00 0.10

- air 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.57 5.22 0.00 1.55

-transport equipment rental 9.73 13.78 16.95 23.23 44.46 0.00 24.29

- travel agency services /tour operators 0.06 0.05 0.03 0.02 0.29 0.00 0.11

- others and supporting services 0.81 0.83 0.56 0.41 1.63 0.00 0.90

- clothing & garments 41.39 40.40 54.47 66.58 128.47 0.00 73.03

- processed food 22.10 20.33 18.94 27.50 35.01 0.00 25.80

-tobacco products 3.10 1.80 1.41 1.95 1.11 0.00 1.74

-alcohol 0.52 0.40 0.68 0.54 0.30 0.00 0.48

-travel related consumer goods 2.17 1.70 0.81 2.22 1.51 0.00 1.64

-footwear 4.34 5.50 6.66 8.69 10.28 0.00 7.57

-toiletries 3.97 2.45 1.56 3.82 6.31 0.00 3.81

-gems and jewellery 3.25 24.16 5.19 13.30 25.81 0.00 15.68

- books , journal, magazines , stationery, etc. 1.42 3.33 2.37 7.19 10.76 0.00 5.73

- others 30.27 24.41 29.40 44.38 59.59 0.00 40.05

- recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities 6.63 6.10 7.31 9.20 20.84 0.00 11.10

edical and health-related activities 6.82 10.38 16.82 10.58 19.91 0.00 13.89

37.18 43.10 53.86 53.47 71.34 0.00 54.46

estd. no. of same day trips(‘00) 462369 637769 735318 761373 973682 0 3570512

estd. no. of same day visitor-trips (‘00) 1192106 1386488 1457632 1450596 1661159 0 7147982

Table 59: Average expenditure (in Rs.) per same-day trip by catego ries of expenditure for each quintile class of MPCE (%)

all-India urban

package component

non-package component

accommodation

food and drink

transport

shopping

recreation religious, cultural and sporting activities

-m

others

total 251.82 274.79 308.06 391.82 612.13 0.00 395.61

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A- 236

leading purposequintile class of MPCE

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all estd no. of

overnight trip (’00)

sample no. of overnight trip **

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

business 759.38 541.48 2519.66 777.11 1184.73 0 1193.99 163028 2038

holidaying, leisure and recreation 291.62 440.92 398.38 497.88 2405.94 0 1214.46 130861 1218

social 246.95 498.5 325.45 395.15 675.62 0 466.07 5224979 40675

religious & pilgrimage 538.91 545.37 628.42 776.77 1529.93 0 996.59 612210 4730

education & training 468.62 443.27 765.12 845.92 1353.52 0 996.14 62992 753

health & medical 1769.61 1891.53 1589.26 2034.09 5508.06 0 3416.06 508224 4764

shopping 1092.8 907.1 1534.29 2014.78 6980.1 0 3085.61 31679 588

other 512.58 462.86 1112.99 2085.61 2822.97 0 1911.69 228397 2262

n.r 700 183.05 1011.17 1004.96 2577.26 0 985.65 2205 51

estimated no. of households with at least one overnight trip('00)

237942 270259 280454 310870 364373 0 1463898 XXX XXX

estimated no. of overnight trip('00) 876290 1069150 1209250 1460391 2349494 0 6964576 XXX XXX

sample no. of households with at least one overnight trip

12343 14648 16639 20488 27802 0 91920 XXX XXX

sample no. of overnight trip 6703 8205 9803 12515 19853 0 57079 XXX XXX

* 365 days **30 days

Table 60 : Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by quintile class of MPCE and leading purpose of trip

all-India rural

all 370.07 589.73 509.86 605.13 1393.17 0 820.75 6964576 57079

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A- 237

leading purposequintile class of MPCE

00-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 n.r. all estd no. of

overnight trip (’00)

sample no. of overnight trip **

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

business 879.96 4399.51 984.53 4265.16 4187.31 0 3585.67 83156 1656

holidaying, leisure and recreation 210.62 1408.04 1232.69 2085.06 8966.73 0 5286.63 121415 1578

social 436.44 591 686.98 832.44 1572.48 0 988.67 1729901 22943

religious & pilgrimage 812.29 785.71 1420.45 1829.45 3291.9 0 1918.89 301320 3683

education & training 952.14 1947.38 838.78 1476.24 2522.28 0 1994.74 32714 577

health & medical 1761.62 3140.22 4147.88 8773.45 11578.14 0 6955.59 83907 1389

shopping 3177.61 2194.86 7047.46 5353.78 6309.82 0 5491.08 4162 105

other 570.17 769.85 1186.24 836.68 3208.06 0 1676.41 68911 1076

n.r 545.93 2749.68 5674.6 5300 0 0 1828.04 263 16

estimated no. of households with at least one overnight trip('00)

92547 102247 114054 124846 163720 0 597415 XXX XXX

estimated no. of overnight trip('00) 287138 347847 406137 512339 872285 0 2425746 XXX XXX

sample no. of households with at least one overnight trip

6323 8425 10338 12504 14874 0 52464 XXX XXX

sample no. of overnight trip 3134 4560 6046 8193 11090 0 33023 XXX XXX

* 365 days **30 days

Table 60 : Average expenditure(in Rs.) per overnight trip by quintile class of MPCE and leading purpose of trip

all-India urban

all 556.12 843.08 963.19 1430.78 2728.3 0 1636.33 2425746 33023

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Appendix B

Sample Design and

Estimation Procedure

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Sample Design and Estimation Procedure 1. Introduction 1.1 The National Sample Survey (NSS), set up by the Government of India in 1950 to collect socio-economic data employing scientific sampling methods, conducted its sixty-fifth round from 1st July 2008 to 30th June 2009. 2. Outline of Survey Programme

2.1 Subject coverage: The subjects covered in the 65th round (July 2008 – June 2009) of NSS were ‘Domestic Tourism’, ‘Housing Condition’ and ‘Urban Slums’.

2.2 Geographical coverage: The survey covered the whole of the Indian Union except (i) interior villages of Nagaland situated beyond five kilometres of the bus route and (ii) villages in Andaman and Nicobar Islands which remained inaccessible throughout the year. For Leh (Ladakh) and Kargil districts of Jammu & Kashmir there were no separate sample first-stage units (FSUs) for central sample. For these two districts, the State sample was treated as Central sample. 2.3 Period of survey and work programme: The period of survey was of one year duration starting on 1st July 2008 and ending on 30th June 2009. The survey period of this round was divided into four sub-rounds of three months’ duration each as follows:

sub-round 1 : July - September 2008 sub-round 2 : October - December 2008 sub-round 3 : January - March 2009 sub-round 4 : April - June 2009

2.3.1 In each of these four sub-rounds, equal number of sample villages/ blocks (FSUs) were allotted for survey with a view to ensuring uniform spread of sample FSUs over the entire survey period. Attempt was made to survey each of the FSUs during the sub-round to which it was allotted. Because of the arduous field conditions, this restriction was not strictly enforced in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep and rural areas of Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland. 2.4 Schedules of enquiry: During this round, the following schedules of enquiry were canvassed:

Schedule 0.0 : list of households Schedule 21.1 : domestic tourism Schedule 1.2 : housing condition Schedule 0.21 : particulars of slum

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2.5 Participation of States: In this round all the States and Union Territories except Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Chandigarh, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep participated. The following was the ratio of State sample size (number of first stage units) to the Central sample size for the participating States/ UTs.

Nagaland (U) : triple J & K , Manipur & Delhi : double Maharashtra (U) : one and half Gujarat : less than equal Remaining States/ UTs : equal

3. Sample Design

3.1 Outline of sample design: A stratified multi-stage design was adopted for the 65th round survey. The first stage units (FSU) were the 2001 Census villages (panchayat wards in case of Kerala) in the rural sector and Urban Frame Survey (UFS) blocks in the urban sector. For towns with no UFS frame available (applicable to Leh and Kargil towns of J & K), each town was treated as an FSU. The ultimate stage units (USU) were households in both the sectors. In case of large FSUs, one intermediate stage of sampling was the selection of two hamlet-groups/ sub-blocks from each FSU.

3.2 Sampling frame for first-stage units: For the rural sector, the list of 2001 Census villages (panchayat wards for Kerala) constituted the sampling frame. For the urban sector, the list of latest available Urban Frame Survey (UFS) blocks was considered as the sampling frame. However, for Leh and Kargil towns of J & K, UFS frame was not available. Accordingly, Census 2001 served as the frame for these two towns (to be referred to as non-UFS towns).

3.3 First-stage stratification

3.3.1 Rural sector: All villages of a district formed a separate stratum.

3.3.2 Urban sector: In the urban sector, strata were formed within each NSS region on the basis of size class of towns as per Census 2001 town population. This departure was made in the stratification principle in order to facilitate generation of town-class wise estimates to satisfy the requirements of the user ministries. The stratum numbers and their composition (within each NSS region) are given below.

