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United Nations Statistics Division and the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics

This workshop aims to provide countries in South Asia with an introduction to the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics and discuss their implementation. Topics include recent initiatives, international coordination, and the UNSD portal for developing national statistical systems.

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United Nations Statistics Division and the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics

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  1. Workshop on the organization of National Statistical Systems and user-producer relations for countries in South Asia Colombo, Sri Lanka, 22 – 24 July 2008 United Nations Statistics Division and the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics Stefan Schweinfest United Nations Statistics Division

  2. Introduction to the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics Overview 1 2 • Implementation of the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics: selected results of an UNSD survey 3 • Recent initiatives to promote the Principles • International Principles • UNSD portal for the Development of National Statistical Systems

  3. 1 • Introduction to the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics

  4. 1 Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics Historical Background: 1979 Code of Conduct for Statisticians, American Statistical Association 1991 Adopted by the Conference of European Statistician 1994 Adopted by the UN Statistical Commission 1985 Declaration on Professional Ethics, ISI • 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall  moving from ‘centrally planned economies’ to ‘market economies’, requiring: • -sound statistical information systems to drive policy making • -confidence of the public in statistics

  5. 1 Fundamental Principles: The 10 Commandments • Principle 1: Relevance, impartiality and equal access • Principle 2: Professionalism • Principle 3: Accountability and transparancy • Principle 4: Prevention of misuse • Principle 5: Cost-effectiveness • Principle 6: Confidentiality • Principle 7: Legislation • Principle 8: National co-ordination • Principle 9: International co-ordination • Principle 10: International statistical co-operation

  6. …some explanation (1) • Principle 1: Relevance, impartiality and equal access • Serve users on an impartial basis • Statistics should meet the test of practical utility (demand-driven rather than supply-driven) • Principles 2, 3, 7: Professionalism, Accountability, Legislation • Specify the scientific approach a statistician should adopt: honour impartiality, reliability, relevance and transparency • Principle 4: Prevention of misuse • Statistical agencies to comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse of statistics and statistically educate major stakeholders

  7. …some explanation (2) • Principle 5: Cost-effectiveness • Collect only the data required for the purpose of the enquiry, avoiding over burden of respondents and respecting privacy • Principle 6, 8 : Confidentiality, National co-ordination • Greater trust of raw data suppliers result in better quality of data supplied • Coherence and consistency, effective use of scarce resources • Principle 9, 10: International co-ordination, International statistical co-operation • Adoption of international concepts, classifications, practices • Formulation and establishment of international standards and practices

  8. 2 • Implementation of the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics

  9. 2 Implementation of the Fundamental Principles • Results of a UNSD survey (May-Nov. 2003), presented at 34th session of UN Statistical Commission, March 2004 • 54 questions • 112 out of 194 countries replied Scale used: 1. Fully implemented 2. Largely implemented 3. Somewhat implemented 4. Not implemented

  10. P1 Relevance, impartiality and equal access • “Official statistics need to meet the test of practical utility and need to be made available on an impartial basis by official statistical agencies to honour citizens’ entitlement to public information” Fully implemented in 44% and Largely implemented in 45% of responding countries

  11. P2 Professional standards and ethics • “To retain trust in official statistics, the statistical agencies need to decide according to strictly professional considerations, including scientific principles and professional ethics, on the methods and procedures for the collection, processing, storage and presentation of statistical data” Fully implemented in 59% and Largely implemented in 37% of responding countries

  12. P3 Accountability and transparency • “To facilitate a correct interpretation of the data, the statistical agencies are to present information according to scientific standards on the sources, methods and procedures of the statistics” Fully implemented in 43% and Largely implemented in 50% of responding countries

  13. P4 Prevention of misuse • “The statistical agencies are entitled to comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse of statistics” Fully implemented in 37% and Largely implemented in 37% of responding countries

  14. P5 Sources of official statistics • “Data for statistical purposes may be drawn from all types of sources, be they statistical surveys or administrative records. Statistical agencies are to choose the source with regard to quality, timeliness, costs and the burden on respondents” Fully implemented in 49% and Largely implemented in 42% of responding countries

  15. P6 Confidentiality • “Individual data collected by statistical agencies for statistical compilation, whether they refer to natural or legal persons, are to be strictly confidential and used exclusively for statistical purposes” Fully implemented in 80% and Largely implemented in 19% of responding countries

  16. P7 Legislation “The laws, regulations and measures under which the statistical systems operate are to be made public” Fully implemented in 77% and Largely implemented in 17% of responding countries

  17. P8 National coordination “Coordination among statistical agencies within countries is essential to achieve consistency and efficiency in the statistical system” Fully implemented in 31% and Largely implemented in 44% of responding countries

  18. P9 Use of international standards • “The use by statistical agencies in each country of international concepts, classifications and methods promotes the consistency and efficiency of statistical systems at all official levels” Fully implemented in 45% and Largely implemented in 50% of responding countries

  19. P10 International cooperation • “Bilateral and multilateral cooperation in statistics contributes to the improvement of systems of official statistics in all countries”

  20. Major conclusions of survey • Fundamental Principles seem well implemented • Best implemented principles are: • Confidentiality (principle 6) • Legislation, although some reported law is outdated (principle 7) • Least implemented are: • Prevention of misuse (principle 4) • National coordination (principle 8) • Major problem areas preventing a better implementation of the principles: • Authorized and unauthorized disclosure of individual data; • Political interference at the dissemination stage; • Need to adapt international standards to national circumstances • Lack of resources

  21. 3 • Recent initiatives to promote the Principles

  22. UNSD Good Practices Database • Database containing 323 documents on countries’ implementation of the Fundamental Principles • Relevance, impartiality and equal access = 196 documents • Legislation = 180 documents • Confidentiality = 114 documents • 82 countries contributed

  23. Principles Governing International Statistical Activities • Endorsed by the Committee for the Coordination of Statistical Activities on 14 September, 2005 • Chief Statisticians or coordinators of statistical activities of United Nations agencies and related organizations, agreed to implement the International Principles toenhance the functioning of the international statistical system • Principles as basis for quality assessment frameworks (CCSA quality conference Rome, July 2008).

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