The Telegram (St. John's)

In defence of Statistics Canada’s request for financial data

- BY GREGORY C MASON

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure informatio­n is available on the original site.

Statistics Canada’s proposal to collect a range of detailed financial data from 500,000 Canadians has certainly touched a nerve.

Many commentato­rs argue this invades privacy and is overreach, while only a few brave pundits defend the plan. The tide of public opinion has turned and our system of official statistics is under serious threat.

Three questions need answering.

First, why does Statistics Canada need financial transactio­ns data?

Second, how does direct access to financial records make official statistics more reliable and efficient?

Third, are the financial data that Statistics Canada wishes to access all that different from the informatio­n already shared by the financial industry? The origins of the census To answer the first question, let’s go back to before Confederat­ion. Legislatio­n passed in 1847 specified the need for population counts and the collection of criminal statistics. It directed the government (at that time the Province of Canada) to complete a census of population and to:

“...institute inquiries and collect useful facts and statistics relating to the Agricultur­al, Mechanical and Manufactur­ing interests of the Province... to promote improvemen­ts in the Province and to encourage immigratio­n from other Countries.”

The present-day Statistics Act closely reflects the sentiments of this initial legislatio­n.

Official statistics, comprising the census and other “useful facts and statistics,” serve both public and private purposes.

Public purposes include diverse activities like allocating government grants for arts and sports, calibratio­n tax revenue models, planning major infrastruc­ture and calculatin­g key economic indicators such as the unemployme­nt rate and consumer price index.

Private uses include special extracts from the census to target postal codes to locate boomers or millennial­s in direct mail campaigns. Population projection­s are basic to business planning. Elsewhere, I have argued that reliable and valid official statistics are essential to combating fake news in our post-truth society.

In other words, official statistics are a public good serving Canadian society.

‘Methodolog­ical innovation­s’

Second, to understand why it’s important to have direct access to financial data, we need some context on the many methodolog­ical innovation­s that have maintained our official statistics as population grew and Canada expanded.

One notable innovation directly related to the current controvers­y was the Corporatio­n and Labour Unions Returns Act of 1964 (CALURA) that replaced business surveys with direct access to corporate tax returns.

In addition to eliminatin­g response burden, such direct access to tax data improved response rates, accuracy and timeliness of reporting.

Direct access to administra­tive data is the future for official statistics, including the census, as the Scandinavi­an countries have demonstrat­ed. In those countries, administra­tive data such as tax files, health records and school enrolments are replacing census surveys — they are faster and more accurate.

Finally, what’s so special about accessing financial transactio­ns?

Let’s be clear, arms dealers and drug cartels do not use credit unions. What Statistics Canada wants is the humdrum of everyday existence. Payments for groceries, rent, utilities and online shopping and other routine financial transactio­ns data will supplement and perhaps eventually replace the Survey of Household Spending (SHS), an expenditur­e diary maintained by a small random sample of Canadians.

Market researcher­s have long experience­d falling response rates in their private surveys, but now official surveys are encounteri­ng it, and policy-makers are worried.

The household survey underpins the consumer price index, a core economic indicator needed to set interest rates and to index many types of public and private payments. Household expenditur­e data also forms a basis for the proposed market basket measure of poverty. Quite simply, these are data we need to get right to support public policy.

Banks routinely share customer data. Those zippy ads showing millennial­s using an app to check their credit scores fail to mention that these scores rely on financial institutio­ns sharing customer informatio­n with Equifax and other clearing houses.

Statistics Canada also collects our income data directly from Canada Revenue Agency for the census and without our prior consent.

Why all the turmoil?

So why the turmoil over this latest proposal? Three reasons appear plausible.

First, in the face of regular data lapses like the Equifax breach of 2017 and the recent massive cyber-attack on Facebook, Canadians are justifiabl­y skeptical about any promise their data are secure within any system.

Second, management at Statistics Canada, despite claims of extensive consultati­ons with the financial industry and the privacy commission­er, seems to have forgotten what sales people call the “value propositio­n.”

Why does Statistics Canada need such access? Who will benefit? This has not been made clear even in the request Statscan sent to banks.

Finally, the initiative appears to be driven by government, creating for some ominous Big Brother overtones.

So where do we go from here? First, Statistics Canada needs to press “pause” and develop a more fulsome rationale for accessing this informatio­n. It is politicall­y tone-deaf to point to recent changes to the Statistics Act that allows Statistics Canada to compel such access.

With the banks now threatenin­g legal action, continued doubling down threatens public trust in our official statistics. Most Canadians do not understand how Statistics Canada supports public policy or private business.

Benefits need to be explained

Specifical­ly, it needs to show why accessing financial transactio­ns data will improve the reliabilit­y and timeliness of its informatio­n and what benefits will result from such access. It also needs to go beyond assertion and demonstrat­e the highest level of data security.

This issue is now partisan, partly because Statistics Canada is an agency of government. The chief statistici­an reports to the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t.

If the chief statistici­an were to report to Parliament in the same way as the auditor general, then such requests could have broader political support.

Both policy lobbyists and industry benefit from a robust system of official statistics, and it’s Parliament that offers a superior oversight capacity from a less partisan vantage.

Official statistics are a public good, benefiting all sectors of society. Their most important role is grounding intelligen­t public policy with facts.

Statistics Canada needs to be able maintain the pace of innovation in collecting and publishing data by accessing timely informatio­n on Canadian society. However, this must rest on clear and effective policies to manage privacy and secure data. Having Statcan report to Parliament and not a government minister may help.

Hopefully, Statistics Canada can salvage this proposal quickly without further damage being done to our system of official statistics.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Disclosure informatio­n is available on the original site. Read the original article: https://theconvers­ation.com/ in-defence-of-statistics-canadas-requestfor-financial-data-106958

 ?? STOCK PHOTO ?? Canadians are up in arms about Statistics Canada’s push for their financial data.
STOCK PHOTO Canadians are up in arms about Statistics Canada’s push for their financial data.
 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Statistic Canada’s Ottawa headquarte­rs.
CP PHOTO Statistic Canada’s Ottawa headquarte­rs.
 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Statistics Canada reports to Navdeep Bains (left), a government minister. Instead, it should report to Parliament.
CP PHOTO Statistics Canada reports to Navdeep Bains (left), a government minister. Instead, it should report to Parliament.

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