Stratum Composition (within NSS region) 1 All towns with population 50,000 2 All towns with population 50,000 – 99,999 3 All towns with population 1,00,000 – 4,99,999 4 All towns with population 5,00,000 – 9,99,999 5, 6, …. Each million-plus city

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3.3.3 The non-UFS towns of Leh and Kargil of J & K within the NSS region (region number ‘014’) were grouped together to form a separate urban stratum. 3.4 Sub-stratification: There was no sub-stratification in the rural sector and for strata corresponding to non-UFS towns. However, for all other urban strata, each stratum was divided into two sub-strata as follows:

sub-stratum 1: all UFS blocks having area type ‘slum area’ sub-stratum 2: remaining UFS blocks

3.5 Total sample size (FSUs): 12952 FSUs were allotted for the Central sample and 13996 FSUs for State sample at all-India level. 3.6 Allocation of total sample to States and UTs: The total number of sample FSUs was allocated to the States and UTs in proportion to population as per Census 2001 subject to a minimum sample allocation to each State/UT, and subject to resource availability in terms of number of field investigators. 3.7 Allocation of State/UT level sample to rural and urban sectors: The State/UT level sample was allocated between the two sectors in proportion to population as per Census 2001 with 1.5 weightage to urban sector subject to the restriction that urban sample size for bigger States like Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, etc. should not exceed the rural sample size. At least 4 FSUs were allocated to each State/UT separately for rural and urban areas. Further, the State level allocations for both rural and urban sector were adjusted marginally in a few cases to ensure that each stratum got a minimum allocation of 4 FSUs. 3.8 Allocation to strata/ sub-strata: Within each sector of a State/UT, the sample size was allocated to the different strata in proportion to the stratum population as per Census 2001. Allocations at stratum level were adjusted to multiples of 4 with a minimum sample size of 4. Stratum-level sample size in the urban sector pertaining to strata belonging to UFS towns was further allocated to the 2 sub-strata in proportion to the number of UFS blocks in them with double weightage to sub-stratum 1, subject to a minimum allocation of 4 to each of the two sub-strata. 3.9 Selection of FSUs: Villages were arranged as per Census ordering and FSUs were selected by Circular Systematic Sampling with probability proportional to population from all rural strata. For urban strata × sub-strata (wherever applicable), the towns within the stratum were arranged in ascending order of population; then FSUs were selected by Circular Systematic Sampling with equal probability for UFS towns. Within each stratum/ sub-stratum, a multiple of 4 FSUs was selected. The sample was drawn in the form of two independent sub-samples and an equal numbers of sample FSUs was allocated to the four sub-rounds.

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Since UFS frames were not available for Leh and Kargil towns of Jammu and Kashmir, a somewhat different approach was adopted for the survey in these two towns. Each of these two towns was treated as an FSU (instead of UFS blocks being considered as the FSUs for UFS towns). Both these towns were selected and repeated in each of the sub-rounds 1 to 4 of the sample list. 3.10 Selection of hamlet-groups/ sub-blocks 3.10.1 Large sample FSUs with approximate present population of 1200 or more were divided into a suitable number (say, D) of ‘hamlet-groups’ in the rural sector and ‘sub-blocks’ in the urban sector, by more or less equally dividing the present population of the FSU, as shown below.

approximate present population of the sample FSU

no. of hg’s/sb’s formed

less than 1200 (no hg’s/sb’s formed) 1 1200 to 1799 3 1800 to 2399 4 2400 to 2999 5 3000 to 3599 6 …………..and so on

3.10.2 For rural areas of Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim, hilly districts of Uttaranchal, Poonch, Rajouri, Udhampur, Doda, Leh (Ladakh) and Kargil districts of Jammu and Kashmir and Idukki district of Kerala, the number of hamlet-groups to be formed was determined as follows:

approximate present population of the sample village

no. of hg’s formed

less than 600 (no hg’s) 1 600 to 899 3 900 to 1199 4 1200 to 1499 5 .………..and so on

3.10.3 Wherever hamlet-groups/ sub-blocks were formed, two were selected from among them in the following manner – the hg/sb with the highest percentage share of population was always selected; one more hg/sb was selected from the remaining hg’s/sb’s by SRS. Listing and selection of the households was done independently in the two selected hamlet-groups/ sub-blocks. 3.10.4 Procedure for Leh and Kargil towns: Sub-blocks were formed in the usual way treating the entire town as one FSU. For the selection of two sub-blocks in any given town (FSU) of Leh or Kargil during sub-round 1, the sub-block having the highest percentage share in total present population of the FSU/town was selected with probability 1 and another one was selected randomly.

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It was possible that the sub-block with the highest population and hence selected with probability 1 in a particular sub-round might not have the highest population in subsequent sub-rounds. So a different sub-block might be selected with probability 1 in a subsequent sub-round. Again, the second sub-block to be surveyed was, in subsequent sub-rounds, selected afresh with the help of random number tables. If the randomly selected sub-block happened to coincide with any of the selected sub-blocks of the previous sub-round(s), it was rejected and a fresh sub-block was again selected. 3.11 Second-stage stratification

3.11.1 Two cut-off points ‘A’ and ‘B’ (in Rs.), determined from NSS 61st round data for each NSS region for urban areas in such a way that the top 30% of the population had MPCE equal to or more than ‘B’ and the bottom 30% of the population had MPCE equal to or less than A, were used for second-stage stratification in the urban sector. 3.11.2 For Schedule 21.1, all the households listed in the selected FSU/ hamlet-group/ sub-block were stratified into five second-stage strata (SSS) as shown below.

rural

SSS 1 households having pucca dwelling structure and having at least one member, who performed at least one overnight trip during last 30 days

SSS 2 households not having pucca dwelling structure and having at least one member, who performed at least one overnight trip during last 30 days

SSS 3 remaining households having pucca dwelling structure and having at least one member who performed at least one same-day trip during last 30 days

SSS 4 remaining households not having pucca dwelling structure and having at least one member who performed at least one same-day trip during last 30 days

SSS5 other households

urban

SSS 1 households with MPCE B and having at least one member, who performed at least one overnight trip during last 30 days

SSS 2 households with MPCE B and having at least one member who performed at least one overnight trip during last 30 days

SSS 3 remaining households with MPCE B and having at least one member who performed at least one same-day trip during last 30 days

SSS 4 remaining households with MPCE B and having at least one member who performed at least one same-day trip during last 30 days

SSS 5: other households

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3.12 Allocation of households to different second-stage strata

3.12.1 Numbers of households allotted for survey to different SSS’s for Schedule 21.1 were as follows:

SSS

number of sample households allotted for survey

FSU’s without hg/sb formation

FSU’s with hg/sb formation (for each hg/sb)

SSS 1 4 2

SSS 2 2 1

SSS 3 2 1

SSS 4 2 1

SSS 5 2 1

3.13 Selection of households

3.13.1 From each SSS the sample households were selected by SRSWOR. 4. Estimation Procedure 4.1 Notations s = subscript for s-th stratum t = subscript for t-th sub-stratum (only for UFS towns of urban sector) m = subscript for sub-sample (m =1, 2) i = subscript for i-th FSU [village (panchayat ward)/ block/ non-UFS town] d = subscript for a hamlet-group/ sub-block (d = 1, 2) j = subscript for j-th second stage stratum in an FSU/ hg/sb, j = 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 for Sch. 21.1 k = subscript for k-th sample household under a particular second stage stratum within an FSU/ hg/sb D = total number of hg’s/ sb’s formed in the sample FSU D* = 0 if D = 1 = (D – 1) for FSUs with D > 1 N = total number of FSUs in any urban sub-stratum Z = total size of a rural stratum (= sum of sizes for all the FSUs of a stratum) z = size of sample village used for selection. n = number of sample FSUs surveyed including zero cases but excluding casualty for a particular

sub-sample and stratum/sub-stratum. H = total number of households listed in a second-stage stratum of an FSU / hamlet-group or sub-

block of sample FSU

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h = number of households surveyed in a second-stage stratum of an FSU / hamlet-group or sub-block of sample FSU x, y = observed value of characteristics x, y under estimation

X , Y = estimate of population total X, Y for the characteristics x, y In terms of the above symbols, ystmidjk = observed value of the characteristic y for the k-th household in the j-th second stage stratum of the d-th hg/ sb (d = 1, 2) of the i-th FSU belonging to the m-th sub-sample for the t-th sub-stratum of s-th stratum. However, for ease of understanding, a few symbols have been suppressed in following paragraphs where they are obvious. 4.2 Formulae for Estimation of Aggregates for a particular sub-sample and stratum (for

rural/non-UFS towns of urban i.e. Leh and Kargil) / sub-stratum (for UFS towns of urban) for Schedule 21.1:

4.2.1 Rural: (i) For j-th second stage stratum of a stratum:

j

i

h

kjki

ji

ji

i

h

kjki

ji

ji

ij

j

ny

h

HDy

h

H

zn

ZY

jiji

1 12

2

2*

11

1

1211ˆ

(ii) For all second-stage strata combined:

jjYY ˆˆ

4.2.2 Urban:

(i) For j-th second stage stratum of a sub-stratum:

j

i

h

kjki

ji

ji

i

h

kjki

ji

ji

j

j

ny

h

HDy

h

H

n

NY

jiji

1 12

2

2*

11

1

121

ˆ

(ii) For all second-stage strata combined:

jjYY ˆˆ

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(iii) Estimate for a stratum ( sY ) will be obtained by adding sub-stratum level estimates

( stY ). Note: N = 2 in the above formula in the case of NSS region ‘014’ of J & K comprising two towns of Leh and Kargil. 4.3 Overall Estimate for Aggregates

Overall estimate for aggregates for a stratum ( sY ) based on two sub-samples is obtained as:

2

1

ˆ2

1ˆm

sms YY

4.4 Overall Estimate of Aggregates at State/UT/all-India level

4.4.1 The overall estimate Y

at the State/ UT/ all-India level is obtained by summing the stratum

estimates sY over all strata belonging to the State/ UT/ all-India. 4.5 Estimates of Ratios

4.5.1 Let Y

and X be the overall estimates of the aggregates Y and X for two characteristics y and x respectively at the State/ UT/ all-India level.

Then the combined ratio estimate )ˆ(R

of the ratio )(

X

YR

is obtained as

X

YR

ˆ

ˆˆ

4.6 Estimation of total number of trips/ visitor- trips /expenditure, etc.

4.6.1 Number of overnight/same-day trips during last 365 days

Total number of overnight trips and same day trips during last 365 days are to be estimated by using the relevant information recorded against items 7.2 and 8.2 of block 3.

4.6.2 Number of visitor-trips during last 365 days Number of visitor-trips by different classifications are obtained from column (11) and (13) of block 4.

4.6.3 Number of trips (overnight/same-day) classified by different categories for 365 days

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(a) Number of trips for 30 days by different categories such as purpose of the trip, type of trip, mode of travel, etc. is available from blocks 5.1 and 5.2. But this information is not available for 365 days by different categories. Therefore, to provide estimates for 365 days for these categories, the following assumption is made:

Assume that the joint distribution for the last 365 days for households/trips/visitor-trips, etc. classified by different categories is the same as the joint distribution obtained for last 30 days.

