1 / 19

Assessing National Statistical Systems PARIS21 Task Team Meeting Washington, DC May 21-23, 2001

Assessing National Statistical Systems PARIS21 Task Team Meeting Washington, DC May 21-23, 2001. Principles of official statistics. Statistical system is part of the information system, provides statistical data as a public good.

Download Presentation

Assessing National Statistical Systems PARIS21 Task Team Meeting Washington, DC May 21-23, 2001

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assessing National Statistical Systems PARIS21 Task Team Meeting Washington, DCMay 21-23, 2001

  2. Principles of official statistics • Statistical system is part of the information system, provides statistical data as a public good. • Statistical agencies make decisions on the methods and procedures for the collection, processing, storage and presentation of statistical data. • Presents data in a certain format. • Statistical agencies are entitled to comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse of statistics.

  3. Principles of official statistics (cont.) • Draws data from statistical surveys and administrative records. • Data collected by statistical agencies are to be strictly confidential and used exclusively for statistical purposes. • The laws, regulations and measures under which the statistical systems operate are to be made public.

  4. Principles of official statistics (cont.) • Coordination among statistical agencies is essential. • Statistical agencies use international concepts, classifications and methods promotes the consistency and efficiency of statistical systems at all official levels. • Bilateral and multilateral cooperation in statistics contributes to the improvement of systems of official statistics in all countries.

  5. Assessments of National Statistical System • Review current outputs and assess their relevance to users. • Determine national priority statistical outputs, their contents and periodicity. • Define the information production system, including data collection, processing, storage and dissemination capabilities. • Propose an adequate legislative and institutional framework. • Propose a statistical development plan.

  6. Components of a National Statistical System

  7. The structure of the national statistical system • National Statistical Agency. • Line ministries. • Regional and local offices.

  8. Coordination and management • Centralized. • Decentralized. • Strategies and targets.

  9. Human resources • General management. • Financial management. • Human resource management. • Technical statistical analysis. • Survey design and management. • Cartography. • Communications, publications and design. • Computer systems analysis and programming.

  10. Infrastructure and equipment For • Data collection. • Data processing and analysis. • Data dissemination. To • Increase efficiency. • Increase accessibility. • Reduce costs.

  11. Management Process The ways a statistical agency is managed. For: • Setting goals. • Developing system wide values. • Measuring progress. • Assessing staff performance. • Communicating at all levels.

  12. Components of a National Statistical System

  13. The statistical legislation The statistical law governs: • The responsibilities and functions of the statistical agency. • The organizational structure of the national statistical system. • The rules for the obligatory supply of information. • The relationships between data suppliers and users. • Being accountable for its actions and outputs on a regular basis.

  14. Statistical legislation (cont.) Statistical law guarantees: • Confidentiality and non-disclosure of information supplied. • Publishing and disseminating information free from political interference. • Preparing and publishing an advance publication calendar. • Independence of the statistical agency from political control.

  15. Budgets • Statistics are a public good and financed from government revenue allocated through the budget. • The capacity of the statistical system is determined to a large extent by the level and stability of the financial resources it receives. • The more successful national statistical systems are ones where increased resources are seen to result in improved outputs. • Balancing donor funding and budgetary funding and improving budget management.

  16. Accountability and reporting • Accountability and reporting must be open, transparent and regular on • how those resources have been used • what products have been produced and • what plans are in place to improve performance. • The statistical agency may be required to make an annual report to • parliament or • to an independent statistical commission or board.

  17. Relationships with users and customers • A wide spectrum of users - policy makers, administrators, planners, researchers, activists, citizens, students, and media representatives. • The needs of users can be explored formally or informally. • Scientific cooperation with professional associations, institutes, universities, and scholars.

  18. Relationships with users and customers (cont.) Consultation with users and suppliers for: • Planning services to best meet the needs and expectations of users. • Monitoring the effectiveness of services and the load placed on suppliers. • Prioritizing services and resources. • Setting relevant performance standards. • Fostering good relations. • Providing early warning of problems.

  19. The public image of the statistical system • Being more open about methods, techniques and how resources are being used. • Campaigning for the need for reliable, trustworthy and timely data. • Improving the design and structure of statistical reports, abstracts and other products. • Providing training and special briefings for data users. • Providing briefings for journalists and other media workers. • Using external processes to provide a framework against which progress can be assessed.

More Related