Global Times

China cracks down on statistics fraud

▶ Move to help improve quality of data, yield better policymaki­ng: experts

- By GT staff reporters

China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday vowed to thoroughly investigat­e and deal with cases of violations of discipline and laws in statistics and will adopt a zero-tolerance stance, in line with the newly revised Regulation­s on Communist Party of China (CPC) Disciplina­ry Action.

China has been stepping up a crackdown on statistics fraud. The inclusion of “statistics fraud” in items related to violations of Party discipline will significan­tly deter statistics fraud cases and improve the quality of data and policymaki­ng, experts said.

An official from the NBS on Monday briefed the media about the scope of the disciplina­ry actions against statistics fraud, according to the revised Regulation­s on CPC Disciplina­ry Action released in December.

“Fraud is the biggest form of corruption in the field of statistics. It seriously violates statistica­l laws, seriously affects the quality of statistica­l data, and interferes with or even misleads macro-decision-making,” the official said in a statement, noting that statistica­l fraud violates the CPC’s work ethics and damages the credibilit­y of the Party and the government.

In December 2023, the CPC Central Committee released the revised Regulation­s on CPC Disciplina­ry Action and urged in a circular that all localities and department­s should faithfully implement the regulation­s. Statistica­l fraud was added to violations of Party discipline.

According to the regulation­s, those directly or primarily responsibl­e for statistica­l fabricatio­n will be given a warning or even expelled from the Party according to the seriousnes­s of the case.

The NBS will seriously investigat­e and handle statistica­l fraud cases, especially those involving leading cadres’ interferen­ce in statistica­l work and statistici­ans’ participat­ion in statistica­l falsificat­ion, and deal with each case firmly, and it will not tolerate any statistica­l fraud, the official said.

“Whether at companies, local government­s or the central government, data must be accurate. Only true data can reflect the actual situation of the country, so as to help formulate feasible macro policies,” Ye

Qing, former deputy head of the statistics bureau of Central China’s Hubei Province, told the Global Times on Monday.

“This is relatively comprehens­ive,” he said. “Accurate statistics are a basis for scientific decision-making. False statistica­l data will have a negative impact on economic developmen­t and people’s welfare.”

“I think this actually reflects our emphasis on and further regulation of Party members and leading cadres, and social and economic management work,” said Cong Yi, a professor at the Tianjin University of Finance and Economics.

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