(b) Under the above assumption, for the tables where estimates for 365 days are given, the

distribution is obtained on the basis of information for last 30 days while marginal totals are based on information for last 365 days.

(c) These marginal totals are obtained at appropriate level (e.g., State × sector, State × sector × sex, etc.). The information necessary for deriving marginal totals is the (i) the estimated total number of trips/visitor-trips during last 365 days obtained from blocks 3/4 and (ii) marginal distribution of trips or visitor-trips during last 30 days obtained from blocks 5.1 or 5.2. The proportion of trips for a particular category (for 30 days) multiplied by the estimated total number of trips (for 365 days) is the estimated marginal total number of trips for that category for 365 days.

4.6.4 Expenditure incurred

(a) Information on total expenditure during last 30 days is recorded in block 6.1 for latest 3 overnight trips only and in block 6.2 for all same-day trips. However, this information is not available for 365 days in respect of overnight / same-day trips in blocks 6.1 and 6.2.

To obtain estimates of expenditure for all the overnight trips during last 30 days and also the expenditure during last 365 days for overnight/same-day trips, certain assumptions are made similar to 4.6.3 (a) above:

It is assumed that the average expenditure per trip based on last 3 overnight trips during last 30 days for any group of trips or visitor-trips remains invariant for the last 30 days. Also, average expenditure for last 30 days for (any group of trips × particular category of expenditure) is assumed to be same for the last 365 days.

(b) Under the above assumption,

(i) average expenditure per overnight trip for a group/category of trips is obtained as the ratio of total estimated expenditure incurred on the group/category of overnight trips to the estimated number of overnight trips on the basis of the latest three trips during last 30 days for which the expenditure has been reported in block 6.1.

(ii) average expenditure per same-day trip for a group/category of trips is obtained as the ratio of total estimated expenditure incurred on the group/category of same-day trips to the estimated number of same-day trips during last 30 days.

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(c) Marginal totals of trips for last 365 days are obtained using the procedure explained in para 4.6.3.

4.6.5 Further explanatory notes on how the estimates of cell values and marginal totals are derived in various tables of the approved Tabulation Plan are given in paragraphs 6 & 7.

4.7 Estimates of Error: The estimated variances of the above estimates are as follows:

4.7.1 For aggregate Y :

s

sYraVYraV )ˆ(ˆ)ˆ(ˆ where )ˆ(ˆ sYraV is given by

221ˆˆ

4

1ˆˆsss YYYrVa for rural stratum, 1sY and 2sY being the stratum estimates for sub-

sample 1 and 2 respectively

and

t

ststs YYYrVa2

21ˆˆ

4

1ˆˆ for urban stratum, where 1stY and 2stY are the estimates for

sub-sample 1 and sub-sample 2 respectively for stratum ‘s’ and sub-stratum ‘t’.

4.7.2 For ratio R :

(i) s

ssssssss XXYYRXXRYYX

RESM 2121

2

21

22

212ˆˆˆˆˆ2ˆˆˆˆˆ

ˆ4

1)ˆ(ˆ for

rural

and

(ii) s t

stststststststst XXYYRXXRYYX

RESM 2121

2

21

22

212ˆˆˆˆˆ2ˆˆˆˆˆ

ˆ4

1)ˆ(ˆ

for urban,

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where 1sY , 1stY and 2sY , 2stY are the estimates for sub-sample 1 and sub-sample 2 respectively

for stratum ‘s’ and sub-stratum ‘t’.

4.7.3 Estimates of Relative Standard Error (RSE)

100

ˆ

ˆˆˆˆ

Y

YraVYESR

100

ˆ

ˆˆˆˆ

R

RESMRESR

5. Multipliers

The formulae for multipliers at stratum/sub-stratum level for a sub-sample are given below:

sub-stratum

formula for multipliers

hg / sb 1 hg / sb 2

rural

jsmi

jsmi

smismj

s

h

H

zn

Z

1

11

jsmi

jsmi

smi

smismj

s

h

HD

zn

Z

2

2*1

Urban jstmi

jstmi

stmj

st

h

H

n

N

1

1 jstmi

jstmistmi

stmj

st

h

HD

n

N

2

2*

j=1,2,3,4,5

Note: (i) For estimating any characteristic for any domain not specifically considered in sample design, indicator variable is used.

(ii) Multipliers are computed on the basis of information available in the listing schedule irrespective of any misclassification observed between the listing schedule and the detailed enquiry schedule.

(iii) For estimating number of villages possessing a characteristic, *

smiD = 1 in the relevant

multipliers and there is only one multiplier for the village.

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6. An Explanatory Note on Preparation of Appendix Tables

I. For tables 40-48, the estimates for 365 days marginal totals for rows & cols. are derived by distributing estimated total number of visitor-trips for 365 days (obtained from block-4) to the row/col. variable as per their distribution of 30 days estimates. Since the distribution pattern of row/column variables with respect to 30 days estimates may not be similar in rural and urban sectors, the rural & urban sectors marginal totals do not add up to marginal totals for combined sector. II. Similarly for tables 50-57, the estimated total number of trips for 365 days, obtained from block-3, is distributed over the marginal variables as per their distribution of 30 days estimates to arrive at the estimates for marginal totals for 365 days. Hence the rural & urban sectors marginal totals do not add up to marginal totals for combined sector for the same reason as mentioned above. III. For table 56, the item-wise expenditure for each leading purpose of overnight trips and also for column ‘all’ are derived by multiplying the average expenditure of the corresponding cell in table 57 with the total no. of estimated trips for 365 days for that leading purpose. So the expenditure for col. ‘all’ for a particular item does not match with the summation of expenditure over leading purposes for that item. IV. For table 58, the estimated total expenditure for ‘all’ MPCE classes together corresponding to a particular item of expenditure in the rural & urban sectors marginal totals do not add up to marginal totals for combined sector for that particular item. V. For all these tables, the estimated totals for (rural + urban) sector are calculated by adding the corresponding figures from rural and urban sectors respectively, except for the estimated totals corresponding to MPCE classes. VI. The expenditure for column ‘all’ for a particular category of item in table 56 are obtained by adding the corresponding category of expenditure over different leading purposes. VII. The average expenditure per overnight trip for (rural + urban) sector in table 57 is obtained from table 56 for (rural & urban) sector.

7. An Explanatory Note on Estimation of Cell Values and Marginal Totals

A. For tables 1-39 and 49

Estimates for 365 days are obtained from block 3, items 7.2 and 8.2. Distributions wherever applicable are based on 365 days estimates.

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B. For all other tables

1. (a) Distribution is obtained for the households/trips/visitor-trips/expenditure, etc. on the basis of estimates of last 30 days. (b) It is assumed that the joint distribution for the last 365 days for households/trips/visitor-trips/expenditure, etc. classified by different categories is the same as the joint distribution obtained for last 30 days.

(c) Under the above assumption, for the tables where estimates for 365 days are given, the distribution is that of the last 30 days while marginal totals are that of 365 days. These marginal totals are obtained at appropriate level (e.g., State × sector, State × sector × sex, etc.).

2. For tables 40-48, estimates of visitor-trips for 365 days by different classifications are obtained from col (11) of block 4 for tables 40-44 and col (13) of block 4 for tables 45-48. Subsequent method of estimation is illustrated for table 40. For table 40, the estimates of visitor-trips by activity status × NCO at State × sector × sex level are used as marginal totals for the rows. Marginal totals for columns are obtained by using the distribution of column variables obtained from block 5.1 and the total number of visitor-trips obtained from block 4, column 11.

3. For tables 50-55, joint distribution is obtained for last 30 days at State × sector level. Subsequent method of estimation is illustrated for table 50. For table 50, to obtain the marginal totals representing 365 days’ estimate for the leading purposes at State × sector level, the marginal distribution by leading purposes using last 30 days’ data is first obtained. This distribution is then applied to the estimated number of trips during last 365 days obtained from block 3. Marginal distribution of 30 days of column variables is used wherever necessary to obtain marginal column totals for 365 days.

4. For table 57, it is assumed that average expenditure per trip based on last 3 trips during last 30 days for any group of trips or visitor-trips remains invariant for the last 30 days. Also, average expenditure for last 30 days for (any group of trips × particular category of expenditure) is assumed to be the same for the last 365 days. [A trip in block 5.1 which is supposed to be reported but is not actually reported in block 6.1 is assumed to be present in block 6.1 with zero expenditure.]

(i) Average expenditure per overnight trip for a cell is obtained as follows:

(a) The trips in block 5.1 which are to be reported in block 6.1 are identified.

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(b) The estimated number of trips for a leading purpose is obtained using the information regarding leading purpose of the identified trips in block 5.1.

(c) The estimated total expenditure for a cell (leading purpose × expenditure category) is obtained from block 6.1 classified by category of expenditure in block 6.1 and leading purposes given in block 5.1.

(d) Ratio of estimated expenditure to estimated number of trips obtained as per (b) and (c) gives the estimated average expenditure for each cell.

(ii) To obtain the marginal totals for columns (estimated no of overnight trips by leading purpose for 365 days), the following procedure is used:

(a) Estimated total no of overnight trips for last 365 days are obtained from block 3. (b) The above estimated total number of overnight trips are distributed over the cells

corresponding to the row ‘estimated no of overnight trips’ using the procedure given in (3) above. This agrees with marginal row totals of table 50.

(iii) To obtain the marginal column totals for ‘estimated number of visitor-trips’ for 365 days,

the following steps are involved:

(a) The total number of visitor-trips for 365 days from block 4, column 11 for overnight trips are estimated.

(b) The distribution of visitor-trips by the leading purpose for overnight trips using the information on visitor-trips by leading purposes obtained from column (12), block 5.1, is found.

(c) Using this distribution and the estimate of total number of visitor-trips obtained as per (a) and (b), marginal totals are obtained.

