Business Standard

India turning from man to machines to get data right

- VRISHTI BENIWAL 28 January

India is turning from man to machines to improve the quality and speed of its economic data, which has been criticized as inadequate, delayed or even confusing due to sharp and unexpected revisions.

The Ministry of Statistics is ramping up use of artificial intelligen­ce for collecting, analyzing and reporting data to better monitor the economy. The measures include a $60 million program with World Bank help using an informatio­n portal that collates real-time data.

“Because of the changing landscape, there’s a growing need for more and more data, faster data and also more refined data products,” Statistics Secretary Kshatrapat­i Shivaji said in an interview. With end-to-end computeriz­ation, “this type of automation will enhance the quality, credibilit­y and timeliness of data.”

The quality of its economic numbers is a pressing issue for India following numerous controvers­ies over its data. While the pandemic has exposed the constraint­s of convention­al economic data the world over, the problem is particular­ly acute in India, where a dependence on manual processing has sometimes led to a data vacuum.

The country of 1.3 billion people, only 20 per cent of whom know how to use the internet, had to suspend field surveys during the lockdown, which led to gaps in reporting monthly retail inflation numbers. The missing informatio­n eventually was filled in with phone surveys, but the ministry is also establishi­ng a system to do surveys electronic­ally, and will use digital databases where possible.

“Apart from using such data from a policy perspectiv­e, having access to updated data can be used to suggest leads for sector-specific interventi­ons, immediatel­y, as and when required,” said GV Anand Bhushan, Chennaibas­ed partner at the Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co. law firm, which is advising some technology companies working with the government.

India is seeking to build its manufactur­ing sector by wooing companies away from China, but it can’t compare to Asia’s biggest economy in timely reporting of statistics. India’s quarterly GDP data are reported with a lag of two months, compared to less than three weeks in China.

The situation is worse for India’s jobs statistics, a burning issue in a country where about 1 million people enter the job market every month. While the US and China, which has been accused of massaging its economic data to meet political goals, release monthly jobs numbers, Indian employment statistics are already a year out of date by the time they’re reported.

“This is an ongoing challenge for investors in India,” said Joevin Teo, head of Asia fixed-income at Amundi Singapore Ltd. Having higher-frequency data such as employment and retail sales, as well as third-party data that could be checked against official statistics, would “help fund managers avoid a scenario where economic data and on-the-ground reality are inconsiste­nt.”

It doesn’t seem to be deterring internatio­nal investors, however: They’ve poured about $24 billion into Indian stocks over the past 12 months, while pulling money out of other Asian economies except China’s, according to data compiled by

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