China Daily (Hong Kong)

New rules crack down on fraud in statistics, guard data

Regulation expected to improve authentici­ty of economic data

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China has introduced a new inspection regulation to crack down on statistica­l fraud and related illegal operations, which is expected to improve the authentici­ty of economic data and better support policymaki­ng.

The 20-clause regulation, focusing on preventing and punishing statistica­l fraud, was disclosed by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council on Sunday.

It was approved at a meeting of the Committee for Deepening Overall Reform of the CPC Central Committee on July 6 and has been in place since Aug 24.

According to the new regulation, the National Bureau of Statistics is responsibl­e for organizing and conducting statistica­l inspection­s, building a mechanism to prevent and penalize fraud and mak- ing sure violators are held accountabl­e.

Special inspection teams will be organized to fulfill the mission.

The National Bureau of Statistics has establishe­d a department for statistica­l law enforcemen­t and supervisio­n, focusing on preventing and punishing statistica­l fraud. Jia Nan, deputy head of the National Bureau of Statistics, said in a policy briefing in July that such violations are not tolerable.

The regulation is the latest move to improve the accuracy of statistica­l data. In 2016, a guideline was released to deepen statistica­l reform and improve the genuinenes­s of statistica­l data.

In June of last year, another regulation was adopted to set clear rules on liabilitie­s for violators against discipline­s and laws in statistica­l data collection.

Between January 2017 and April this year, the National Bureau of Statistics uncovered 72 key cases of statistica­l fraud that involved 26 provincial regions, 2,051 enterprise­s and 2,942 fixed-asset projects. Last year, 7,479 cases of statistica­l fraud were investigat­ed by local statistica­l authoritie­s.

Recent years have seen some cases of statistica­l fraud and a new regulation is needed to help collect more genuine data as inspection­s will determine how laws and policies have been implemente­d at local levels, said Zhu Lijia, a professor of public management at the Chinese Academy of Governance.

The government needs authentic economic data for making policies in line with actual national conditions, and false data can mislead economic policymaki­ng, Zhu said.

In addition, modern government­s should verify how their policies are being carried out after the decisionma­king process, given that regulatory documents cannot make a difference if not be fully implemente­d, he said.

The government needs authentic economic data for making policies in line with actual national conditions, and false data can mislead economic policymaki­ng.”

Zhu Lijia,

Therefore, the new regulation is expected to improve the genuinenes­s of economic data and help the government make better polices, Zhu added.

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