5. For table 56, (i) estimated total expenditure for a cell (i.e. leading purpose × expenditure

category) = (estimated average expenditure for the cell) × (corresponding marginal column totals for ‘estimated no of overnight trips’ for the leading purpose during last 365 days) is obtained from table 57.

6. (i) For table 59, average expenditure per same-day trip for a cell is obtained as follows:

(a) The estimated number of same-day trips for 30 days by quintile class of MPCE using the information in blocks 3 (quintile class) and 5.2 (number of same-day trips) is obtained.

(b) The estimated expenditure for a cell (quintile class of MPCE × expenditure category) from blocks 3 and 6.2 is obtained.

(c) Ratio of estimated expenditure to estimated number of trips obtained as per (a) and (b) gives the estimated average expenditure for each cell.

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(ii) To obtain the marginal column totals for ‘estimated number of same-day trips’ by quintile classes for 365 days, the information in block 3, items 8.2 and 18 is used.

(iii) To obtain the marginal column totals for ‘estimated number of visitor-trips’ for 365 days, the following step is taken:

The total numbers of visitor-trips by quintile classes of MPCE are estimated using information from block 3, item 18 and block 4, column 13 for same-day trips.

7. For table 58, (i) estimated total expenditure for a cell (i.e. quintile class of MPCE × expenditure category) = (estimated average expenditure for the cell) × (corresponding marginal column totals for ‘estimated no of same-day trips’ for quintile class of MPCE during last 365 days) are obtained from table 59.

8. (i) For table 60, average expenditure per overnight trip for a cell (quintile class of MPCE × leading purpose) is obtained as follows:

(a) The trips in block 5.1 which are to be reported in block 6.1 are identified. (b) The estimated number of trips for a leading purpose is obtained using the information

regarding leading purpose of the identified trips in block 5.1. (c) The estimated total expenditure for a cell (quintile class of MPCE × leading purpose)

is obtained from block 6.1 classified by category of expenditure in block 6.1 and leading purposes given in block 5.1 and MPCE information in block 3.

(d) Ratio of estimated expenditure to estimated number of trips obtained as per (b) and (c) gives the estimated average expenditure for each cell.

(ii) A column with heading ‘estimated no of overnight trips’ is inserted giving the marginal

row totals for leading purposes. To obtain the marginal totals for rows (estimated no of overnight trips by leading purpose for 365 days), following procedure is used:

(a) Estimated total no of overnight trips for last 365 days are obtained from block 3. (b) The above estimated total number of overnight trips are distributed over the cells

corresponding to the column ‘estimated no of overnight trips’ using the procedure given in (3) above. These agree with marginal row totals of table 50.

(iii) A row with heading ‘estimated no of overnight trips’ is inserted giving the marginal

column totals for quintile classes. These marginal totals for columns (estimated no of overnight trips by quintile classes for 365 days) are obtained using the information from block 3.

(iv) The marginal total for columns (estimated number of households with at least one overnight trip during last 365 days) are obtained using information from block 3, item 18 where item 7.2 > 0.

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Appendix C

Facsimile of Schedule 21.1

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GOVERNMENT OF INDIA NATIONAL SAMPLE SURVEY ORGANISATION

SOCIO-ECONOMIC SURVEY SIXTY-FIFTH ROUND: JULY, 2008-JUNE, 2009

SCHEDULE 21.1: DOMESTIC TOURISM

[0] descriptive identification of sample household1. state/u.t.

5. hamlet name

2. district

6. ward/ inv. unit/ block**

3. tehsil/town

7. name of head of household

4. village name

8. name of the informant

[1] identification of sample household item no.

item code Item no.

item code

1. serial no. of sample village/block

11. sub-sample

2. round number

6 5 12. FOD sub-region

3. schedule number

2 1 1 13. sample hamlet-group/ sub-block number

4. sample (central-1, state-2)

14. second-stage stratum number

5. sector (rural-1, urban-2)

15. sample household number

6. NSS region

16. sl. no. of informant (as in col.1, block 4)

7. district code

17. response code

8. stratum number

18. survey code

9. sub-stratum number#

10. sub-round

19. reason for substitution of original household (code)

CODES FOR BLOCK 1

item 17: response code: informant co-operative and capable – 1, informant co-operative but not capable – 2,

informant busy – 3, informant reluctant – 4, others – 9

item 18: survey code: original h.h. surveyed – 1, substituted h.h. surveyed – 2, casualty –3

item 19: reason for substitution of original household : informant busy – 1, members away from home – 2, informant non-

cooperative –3, others – 9

* tick mark () may be put in the appropriate place ** strike out whichever is not applicable # for urban only

* CENTRAL STATE

* RURAL URBAN

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[2] particulars of field operations

sl. no. Item investigator/ senior

investigator superintendent /

senior superintendent other supervisory

officer (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) 1. i) name

(block letters)

ii) code

2. date(s) of : DD MM YY DD MM YY DD MM YY

(i) survey/inspection

(ii) receipt

(iii) scrutiny

(iv) dispatch

3. number of additional sheets attached

4. total time taken to canvass schedule 21.1 (in minutes)

5. whether the schedule contains remarks? (yes-1, no-2)

in block 7 in block 8/9 elsewhere in the schedule

6. signature

[7] remarks by investigator/senior investigator

[8] comments by superintendent / senior superintendent

[9] comments by other supervisory officer

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[3] household characteristics

1. household size 11.1 whether any member of the household is aware of the “Incredible India” campaign by the Govt. of India? (yes-1, no-2)

2. principal industry (NIC – 2004)

description

code (5-digit)

if ‘yes’ in item 11.1,

11.2 where has/have the member(s) seen /heard the campaign? (code)

3. principal occupation (NCO-2004)

description

11.3 what was the impact of seeing/ hearing the campaign? (code)

code (3-digit) 12.1 whether any member of the household is aware of the tourism promotional campaigns by state tourism departments / development corporations or any other organization? (yes-1, no-2)

4. household type (code)

if ‘yes’ in item 12.1,

12.2 where has/have the member(s) seen /heard the campaign? (code)

5. religion (code)

12.3 what was the impact of seeing/ hearing the campaign? (code)

6. social group (code)

household consumption expenditure (Rs.) during last 30 days out of:

7.1 number of overnight trips undertaken by the

household during last 30 days

7.2 number of overnight trips undertaken by the household during last 365 days

13. purchase

8.1 number of same-day trips undertaken by the household during last 30 days

14. home produced stock

8.2 number of same-day trips undertaken by the household during last 365 days

15. receipts in exchange of goods and services

9.1 whether any NRI visited the household during last 365 days? (yes-1, no -2)

16. gifts and loans

9.2 what was the impact of the NRI visit in influencing the household to undertake trips? (code)

17. free collection

10. whether some portion of the house was rented out to the tourists for at least one night during the last 365 days? (yes-1, no-2, cannot say-3)

18. total (items 13 to 17)

CODES FOR BLOCK 3 item 4: household type: for rural areas: self-employed in non-agriculture-1, agricultural labour-2, other labour-3, self-employed in agriculture-4, others-9 for urban areas: self-employed-1, regular wage/salary earning-2, casual labour-3, others-9 item 5: religion: Hinduism-1, Islam-2, Christianity –3, Sikhism-4, Jainism-5, Buddhism-6, Zoroastrianism-7, others-9 item 6: social group: scheduled tribe-1, scheduled caste-2, other backward class-3, others-9 item 11.2/12.2: where have the member(s) seen /heard the campaign?(code): newspaper/magazine-1,radio-2, TV-3, internet-4,

billboard/hoarding-5, more than one of these-6, others-9 item 9.2/11.3/12.3: impact (code): resulted into one or more trips-1, planning to make a trip in near future –2, willing to make trip

but could not make it due to other constraints (like time, money etc) – 3, no impact – 4, cannot say-5

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CODES FOR BLOCK 4

Col (3): relation to head: self-1, spouse of head-2, married child-3, spouse of married child-4, unmarried child-5, grandchild-6, father/mother/father-in-law/mother-in-law-7, brother/sister/brother-in-law/sister-in-law/other relatives-8, servants/employees/other non-relatives-9

Col (4): sex: male-1, female-2

Col (6): marital status: never married – 1, currently married – 2, widowed – 3, divorced/separated – 4

Col (7): educational level: not literate -01, literate without any schooling: 02, literate without formal schooling: through NFEC/AIEP -03, literate though TLC/ AEC -04,others -05; literate with formal schooling including EGS: below primary -06, primary -07, upper primary/middle -08, secondary -10, higher /senior secondary -11, diploma/certificate course -12, graduate -13, postgraduate and above -14

Col (8): usual principal activity status:

worked in h.h. enterprise (self-employed): own account worker

-11 worked as casual wage labour: in other types of work

-51 attended domestic duties and was also engaged in free collection of goods (vegetables, roots, firewood, cattle feed, etc.), sewing, tailoring, weaving, etc. for household use

-93

worked in h.h. enterprise (self-employed): employer

-12 did not work but was seeking and/or available for work

-81

worked as helper in h.h. enterprise (unpaid family worker)

-21 attended educational institution -91 rentiers, pensioners , remittance recipients, etc

-94

worked as regular salaried/ wage employee

-31 attended domestic duties only -92 not able to work due to disability -95

worked as casual wage labour: in public works

-41 others (including begging, prostitution, etc.) -97

Col (10): NCO-2004 (code): legislators, senior officials and managers-1, professionals-2, associate professionals-3, clerks-4, service workers and shop & market sales workers-5, skilled agricultural and fishery workers-6, craft and related trades workers-7, plant and machine operators and assemblers-8, elementary occupations-9

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[4] demographic and other particulars for all household members

sl. no.

name of household member

relation to head (code)

sex (male-1, female-

2)

age (years)

marital status (code)

educational level

(code)

usual principal activity status (code)

for employed

members (code 11-51, col. 8)

number of overnight trips

completed by the member during

number of same-day trips completed by the member

during

NIC-2004

(code) (2-digit)

