Business Standard

Covid to change data collection for official stats

Mobiles, apps to play an integral role

- DILASHA SETH

The pandemic may structural­ly change the way data is collected for official statistics.

The government is examining options, including the use of mobile applicatio­ns for reporting price data to compute retail inflation.

Through an applicatio­nbased system, shopkeeper­s will be able to update price informatio­n in a format every month, partly doing away with the need for visits by field investigat­ors. The objective is to ensure sustained data quality and collection amid a lockdown or a pandemic-type of situation in the future as well.

With closed shops and markets, field officers worked remotely and collected informatio­n on the telephone in April for the consumer price index, raising concern on data accuracy.

Chief Statistici­an Pravin Srivastava said alternativ­e methods of data collection such as telephone or mobile applicatio­ns would need to be institutio­nalised. “We used the telephonic way of price reporting, but in an informal manner, in April. We will start working to institutio­nalise alternativ­e data collection,” he said.

Despite a telephone- or appbased system, one may need to follow it up with the shopkeeper­s to upload correct data.

Monthly price data is collected from 1,114 markets in 310 select towns by the field operations division of the statistics ministry and the specified state/union territorie­s’ directorat­es of economics and statistics. Apart from this, the department of posts collects data from 1,181 select villages.

As for challenges related to the telephonic method, Srivastava said it was possible that a shopkeeper might not respond during the peak time and hence correct informatio­n might not be available. The National Statistica­l Office is exchanging ideas with internatio­nal agencies about handling data and statistics amid the pandemic situation.

Pronab Sen, former chief statistici­an, who is heading a committee to improve data quality, said telephonic- or app-based collection would become a norm. “An applicatio­n-based data collection will

work as you can pick up specific shops or data outlets and give price data in a standard format. But the problem will arise if there is confusion about the product itself,” he said.

On retail inflation, data comparabil­ity is the key. If the category is basmati rice, you need to gather price for only the specific quality of it; if it is 100 gm of Colgate, the data input cannot be for 100 gm of Pepsodent, Sen said.

The telephonic system may be problemati­c because shopkeeper­s may be wary of providing data if they do not know the field officers. “They may think the data may be used by their competitor, and that will affect their response. Initially, it will be important to build contacts with the data source,” Sen said.

Alternativ­e sources of data will need to be looked at to see whether the data is in the same range or not. Sample surveys will be an issue, with telephonic reporting not possible in that.

“We used the telephonic way of price reporting, but in an informal manner, in April. We will start working to institutio­nalise alternativ­e data collection” PRAVIN SRIVASTAVA Chief statistici­an

“An applicatio­n-based data collection will work as you can pick up specific shops or data outlets and give price data in a standard format. But the problem will arise if there is confusion about the product itself” PRONAB SEN Former chief statistici­an

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