This table provides metadata for the actual indicator available from United States statistics closest to the corresponding global SDG indicator. Please note that even when the global SDG indicator is fully available from American statistics, this table should be consulted for information on national methodology and other American-specific metadata information.
This table provides information on metadata for SDG indicators as defined by the UN Statistical Commission. Complete global metadata is provided by the UN Statistics Division.
Indicator |
Indicator 1.4.1: Proportion of population living in households with access to basic services |
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Target |
Target 1.4: By 2030, ensure that all men and women, in particular the poor and the vulnerable, have equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to basic services, ownership and control over land and other forms of property, inheritance, natural resources, appropriate new technology and financial services, including microfinance |
Organisation |
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) |
Definition and concepts |
Definition: The proportion of population living in households with access to basic services is defined as the proportion of population using public service provision systems that meet basic human needs including drinking water, sanitation, hygiene, energy, mobility, waste collection, health care, education and information technologies. The basic services indicator is therefore based on 9 components. These components are captured in various standalone indicators of the SDGs, which means that the concepts and definitions of SDG indicator 1.4.1 will be derived from or are the same as those of these specific SDG indicators. Concepts: The term ‘access to basic services’ implies that sufficient and affordable service is reliably available with adequate quality.
For many low and middle-income countries, achieving universal access to basic drinking water, sanitation and hygiene remains a high priority, which will help them achieve access to ‘safely managed services’, the target for SDG targets 6.1 and 6.2.
To eradicate poverty, communities need to be connected to socio-economic opportunities by roads that are passable all season and attract reliable and affordable public transport services. In many areas, safe footpaths, footbridges and waterways may be required in conjunction with, or as an alternative, to roads. For reasons of simplification, specific emphasis was given to roads in this definition (based on the Rural Access Index - RAI - percentage of the population <2km from an all-season road (equivalent to a walk of 20-25 mins)[4])[5] since road transport reflects accessibility for the great majority of people in rural contexts. In those situations where another mode, such as water transport is dominant the definition will be modified and contextualized to reflect and capture those aspects. Access to mobility has shown some of the largest impacts on poverty reduction and has a strong correlation to educational, economic and health outcomes (“transport as an enabler”). RAI is the most widely accepted metric for tracking access to transport in rural areas and has been included in the SDGs as SDG indicator 9.1.1 - Proportion of the rural population who live within 2 km of an all-season road. This component will be therefore captured through SDG 9.1.1. The existing RAI methodology relies on household level survey data – however, is currently being revised into a GIS-based index that exploits advances in digital technology with the aim to create a more accurate and cost-effective tool.
The urban context of access to transport is measured utilizing the methodology of SDG 11.2.1 –Proportion of the population that has convenient access to public transport by sex, age and persons with disabilities. The metadata methodology[6] is available (UN-Habitat being the custodian agency). City delimitation is conducted to identify the urban area which will act as the spatial analysis scope as inventory of available public stops in the service areas is collected. Identification of population served by available street network allows for measurement 500m and/or 1km walkable distance to nearest stop (“service area”). We know that measuring spatial access is not sufficient and does not address the temporal dimension associated with the availability of public transport. Complementary to the above, other parameters of tracking the transport target related to street density/no. of intersections, affordability, or quality in terms of safety, travel time, universal access, are all tracked.
1 https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/files/Metadata-06-01-01.docx ↑ 2 https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/files/Metadata-06-02-01a.docx ↑ 3 https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/files/Metadata-06-02-01b.docx ↑ 4 https://www.ssatp.org/sites/ssatp/files/publications/HTML/Gender-RG/index.html ↑ 6 https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/files/Metadata-11-02-01.pdf ↑ |
Unit of measure |
Proportion of population |
Data sources |
The main sources of data for this indicator remain censuses and household surveys (including DHS, MICS, LSMS)and administrative data. Other datasets could also be used, such as compilations by international or regional initiatives (e.g., Eurostat), studies conducted by research institutes, or technical advice received during country consultations. The data sources used for each of the constituent measures are described in more detail in the reference metadata. |
Data providers |
The main data source for the generation of indicators are national statistics offices; ministries of water, health, education, and environment; regulators of drinking water service providers. UN-Habitat and various supporting agencies such as WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (JMP), UNEP, World Bank, AfDB, IDB, EBRD and ADB and bilateral donors (JICA, GIZ, etc.) provide the estimates for the indicators. |
Comment and limitations |
Different local characteristics of what constitutes “basic services” around the world by some concerned authorities and stakeholders compelled the team to work on modules and global guides for this indicator. This draws on definitions available for many other SDG indicators. For example, elements of basic services are measured under indicators 3.8.1 (health), 4.1.1 (education), 6.1.1 (drinking water), 6.2.1 (sanitation and hygiene), 7.1.1 (energy), 11.2.1 (public transport), etc. Finally, many countries still have limited capacities for data management, data collection and monitoring, and continue to struggle with limited data. This means that complementarity in data reporting in a few exceptions is needed to ensure that both national and global figures achieve consistencies in the final reported data for access to basic services. See the original reference metadata for each of the measures for more details. |
Method of computation |
This indicator is a combination of various components of basic services which on their own are mostly existing as standalone indicators of the SDGs. As a result, the team of experts advised and agreed that these should be presented as a dashboard. Their metadata provide the specific methodologies for computing each of the constituent measures used to report on this indicator. Data presentation Individual components of access to basic services will be computed separately from various data sources over the years. However, the dashboard is configured to display the most recent data points, but with the possibility to visualize data for earlier years through a drilled down access. Data will be presented or visualized as a dashboard but with the possibility to map it out through various visualization tools such as spider web and stellar charts of the achievement of access to different basic services in a country through plotting the various components of the indicators. In this way, policy makers can be informed of most needed intervention areas for any region and country. |
Metadata update |
2023-07-18 |
International organisations(s) responsible for global monitoring |
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (1.4.1a, b and c) |
Related indicators |
SDG global targets 1.2, 2.2, 3.2, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 4.1, 4.a, 5.4, 5.b, 6.1, 6.2, 7.1, 7.2, 9.1 and 11.2. |
UN designated tier |
3 |