NCO-2004

(code) (1-digit)

last 365 days

last 30 days

last 365

days

last 30 days

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

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CODES FOR BLOCK 5.1

Col 5/12: purpose of trip for the member/ leading purpose for all the members performing the trip: business –1, holidaying, leisure and recreation-2, social (including visiting friends and relatives, attending marriages, etc.)-3, pilgrimage & religious activities -4, education & training –5, health & medical –6, shopping-7,others- 9

Col 6: type of trip: package-1, non-package- 2

Col 7/8: mode of travel: on foot-01, bus-02, train(railways)-03, ship/boat-04, air-05, own transport: bicycle-06, two-wheeler-07, rickshaw-08, auto rickshaw-10, car/jeep-11,

tractor/truck-12, animal driven transport-13; transport equipment rental(hired transport): bicycle-14, two-wheeler-15, rickshaw-16, auto rickshaw-17, car/jeep-18,

tractor/truck-20, animal driven transport-21; others -29

Col 9/10: type of stay: hotel-1, private guest house-2, Govt. guest house -3, dharamshala-4, rented house-5, friends & relatives-6, others including carriages / coaches -9

Col 13/14: starting/ending month: January-01, Februray-02, March-03, April-04, May-05, June-06, July-07, August-08, September-09, October-10, November-11, December-12

Col 15: main destination: destination within the district - 1, destination outside the district but within the state-2, destination outside the state but within the country-3

Col 16: state code:

Andhra Pradesh ….28 Gujarat ….24 Madhya Pradesh ….23 Punjab ….03 West Bengal ….19

Arunachal Pradesh ….12 Haryana ….06 Maharashtra ….27 Rajasthan ….08 A & N Islands ….35

Assam ….18 Himachal Pradesh ….02 Manipur ….14 Sikkim ….11 Chandigarh ….04

Bihar ….10 Jammu & Kashmir ….01 Megahlaya ….17 Tamil Nadu ….33 Dadra & Nagar Haveli ….26

Chhattisgarh ….22 Jharkhand ….20 Mizoram ….15 Tripura ….16 Daman & Diu ….25

Delhi ….07 Karnataka ….29 Nagaland ….13 Uttaranchal ….05 Lakshadweep ….31

Goa ….30 Kerala ….32 Orissa ….21 Uttar Pradesh ….09 Pondicherry ….34

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[5.1] Particulars of overnight trips completed by household members during last 30 days

sl. no. of trip #

no. of hh members

in the trip

sl. no. of hh member who was in that

trip (as in col. 1,

block 4)

age

(as in col. 5,

block 4)

purpose of the trip for

the member

(code)

type of trip

(code)

mode of travel (code)

type of stay (code)

no. of nights spent outside usual place of

residence (including journey)

leading purpose* for

all the members

performing the trip (code)

starting month (code)

ending month (code)

main

destination

(code)

if code ‘3’ in col. 15 then state

code

no. of places visited during

the trip major

(max. distance traveled)

minor

(2nd max. distance traveled)

major

(max. no. of nights

spent)

minor

(2nd max. no. of nights

spent)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17)

.

# ordering the trips commencing from the latest completed trip.

* leading purpose of trip as a whole is that purpose without which none of the members in that trip would have undertaken the trip.

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CODES FOR BLOCK 5.2

Col 5/10: purpose of trip for the member/ leading purpose for all the members performing the trip: business –1, holidaying, leisure and recreation-2, social (including visiting friends and relatives, attending marriages, etc.)-3, pilgrimage & religious activities -4, education & training –5, health & medical –6, shopping-7, others- 9

Col 6: type of trip: package-1, non-package-2

Col 7/8: mode of travel: on foot-01, bus-02, train-03, ship/boat-04, air-05, own transport: bicycle-06, two-wheeler-07, rickshaw-08, auto rickshaw-10, car/jeep-11, tractor/truck-12, animal driven transport-13; transport equipment rental (hired transport): bicycle-14, two-wheeler-15, rickshaw-16, auto rickshaw-17, car/jeep-18, tractor/truck-20, animal driven transport-21; others -29

Col 9: type of stay: hotel-1, private guest house-2, Govt. guest house -3, dharamshala-4, rented house-5, friends & relatives-6, did not stay at all -7, others including carriages / coaches -9

Col 11: month of visit: January-01, Februray-02, March-03, April-04, May-05, June-06, July-07, August-08, September-09, October-10, November-11, December-12

Col 12: main destination: destination within the district-1, destination outside the district but within the state-2, destination outside the state but within the country-3

Col 13: state code:

Andhra Pradesh ….28 Gujarat ….24 Madhya Pradesh ….23 Punjab ….03 West Bengal ….19

Arunachal Pradesh ….12 Haryana ….06 Maharashtra ….27 Rajasthan ….08 A & N Islands ….35

Assam ….18 Himachal Pradesh ….02 Manipur ….14 Sikkim ….11 Chandigarh ….04

Bihar ….10 Jammu & Kashmir ….01 Megahlaya ….17 Tamil Nadu ….33 Dadra & Nagar Haveli ….26

Chhattisgarh ….22 Jharkhand ….20 Mizoram ….15 Tripura ….16 Daman & Diu ….25

Delhi ….07 Karnataka ….29 Nagaland ….13 Uttaranchal ….05 Lakshadweep ….31

Goa ….30 Kerala ….32 Orissa ….21 Uttar Pradesh ….09 Pondicherry ….34

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[5.2] Particulars of same-day trips completed by household members during last 30 days

sl. no. of trip #

no. of hh members

in the trip

sl. no. of hh member who was in that

trip (as in col. 1,

block 4)

age

(as in col. 5, block 4)

purpose of the trip for the member

(code)

type of trip(code)

mode of travel (code)

type of stay (code)

leading purpose* for all the members

performing the trip

(code)

month of visit

(code)

main

destination

(code)

if code ‘3’ in col. 12 then state

code

no. of places visited

during the trip

major

(max. distance traveled)

minor

(2nd max. distance traveled)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

.

# ordering the trips commencing from the latest completed trip.

* leading purpose of trip as a whole is that purpose without which none of the members in that trip would have undertaken the trip.

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[6.1] particulars of expenditure* (in Rs.) for latest 3 trips in last 30 days covered in block 5.1 trips (1) (2) (3) 1. trip serial no. [as in col.1,block 5.1]

2. type of trip [as in col.11, block 5.1]

3. package component (in Rs.)

non-package component (in Rs.) 4. accommodation 4.1 hotel

4.2 private guest house 4.3 Govt. guest house 4.4 dharamshala 4.5 rented house

4.6 friends & relatives 4.9 others 4.0 sub-total (4.1 to 4.9)

5. food & drink 5.1 in the accommodation unit 5.2 outside accommodation unit and during

journey and transit

5.0 sub-total (5.1 to 5.2) 6. transport 6.1 railways 6.2 road (excluding transport equipment rental) 6.3 water 6.4 air 6.5 transport equipment rental 6.6 travel agency services/tour operators 6.9 others and supporting services 6.0 sub-total (6.1 to 6.9) 7. shopping 7.01 clothing and garments 7.02 processed food 7.03 tobacco products 7.04 alcohol 7.05 travel related consumer goods 7.06 footwear 7.07 toiletries 7.08 gems and jewellery 7.11 books, journals, magazines, stationery, etc. 7.19 others 7.00 sub-total (7.01 to 7.19)

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[6.1] particulars of expenditure* (in Rs.) for latest 3 trips in last 30 days covered in block 5.1 trips (1) (2) (3) 8. recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities 8.1 cinema, theatre, amusements, etc.

8.2

entry fee to and other expenses at religious sites

8.3

entry fee to and other expenses at cultural sites

8.4 sporting activities

8.5 medical and health related activities

8.5.1 medicine

8.5.2 medical accessories

8.5.3 other health related services

8.5.0 sub-total [8.5.1 to 8.5.3]

8.0 sub-total [8.1 + 8.2 + 8.3 + 8.4 + 8.5.0]

9.

others

10.

sub-total [4.0 +5.0+ 6.0+7.00+8.0+9]

11.

total [3 +10]

12.

whether any reimbursement/direct payment made by any institution? (code)

if code ‘1’ in item 12, amount (Rs.) paid/ reimbursed by

source

13.

Government

14.

other agencies

CODES FOR BLOCK 6.1

Item 12: whether any reimbursement/direct payment made by any institution? (code):

yes and amount known -1, yes and amount not known -2, no -3 * Notes:

(i) all expenditure paid or payable by the selected household in connection with the trip except those to be used / intended to be used for productive purposes/enterprises are to be included in this block.

(ii) if the expenditure or break-up of the expenditure cannot be reported for any trip, detailed remarks and comments should be recorded in Blocks 7, 8 & 9 respectively.

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[6.2] particulars of aggregate expenditure* (in Rs.) for all trips in last 30 days covered in block 5.2 (1) 1.

trip serial no.

2. type of trip

3. package component (in Rs.)

non-package component (in Rs.) 4. accommodation 4.1 hotel

4.2 private guest house 4.3 Govt. guest house 4.4 dharamshala 4.5 rented house

4.6 friends & relatives 4.9 others 4.0 sub-total (4.1 to 4.9)

5. food & drink 5.1 in the accommodation unit 5.2 outside accommodation unit and during journey and transit 5.0 sub-total (5.1 to 5.2) 6. transport 6.1 railways 6.2 road (excluding transport equipment rental) 6.3 water 6.4 air 6.5 transport equipment rental 6.6 travel agency services/tour operators 6.9 others and supporting services 6.0 sub-total (6.1 to 6.9) 7. shopping 7.01 clothing and garments 7.02 processed food 7.03 tobacco products 7.04 alcohol 7.05 travel related consumer goods 7.06 footwear 7.07 toiletries 7.08 gems and jewellery 7.11 books, journals, magazines, stationery, etc. 7.19 others

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[6.2] particulars of aggregate expenditure* (in Rs.) for all trips in last 30 days covered in block 5.2 (1) 7.00 sub-total (7.01 to 7.19) 8. recreation, religious, cultural, sporting and health-related activities 8.1 cinema, theatre, amusements, etc.

