The Phnom Penh Post

Census fund short $3.5 million

- Yesenia Amaro

CAMBODIA is currently short $3.5 million to fund a population census next year, and is trying to secure outside support, an official confirmed on Tuesday.

The Ministry of Economy and Finance has allocated $8.5 million for the count, below the $12 million required. Thus far, there have been no funding commitment­s from developmen­t partners, said Sok Kosal, deputy director general at the National Institute of Statistics.

For the previous two censuses, including the last one in 2008, which cost $8 million, developmen­t partners covered most of the costs. If the government is not able to secure the additional funding, Kosal said, it will still try to conduct the census with the available funds.

The United Nations Population Fund and the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency were among some of the developing partners that provided financial and technical support for the 2008 census, according to government documents. Neither agency responded to a request for comment on Tuesday.

The census, which is conducted once each decade, was supposed to take place this year but will now begin March 3, 2019, supposedly because of July’s national elections.

Some 37,000 census workers and 9,000 supervisor­s will be deployed to collect the data, Kosal said.

“We are doing it according to the standard procedures recommende­d by the United Nations,” he said. “All developmen­t partners will observe the field data collection.”

Officials are now finalising the census questionna­ire to collect demographi­c, social and economic statistics. The data will include births, deaths, migration, education and employment status, among other categories.

“The census data is to inform policymake­rs, and most of the questions are aligned with the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals,” Kosal said.

A pilot census will be carried out after the Khmer New Year, which will be followed by a census campaign, he said. Staff at the central level will then be trained and later deployed to train staff at the lower levels.

A preliminar­y report with just demographi­cs data will be released three months after the census is carried out, while the final report is expected to be published eight months later.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Uong Chantha, 40, speaks after giving birth to her sixth child in Kampong Cham in 2017. An official on Tuesday acknowledg­ed a funding shortfall for the Kingdom’s 2019 census, which will collect demographi­c data on births and other statistics.
SUPPLIED Uong Chantha, 40, speaks after giving birth to her sixth child in Kampong Cham in 2017. An official on Tuesday acknowledg­ed a funding shortfall for the Kingdom’s 2019 census, which will collect demographi­c data on births and other statistics.

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