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Statistics reach a 'crisis point': nations struggle with a critical lack of data

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Why This Matters

The growing crisis in official government data threatens the foundation of informed policymaking, economic planning, and sustainable development worldwide. As trust in these statistics diminishes, the accuracy and reliability of critical information for addressing global challenges are at risk, impacting both industry and consumers. Ensuring data integrity is essential for effective decision-making and progress towards shared goals.

Key Takeaways

“Uncertainty.”

“Loss of trust.”

“Definitely a crisis.”

These are some of the ways in which researchers describe the state of affairs for government data in many countries.

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“There is a new type of politics that is undermining the credibility of official statistics,” says João Pedro Azevedo, chief statistician for the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF in New York City.

Official statistics are data collected and validated by both national statistical agencies and international organizations. Nearly every country has an agency for official statistics. They collect information and organize it into statistics about myriad aspects of life, including what people earn, how many individuals are employed, how well children perform in school, the quality of nutrition, how long patients have to wait for an operation, levels of air pollution and increases to average temperatures.

National agencies collect data through surveys and from secondary sources. These data sets are used by governments to inform policy, by businesses to plan for the future, and by researchers and advocacy organizations. Official statistics, such as those measuring nations’ gross domestic product (GDP), are also the foundation for monitoring progress towards the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals, the world’s plan to end poverty and achieve environmental sustainability.

“Official statistics are like the backbone of a nation’s data infrastructure,” says Steve Pierson, director of science policy at the American Statistical Association (ASA) in Washington DC. “Just like any other infrastructure — roads, bridges and highways — they cannot fail.”

People who work with or study official statistics say that they have never experienced a period similar to today’s situation. Those who call the current state a crisis think it has been triggered by an accumulation of overlapping factors. These include falling response rates to national surveys, cuts to funding and, in some cases, government interference.

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