8.2

entry fee to and other expenses at religious sites

8.3

entry fee to and other expenses at cultural sites

8.4 sporting activities

8.5 medical and health related activities

8.5.1

medicine

8.5.2

medical accessories

8.5.3

other health related services

8.5.0

sub-total [8.5.1 to 8.5.3]

8.0 sub-total [8.1 + 8.2 + 8.3 + 8.4 + 8.5.0]

9.

others

10.

sub-total [4.0 +5.0+ 6.0+7.00+8.0+9]

11.

total [3 +10]

12.

whether any reimbursement/direct payment made by any institution? (code)

if code ‘1’ in item 12, amount (Rs.) paid/ reimbursed by

source

13.

Government

14.

other agencies

CODES FOR BLOCK 6.2

Item 12: whether any reimbursement/direct payment made by any institution? (code):

yes and amount known -1, yes and amount not known -2, no -3 * Notes:

(i) all expenditure paid or payable by the selected household in connection with the trip except those to be used / intended to be used for productive purposes/enterprises are to be included in this block.

(ii) if the expenditure or break-up of the expenditure cannot be reported for any trip, detailed remarks and comments should be recorded in Blocks 7, 8 & 9 respectively.

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Appendix D

Projected Population

 

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Appendix D

NSS Report No 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 D-1

Statement 1.1: Projected population (000) as on 1st March 2008, 1st March 2009 and 1st January 2009 for each State/UT male

State/UT/all-India rural

urban

rural+ urban

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Andhra Pradesh 29955 30218 30174 11520 11644 11623 41475 41862 41797 Arunachal Pradesh 449 448 448 182 191 189 631 639 638 Assam 12921 13049 13028 2220 2278 2268 15141 15327 15296 Bihar 43360 43976 43873 5248 5327 5314 48608 49303 49186 Chhattisgarh 9028 9120 9105 2654 2728 2716 11682 11848 11820 Delhi 484 478 479 8881 9161 9114 9365 9639 9593 Goa 361 368 367 471 496 492 832 864 859 Gujarat 17672 17840 17812 12000 12281 12234 29672 30121 30046 Haryana 8793 8885 8870 4253 4399 4374 13046 13284 13244 Himachal Pradesh 2967 2993 2989 397 407 405 3364 3400 3394 Jammu & Kashmir 4284 4326 4319 1628 1664 1658 5912 5990 5977 Jharkhand 11872 12029 12003 3667 3730 3719 15539 15759 15722 Karnataka 18533 18639 18621 10679 10886 10851 29212 29525 29473 Kerala 12242 12350 12332 4224 4251 4246 16466 16601 16578 Madhya Pradesh 25966 26365 26298 9885 10096 10061 35851 36461 36359 Maharashtra 30343 30588 30547 25978 26583 26481 56321 57171 57028 Manipur 890 902 900 303 305 305 1193 1207 1205 Meghalaya 1027 1038 1036 253 257 256 1280 1295 1292 Mizoram 241 243 243 259 263 262 500 506 505 Nagaland 941 953 951 199 200 200 1140 1153 1151 Orissa 16715 16832 16812 3353 3417 3406 20068 20249 20219 Punjab 8908 8952 8945 5427 5571 5547 14335 14523 14491 Rajasthan 25530 25959 25887 8126 8286 8259 33656 34245 34146 Sikkim 275 278 277 39 40 40 314 318 317 Tamil Nadu 16155 15918 15957 17048 17508 17430 33203 33426 33389 Tripura 1461 1474 1472 327 335 334 1788 1809 1805 Uttarakhand 3435 3475 3468 1414 1449 1443 4849 4924 4911 Uttar Pradesh 78295 79607 79387 21969 22506 22416 100264 102113 101802 West Bengal 31941 32226 32178 12879 13008 12986 44820 45234 45165 A & N Islands 153 155 155 91 95 94 244 250 249 Chandigarh 78 83 82 627 664 658 705 747 740 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 99 97 97 73 82 80 172 179 178 Daman Diu 114 123 121 34 34 34 148 157 155 Lakshadweep 23 24 24 14 13 13 37 37 37 Puducherry 195 206 204 418 445 440 613 651 645 all-India 415709 420214 419460 176742 180602 179953 592451 600816 599414 Note: 1. Projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 are from RGI (reference Tables 8 and 9 of the Population Projections

for India and States: 2001-2026). 2. Table 8 provides projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for rural+urban combined and Table 9 provides projected

population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for urban. 3. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived using the formula, A= 𝐴𝐴1 ∗ [(𝐴𝐴2

𝐴𝐴1)[1/12]]10 , where A1 is the population for 1st

March 2008, A2 is the population for 1st March 2009 and A is the population for 1st January 2009. 4. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived for rural+urban and urban separately and the figure for rural has been derived

by subtraction.

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Appendix D

NSS Report No 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 D-2

Statement 1.1: Projected population (000) as on 1st March 2008, 1st March 2009 and 1st January 2009 for each State/UT female

State/UT/all-India rural

urban

rural+ urban

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Andhra Pradesh 29689 29974 29926 11211 11342 11320 40900 41316 41246 Arunachal Pradesh 410 407 407 157 166 164 567 573 572 Assam 12302 12434 12412 1992 2052 2042 14294 14486 14454 Bihar 40440 41065 40960 4585 4659 4647 45025 45724 45607 Chhattisgarh 9086 9180 9164 2501 2573 2561 11587 11753 11725 Delhi 390 385 386 7200 7413 7377 7590 7798 7763 Goa 340 346 345 423 445 441 763 791 786 Gujarat 16626 16775 16750 10328 10538 10503 26954 27313 27253 Haryana 7600 7678 7665 3525 3635 3616 11125 11313 11281 Himachal Pradesh 2926 2951 2947 305 311 310 3231 3262 3257 Jammu & Kashmir 4022 4073 4064 1323 1351 1346 5345 5424 5411 Jharkhand 11376 11518 11494 3266 3334 3323 14642 14852 14817 Karnataka 18175 18284 18266 10163 10372 10337 28338 28656 28603 Kerala 12885 12986 12969 4451 4476 4472 17336 17462 17441 Madhya Pradesh 23999 24357 24297 8887 9079 9047 32886 33436 33344 Maharashtra 28941 29144 29110 22710 23238 23149 51651 52382 52259 Manipur 861 873 871 310 313 312 1171 1186 1183 Meghalaya 990 999 997 260 266 265 1250 1265 1262 Mizoram 223 224 224 247 251 250 470 475 474 Nagaland 855 865 863 176 179 178 1031 1044 1042 Orissa 16509 16630 16610 3077 3146 3134 19586 19776 19744 Punjab 7883 7916 7910 4503 4609 4591 12386 12525 12502 Rajasthan 23677 24066 24001 7200 7339 7316 30877 31405 31316 Sikkim 240 243 242 36 37 37 276 280 279 Tamil Nadu 16033 15798 15837 16870 17342 17262 32903 33140 33100 Tripura 1388 1402 1400 315 322 321 1703 1724 1720 Uttarakhand 3457 3496 3489 1205 1236 1231 4662 4732 4720 Uttar Pradesh 70878 72090 71887 19111 19560 19484 89989 91650 91371 West Bengal 30411 30687 30641 11763 11918 11892 42174 42605 42533 A & N Islands 130 134 133 75 81 80 205 215 213 Chandigarh 47 49 49 475 501 497 522 550 545 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 79 83 82 48 56 55 127 139 137 Daman Diu 53 55 55 36 36 36 89 91 91 Lakshadweep 24 24 24 13 13 13 37 37 37 Puducherry 185 192 191 405 423 420 590 615 611 all-India 393133 397386 396674 159150 162611 162029 552283 559997 558704 Note: 1. Projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 are from RGI (reference Tables 8 and 9 of the Population Projections

for India and States: 2001-2026). 2. Table 8 provides projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for rural+urban combined and Table 9 provides projected

population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for urban. 3. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived using the formula, A= 𝐴𝐴1 ∗ [(𝐴𝐴2

𝐴𝐴1)[1/12]]10 , where A1 is the population for 1st

March 2008, A2 is the population for 1st March 2009 and A is the population for 1st January 2009. 4. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived for rural+urban and urban separately and the figure for rural has been derived

by subtraction.

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Appendix D

NSS Report No 536: Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 D-3

Statement 1.1: Projected population (000) as on 1st March 2008, 1st March 2009 and 1st January 2009 for each State/UT male+female

