Now the data can only be messed up by influencing those who collect and process it. This is exactly what happened. An official poverty line, broadly accepted after some initial debate, was applied for the first time to the dataset relating to 2000-01. Though it understated poverty in a period of drought, the resulting estimate of 32.1 percent was viewed bad optics by the finance minister of the military government. The result was withheld and his economic adviser, a contract employee always too eager to please the boss to keep the job, forced the staff of the federal bureau of statistics to retract, but without success.
Systematic preparations were made for the next survey due for 2004-05. By then the finance minister had been elevated to the office of prime minister. A pliable additional secretary in-charge of statistics division who, instead of appointing the senior most officer in the federal bureau of statistics as director general, assumed the office himself, and allowed all the prime minister’s men to micro manage the 2004-05 survey from the word go. They virtually laid siege to the main computer centre of the federal bureau of statistics. Having ensured a dataset of their liking and clandestinely using the staff of the poverty centre of the planning commission to ensure what might be the result, the data was formally handed over to the planning commission. Any one using this dataset and applying the same methodology would come out with the same result. Calling this validation would require a change in the standard understanding of the word.
As I noted in my last column in these pages, the federal bureau of statistics has washed its hands off the 2004-05 HIES (household integrated economic survey) by ignoring to mention it in its latest report. The report introduces the latest HIES thus: “The income and consumption module [for HIES 2010-11] is exactly the same which has been used previously for the HIES 2001-02, HIES 2005-06 and HIES 2007-08.” It’s the data, stupid! The current debate reminds me of the Urdu saying “Chor machaye shor”.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 28th, 2011.
COMMENTS (9)
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@HH: Judging by the way things have been, perhaps never. Also, look at some institutions that are autonomous. Are they delivering?
@vasan: No guesstimates are required. Just plain honesty shall do. No estimate is perfect. Nor those making the estimates. Compulsive lying is what we should guard against.
@Meekal Ahmed: You mean writing?
You are right. It is not the methodology, it is the data, that has been manipulated.
@Pervez Tahir: Everybody has been crying for making FBS an autonomous body for so long. Do you think it will be done in Pakistan???
What would be the best guesstimate of the Pakistani poverty figure ? and Will Pak govt work on the assumption and try to minimize the poverty? Any answers ?
The argument well taken, the fact is that we all are thieves of one kind or the other. I have seen successive regimes claiming to be destined to alleviate poverty in the country. Nothing went beyond drum-beating or in the words of the author Shor Machany.
I'm waiting too.