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Use of Non-Official Sources for International Food Security and Agricultural Statistics

Use of Non-Official Sources for International Food Security and Agricultural Statistics. Carlo Cafiero , Pietro Gennari and Steve Katz FAO Statistics Division. European Conference on Quality in Official Statistics ( Q2014) - June 5 th 2014. Outline. Background and Context

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Use of Non-Official Sources for International Food Security and Agricultural Statistics

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  1. Use of Non-Official Sources for International Food Security and Agricultural Statistics Carlo Cafiero, Pietro Gennari and Steve Katz FAO Statistics Division European Conference on Quality in Official Statistics (Q2014) - June 5th 2014

  2. Outline • Background and Context • Role of IOs as Producers of Official Stats • Why and When to use Non-Official Sources • FAO Examples • “Voices of the Hungry” Project as Case-Study • Reflections and Conclusions

  3. Background and Context • Tension between NSOs and IOs due to data discrepancies and use of non-official sources (HDR, MDG database, Big Data) • Resulting in specific UNSC recommendations: • 37thSession (2006) – On imputation and SCB • 42nd Session (2011) – On enhanced coordination of statistics within the UN system • CCSA discussions on imputation practices and use of non-official sources • 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 • 2013: adoption of “Recommended Practices on the Use of non-Official Sources in International Statistics”

  4. Role of IOs as producers of OS • Clear role of national governments for official statistics; Role of IOs more controversial • Widespread view: limited to compiling existing governmental statistics • SDMX guidelines: official statistics also apply to Intergovernmental Organizations • Assumes Member States endorse statistical programmes of IOs, which is not always the case • Added value: transformation of national data into international “Global Public Goods”, standardized and comparable across countries • Requires: dedicated attention to quality and good governance

  5. Why and When to use Non-Official Sources • To ensure data harmonization and comparability across countries and regions • To validate official data, to increase their accuracy and comprehensiveness • Politically sensitive data may affect availability/quality of some official sources • To fill missing values/overcome confidentiality issues • To produce indicators not covered by official statistics: • Difficulty of the NSS to address new demands (real-time data, new thematic areas) • But ONLY when all possibilities of using national data have been exhausted

  6. Use of Non-official Sources at FAO • Fertilizer Production, Trade and Consumption • Main source is official statistics from countries, but additional data from the International Fertilizer Association (MoU) • Early Warning and Emergency Preparedness Needs • Real-time data not available from official sources • Developing countries affected by emergencies lack the expertise needed • Data from news agencies, extension services, satellite images; • Crowdsourcing: Price data tool collects price information for food products on retail/wholesale markets • Voices of the Hungry Project as a Case Study

  7. “Voices of The Hungry” Case Study Issue being Addressed • Monitoring Food Insecurity is crucial to fight hunger • Post 2015 Development Agenda requires creation of new indicators for global and national monitoring (food access) • Global Monitoring cannot be based on national sources in the short-term • Voices of the Hungry Project addresses this gap

  8. “Voices of The Hungry” Case Study (cont.) Methodology and Benefits • Direct measure of people’s food insecurity in a timely and cost-effective way • Short questionnaire as integral part of annual survey conducted by Gallup Inc. in 150 countries worldwide • Based on nationally representative samples • Can help in assessing emergency needs after famine or natural disasters • Recommended as a key indicator for the monitoring framework of the Post 2015 Development Agenda • Governments to adopt the indictor for targeted intervention, and monitoring/measuring impact of policies/programmes

  9. “Voices of The Hungry” Case Study (cont.) Quality Assurance Mechanisms • Rigorous UN Procurement Rules adopted for the selection of data supplier • Methodology Field-Tested: initially in 4 African countries • Validation Studies: before adoption of a universal Scale of measurement • Quality Stamp: FAO responsible for integrity and comparability of the different questionnaire language versions • Sustainability: Long-term contract with Gallup Inc.; World Bank and WHO have similar project arrangements • Capacity Development: FAO to assist countries to include the Scale in future national household surveys; countries to eventually to take over data collection function • External Review: All micro-data and methodology for its analysis will be publicly available

  10. Reflections and Conclusions • IOs add value as provider of internationally comparable data as Global Public Goods • Use of non-official data with the ultimate goal of providing higher quality and wider scope of service • Various compelling reasons, including to fill gaps or meet emerging needs • Choice of official or non-official sources to be based purely on professional considerations • Be combined with capacity development work for eventual national handover and sustainability

  11. Reflections and Conclusions (cont.) • Use of non-official sources may create tension between IOs and NSOs • Instruments needed to mitigate this tension: • Full disclosure of methods/sources • Quality assurance frameworks • Stronger country involvement • Particularly, strengthened statistics governance systems where Members endorse the statistical programmes of IOs and peer-review data • FAO: new QAF adopted; Global Commission on Statistics to be established in 2015

  12. Thank You!

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