State/UT/all-India rural

urban

rural+ urban

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

1st Mar 2008

1st Mar 2009

1st Jan 2009

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Andhra Pradesh 59645 60192 60100 22730 22986 22943 82375 83178 83044 Arunachal Pradesh 860 855 856 338 357 354 1198 1212 1210 Assam 25222 25484 25440 4213 4330 4310 29435 29814 29750 Bihar 83800 85041 84833 9833 9985 9960 93633 95026 94792 Chhattisgarh 18114 18299 18268 5155 5301 5276 23269 23600 23545 Delhi 874 863 865 16081 16574 16491 16955 17437 17356 Goa 703 714 712 893 941 933 1596 1655 1645 Gujarat 34298 34616 34563 22328 22818 22736 56626 57434 57299 Haryana 16393 16563 16535 7778 8034 7991 24171 24597 24525 Himachal Pradesh 5892 5944 5935 703 718 715 6595 6662 6651 Jammu & Kashmir 8307 8399 8384 2950 3015 3004 11257 11414 11388 Jharkhand 23248 23547 23497 6933 7064 7042 30181 30611 30539 Karnataka 36708 36922 36886 20842 21259 21189 57550 58181 58075 Kerala 25127 25336 25301 8675 8727 8718 33802 34063 34019 Madhya Pradesh 49965 50722 50595 18772 19175 19107 68737 69897 69702 Maharashtra 59284 59732 59657 48688 49821 49630 107972 109553 109288 Manipur 1751 1775 1771 613 618 617 2364 2393 2388 Meghalaya 2016 2037 2033 514 523 521 2530 2560 2555 Mizoram 465 466 466 505 515 513 970 981 979 Nagaland 1796 1818 1814 375 379 378 2171 2197 2193 Orissa 33225 33462 33422 6430 6563 6541 39655 40025 39963 Punjab 16792 16868 16855 9930 10180 10138 26722 27048 26993 Rajasthan 49208 50025 49888 15326 15625 15575 64534 65650 65463 Sikkim 516 520 519 75 78 77 591 598 597 Tamil Nadu 32188 31716 31794 33918 34850 34693 66106 66566 66489 Tripura 2849 2876 2871 642 656 654 3491 3532 3525 Uttarakhand 6892 6971 6958 2619 2685 2674 9511 9656 9632 Uttar Pradesh 149174 151697 151274 41080 42066 41900 190254 193763 193174 West Bengal 62353 62913 62819 24642 24926 24878 86995 87839 87698 A&N Islands 282 289 288 167 176 174 449 465 462 Chandigarh 125 132 131 1102 1165 1154 1227 1297 1285 Dadra & Nagar Haveli 178 181 180 121 137 134 299 318 315 Daman Diu 168 178 176 70 70 70 238 248 246 Lakshadweep 47 49 49 27 26 26 74 75 75 Puducherry 382 398 395 822 869 861 1204 1267 1256 all-India 808843 817600 816134 335891 343213 341982 1144734 1160813 1158118 Note: 1. Projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 are from RGI (reference Tables 8 and 9 of the Population Projections for

India and States: 2001-2026). 2. Table 8 provides projected population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for rural+urban combined and Table 9 provides projected

population as on 1st March 2008 and 1st March 2009 for urban. 3. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived using the formula, A= 𝐴𝐴1 ∗ [(𝐴𝐴2

𝐴𝐴1)[1/12]]10 , where A1 is the population for 1st

March 2008, A2 is the population for 1st March 2009 and A is the population for 1st January 2009. 4. Projected population as on 1st January 2009 has been derived for rural+urban and urban separately and the figure for rural has been derived by

subtraction.

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Unorganised Trade, NSS 46th Round 1 403 Small Trading Units in India 150 11 7 380 27 17 2 403/1 State Level results on small trading units in India:

Vol.-I 250 18 11 710 51 32

3 403/1 State Level results on small trading units in India: Vol.-II

250 18 11 710 51 32

Land & livestock holdings and Debt & investment, NSS 48th Round

4 407 Operational land holdings in India, 1991-92: Salient features

250 18 11 710 51 32

5 408 Live-stock and Agricultural implements in House-hold operational holdings, 1991-92

150 11 7 380 27 17

6 414 Seasonal variation in the operation of land holdings in India, 1991-92

250 18 11 710 51 32

7 419 Household Assets and Liabilities as on 30.6.91 250 17 11 1140 75 46 8 420 Indebtedness of Rural Households as on 30.6.1991 250 15 9 1370 82 50 9 421 Indebtedness of Urban Households as on 30.6.1991 250 15 9 1370 82 5010 431

(Part I) Household Borrowings and Repayments during 1.7.91 to 30.6.92

250 15 9 1140 68 42

11 431 (Part-II)

Household Borrowings and Repayments during 1.7.91 to 30.6.92

250 15 9 1140 68 42

12 432 (Part-I)

Households Assets and Indebtedness of Social Groups as on 30.6.91

250 15 9 1140 68 42

13 432 (Part-II)

Households Assets and Indebtedness of Social Groups as on 30.6.91

250 15 9 710 43 26

14 437 Household capital expenditure during 1.7.91 to 30.6.92.

250 15 9 1370 82 50

Housing Conditions and Migration with special emphasis on slum dwellers, NSS 49th round

15 417 Slums in India 150 11 7 380 27 17 16 429 Housing Conditions in India 150 11 7 380 25 16 17 430 Migration in India 250 15 9 710 42 26 Employment & Unemployment, NSS 50th Round 18 406 Key Results on Employment & Unemployment 150 11 7 610 44 26 19 409 Employment & Unemployment in India, 1993-94 250 18 11 710 51 32 20 411 Employment & Unemployment situation in cities

and Towns in India, 1993-94 150 11 7 380 27 17

21 412 Economic activities and school attendance by children in India, 1993-94

150 11 7 380 27 17

22 416 Participation of Indian women in household work and other specified activities, 1993-94

150 11 7 380 27 17

23 418 Unemployed in India, 1993-94: Salient Features 150 11 7 380 27 17 24 425 Employment & Unemployment situation among

social groups in India, 1993-94 250 17 10 480 32 19

25 438 Employment & Unemployment situation among religious groups in India, 1993-94

150 10 7 610 37 23

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 50th Round 26 401 Key results on Household Consumer Expenditure,

1993-94 150 11 7 380 28 17

27 402 Level and Pattern of Consumer Expenditure 250 19 12 710 52 32 28 404 Consumption of some important commodities in India 250 18 11 710 51 32 continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Consumer Expenditure, NSS 50th Round 29 405 Nutritional intake in India 250 18 11 710 51 32 30 410/1 Dwellings in India 250 18 11 710 51 32 31 410/2 Energy used by Indian households 150 11 7 380 28 17 32 413 Sources of household income in India, 1993-94 150 11 7 380 28 1733 415 Reported adequacy of food intake in India, 1993-94 150 11 7 380 28 1734 422 Differences in level of consumption among

socioeconomic groups 150 11 7 380 28 17

35 423 IRDP assistance and participation in Public Works, 1993-94

150 11 7 380 28 17

36 424 Ownership of Live-Stock, cultivation of selected crops and consumption levels, 1993-94

150 11 6 610 40 24

37 426 Use of durable goods by Indian households, 1993-94 150 11 7 380 28 17 38 427 Consumption of tobacco in India, 1993-94 150 11 7 610 40 2439 428 Wages in kind, Exchanges of Gifts and Expenditure on

Ceremonies and Insurance in India, 1993-94 150 11 7 610 40 24

Consumer Expenditure and Unorganised Manufacture, NSS 51st Round

40 433 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India Its Size, Employment and Some Key Estimates.

250 15 9 710 43 26

41 434 Unorganised Manufacturing Enterprises in India: Salient Features

250 15 9 710 43 26

42 435 Assets and Borrowings of the Unorganised Manufacturing Enterprises in India

150 10 7 380 23 15

43 436 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment Situation in India, 1994-95

150 10 7 610 36 23

Education, NSS 52nd Round 44 439 Attending an Educational Institution in India:

Its level, nature and cost 250 15 9 1140 68 42

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 52nd Round 45 440 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment

Situation in India, 1995-96 150 10 7 610 36 23

Health, NSS 52nd Round 46 441 Morbidity and Treatment of ailments. 250 15 9 1140 68 42 47 445 Maternity and Child Health Care in India 150 10 7 1270 76 46 Aged in India, NSS 52nd Round 48 446 The Aged in India: A Socio-Economic Profile, 1995-96 150 10 7 610 36 23 Consumer Expenditure, NSS 53rd Round 49 442 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment

Situation in India, 1997 150 10 7 610 36 23

Unorganised Trade, NSS 53rd Round 50 443 Small Trading units in India and their Basic

Characteristics: 1997 Vol. I 250

15 9 710

43 26

51 444 Small Trading Units in India and Their Basic Characteristics: 1997 Vol. II

250 15 9 710 43 26

Consumer Expenditure, Common Property Resources, Sanitation & Hygiene, Services,

NSS 54th Round

52 448 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment Situation in India

150 10 7 610

36 23

53 449 Drinking water, sanitation and hygiene in India 250 15 9 1140 68 42 continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Consumer Expenditure, Common Property

Resources, Sanitation & Hygiene, Services, NSS 54th Round

54 450 Travel and Use of Mass Media and Financial Services by Indian Households

150 10 7 610 10 7

55 451 Cultivation Practices in India 250 15 9 1370 82 50 56 452 Common Property Resources 250 15 9 1370 82 50 Choice of Reference Period for Consumption Data,

NSS 51st, 52nd, 53rd & 54th Round

57 447 Choice of Reference Period for Consumption Data 150 10 7 1700 102 64 Consumer Expenditure, NSS 55th Round

(July’99 to June 2000)

58 453 Household Consumer Expenditure in India (July – December 1999) - Key Results

150 10 7 610 36 23

59 454 Household Consumer Expenditure in India, 1999–2000 - Key Results

150 10 7 610 36 23

60 457 Level and Pattern of Consumer Expenditure in India, 1999 - 2000

250 15 10 1520 81 57

61 461 Consumption of some important Commodities in India, 1999-2000

250 15 10 1370 73 52

62 463 Sources of household income in India, 1999-2000 150 10 7 380 28 1763 464 Energy Used by Indian Households, 1999-2000 150 10 7 610 36 23 64 466 Reported Adequacy of Food Intake in India, 1999 -

2000 150 10 7 610 36 23

65 467 IRDP Assistance and Participation in Public Works: 1999-2000

150 10 7 610 36 23

66 471 Nutritional Intake in India, 1999-2000 250 15 10 710 43 2667 472 Differences in the level of consumption among socio

economic groups, 1999-2000 250 15 10 480 32 19

68 473 Literacy and Levels of Education in India, 1999 - 2000 250 15 10 610 36 23 69 474 Sources of household consumption in India, 1999 - 2000 250 15 10 710 43 26 Employment & Unemployment, NSS 55th Round

(July’99 to June 2000)

70 455 Employment and Unemployment in India, 1999-2000 - Key Results

150 10 7 610 36 23

71 458 (Part-I)

Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 1999 - 2000

250 15 10 750 40 28

72 458 (Part-II)

Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 1999 - 2000

250 15 10 1370 73 52

73 460 Non agricultural workers in Informal Sector based on Employment and Unemployment Survey, 1999-2000

150 10 7 610 36 23

74 462 Employment and Unemployment situation in Cities and Towns of India, 1999-2000

150 10 7 610 36 23

75 465 Participation of Indian Women in Household work and other specified activities, 1999-2000

150 10 7 610 36 23

76 468 Employment and Unemployment among religious groups in India, 1999-2000

150 10 7 610 36 23

77 469 Employment and Unemployment among social groups in India, 1999-2000

250 15 10 2950 156 110

78 470 Migration in India, 1999-2000 250 15 10 1140 68 42 continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Non-agricultural Enterprises in Informal Sector 1999-

2000, NSS 55th Round (July’99 to June 2000)

79 456 Non-agricultural Enterprises in the Informal Sector in India, 1999-2000 - Key Results

150 10 7 610 36 23

80 459 Informal Sector in India, 1999 - 2000 - Salient Features 250 15 10 1600 85 60 Consumer Expenditure,

NSS 56th Round (July 2000 - June 2001)

81 476 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment - Unemployment Situation in India, 2000 - 2001

150 10 7 1040 66 41

Unorganised Manufacturing, NSS 56th Round (July 2000 - June 2001)

82 477 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India 2000-2001 - Key Results

250 15 10 710 52 32

83 478 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India 2000-2001 -Characteristics of Enterprises

250 15 10 1370 82 50

84 479 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India, 2000 – 2001: Employment, Assets and Borrowings

250 15 10 1370 82 50

85 480 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India, 2000 – 2001: Input, Output and Value added

250 15 10 1370 82 50

Pilot Survey on Suitability of Reference Period for Measuring Household Consumption

86 475 Results of a Pilot Survey on Suitability of Different Reference Periods for Measuring Household Consumption

150 10 7 610 36 23

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 57th Round (July 2001 - June 2002)

87 481 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment - Unemployment Situation in India, 2001 - 2002

250 15 10 2680 158 105

Unorganised Service Sector, NSS 57th Round (July 2001 - June 2002)

88 482 Unorganised Service Sector in India 2001 - 02 Salient Features

250 15 10 1925 98 65

89 483 Unorganised Service Sector in India 2001 - 02 Characteristics of Enterprises

250 15 10 1370 82 55

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 58th Round (July 2002 - December 2002)

90 484 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment - Unemployment Situation in India, 2002 - 2003

150 8 4 2380 129 70

Disability, NSS 58th Round 91 485 Disabled Persons in India, July-December 2002 250 14 7 7080 385 208 Urban Slums,

NSS 58th Round (July 2002 - December 2002)

92 486 Condition of Urban Slums, 2002: Salient Features 250 14 7 2080 112 62 Village facilities,

NSS 58th Round (July 2002 - December 2002)

93 487 Report on village facilities, July-December 2002 150 8 4 980 53 29 Housing Condition,

NSS 58th Round (July 2002 - December 2002)

94 488 Housing Condition in India, 2002: Housing stock and constructions

250 15 10 9280 548 350

95 489 Housing Condition in India, 2002: Household Amenities and Other Characteristics

250 15 10 9220 524 285

continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 59th Round (January - December 2003)

96 490 Household Consumer Expenditure and Employment - Unemployment Situation in India

150 8 4 1580 85 47

Situation Assessment Survey of Farmers, NSS 59th Round (January - December 2003)

97 495 Consumption Expenditure of Farmer Households, 2003 250 15 10 2140 121 67 98 496 Some Aspects of Farming, 2003 250 15 10 2680 149 8399 497 Income, Expenditure and Productive Assets of Farmer

Households, 2003 250 15 10 3480 209 139

100 498 Indebtedness of Farmer Households 150 8 4 1380 78 43 101 499 Access to Modern Technology for Farming, 2003 250 15 10 1680 93 52 Land & livestock holdings and Debt & Investment,

NSS 59th Round

102 491 Household Ownership Holdings in India, 2003 250 15 10 3680 221 147 103 492 Some Aspects of Operational Land Holdings in India,

2002-03 250 15 10 5080 305 203

104 493 Livestock Ownership Across Operational Land Holding Classes in India, 2002-03

150 8 4 1580 84 42

105 494 Seasonal Variation in the Operational Land Holdings in India, 2002-03

250 15 10 2080 125 83

106 500 Household Assets and Liabilities in India as on 30.06.2002

250 15 10 4880 293 195

107 501 Household Indebtedness in India as on 30.06.2002 250 15 10 6000 360 240 108 502 Household Borrowings and Repayments in India during

1.7.2002 to 30.6.2003 250 15 10 4750 285 190

109 503 Household Assets Holdings, Indebtedness, Current Borrowings and Repayments of Social Groups in India as on 30.06.2002

250 15 10 3880 233 155

110 504 Household Capital Expenditure in India during 1.7.2002 to 30.6.2003

250 15 10 7280 437 291

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 60th Round (January - June 2004)

111 505 Household Consumer Expenditure in India, January - June 2004

150 8 4 2580 138 69

Employment & Unemployment, NSS 60th Round (January - June 2004)

112 506 Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, January - June 2004

250 15 10 3580 202 112

Health, NSS 60th Round (January - June 2004) 113 507 Morbidity, Health Care and the Condition of the Aged 250 15 10 4480 269 179 Consumer Expenditure, NSS 61st Round

(July 2004 - June 2005)

114 508 Level and Pattern of Consumer Expenditure, 2004-05 250 16 8 5080 322 163 115 509

Vol. I Household Consumption of Various Goods and Services in India, 2004-05 Vol. I

250 16 8 4480 284 144

116 509 Vol. II

Household Consumption of Various Goods and Services in India, 2004-05 Vol. II

250 16 8 4080 259 131

continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Consumer Expenditure, NSS 61st Round

(July 2004 - June 2005)

117 510 Vol. I

Public Distribution System and Other Sources of Household Consumption, 2004-05 Vol. I

250 16 8 3880 246 124

118 510 Vol. II

Public Distribution System and Other Sources of Household Consumption, 2004-05 Vol. II

250 16 8 3680 234 118

119 511 Energy Sources of Indian Households for Cooking and Lighting, 2004-05

250 16 8 2480 157 79

120 512 Perceived Adequacy of Food Consumption in Indian Households 2004-2005

150 10 5 1780 113 57

121 513 Nutritional intake in India, 2004-2005 250 16 8 3680 234 118 122 514 Household Consumer Expenditure among Socio-

Economic Groups: 2004 - 2005 250 16 8 2880 183 92

Employment & Unemployment, NSS 61st Round (July 2004 - June 2005)

123 515 (Part-I)

Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 2004-05 (Part-I)

250 16 8 4680 297 150

124 515 (Part-II)

Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 2004-05 (Part-II)

250 16 8 4680 297 150

125 516 Employment and Unemployment Situation Among Social Groups in India, 2004-05

250 16 8 3680 234 118

126 517 Status of Education and Vocational Training in India 2004-2005

250 16 8 2680 170 86

127 518 Participation of Women in Specified Activities along with Domestic Duties

150 10 5 1380 88 44

128 519 (Part-I)

Informal Sector and Conditions of Employment in India, 2004-05(Part-I)

250 16 8 3880 246 124

129 519 (Part-II)

Informal Sector and Conditions of Employment in India, 2004-05(Part-II)

250 16 8 4480 284 144

130 520 Employment and Unemployment Situation in Cities and Towns in India, 2004-2005

150 10 5 1570 100 50

131 521 Employment and Unemployment Situation among Major Religious Groups in India, 2004-05

250 16 8 2480 157 79

Employment & Unemployment, NSS 62nd Round (July 2005 - June 2006)

132 522 Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 2005-06

250 16 8 4480 284 144

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 62nd Round (July 2005 - June 2006)

133 523 Household Consumer Expenditure in India, 2005-06 150 10 5 1380 88 44 Unorganised Manufacturing Enterprises,

NSS 62nd Round (July 2005 - June 2006)

134 524 Operational Characteristics of Unorganised Manufacturing Enterprises in India, 2005-06

250 16 8 4880 310 156

135 525 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India, 2005-06 – Employment, Assets and Borrowings

250 16 8 2880 183 92

136 526 Unorganised Manufacturing Sector in India, 2005-06 – Input, Output and Value Added

250 16 8 4280 272 137

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 63rd Round (July 2006 - June 2007)

137 527 Household Consumer Expenditure in India, 2006 - 07 150 7 5 1380 69 48 continued

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(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Service Sector Enterprises, NSS 63rd Round

(July 2006 - June 2007)

138 528 Service Sector in India (2006-07): Operational Characteristics of Enterprises

250 12 9 880 44 30

139 529 Service Sector in India (2006-07): Economic Characteristics of Enterprises

250 13 8 1280 68 43

Consumer Expenditure, NSS 64th Round (July 2007 - June 2008)

140 530 Household Consumer Expenditure in India, 2007-08 150 8 5 1380 75 48 Employment & Unemployment and Migration

Particulars, NSS 64th Round (July 2007 - June 2008)

141 531 Employment and Unemployment Situation in India, 2007-08

250 14 9 4080 221 152

142 533 Migration in India, 2007-2008 250 14 9 2280 123 85 Participation & Expenditure on Education

NSS 64th Round (July 2007 - June 2008)

143 532 Education in India : 2007-08 Participation and Expenditure

250 14 9 6280 345 232

Particulars of Slum NSS 65th Round (July 2008 - June 2009)

144 534 Some Characteristics of Urban Slums, 2008-09 150 8 6 1180 64 44 Domestic Tourism

NSS 65th Round (July 2008 - June 2009)

145 536 Domestic Tourism in India, 2008-09 430 24 15 860 48 31

Copies are available with the Dy. Director General, SDRD, NSSO, 164, Gopal Lal Tagore Road, Kolkata-700 108 on payment basis through Demand Draft drawn in favour of “Pay & Accounts Officer, Ministry of Statistics & P.I., Kolkata”. Postal Charges will be Rs. 85/- by Speed Post and Rs. 30/- by Regd. Parcel for single copy within India.