Cape Times

SIGNAL OF HONOUR

Pali Lehohla is chosen to speak at the UN Statistics Commission­s’s 70th anniversar­y

- Pali Lehohla

STATISTICS is a conduit of trust and only those who can be trusted should be its stewards and custodians. Your excellenci­es, I am humbled by this special privilege and invitation to represent my country and address this 48th Session of the UN Statistics Commission (UNSC) on the occasion of its 70th anniversar­y.

On this the 70th anniversar­y of the Statistics Commission I will assert that statistics is a conduit of trust.

In that regard I locate this Commission which is a steward and custodian of global statistics in the midst of its four related sister commission­s that are a year older and one which is 45 years younger.

When this august body, the UNSC was establishe­d in 1947, it joined the premiere infrastruc­ture whose architectu­ral design is to focus the troubled global community towards world progress, peace and prosperity.

The design is about our gregarious being and our egalitaria­n status, thus revealing the imperative of human beings being human. In 1946, ahead of this Commission, Social Developmen­t, Status of Women, and Population and Developmen­t Commission­s, were establishe­d – all congregati­ng to bring trust in society.

Several expert bodies accompanie­d these commission­s, yet the prospect of being human remained remote. Without thinking and acting not only on people but the compulsion to act on the planet for peace and prosperity made this prospect impossible.

Thus the Commission on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t was born in December 1992. No other commission has been as catalytic and trouble steering. No other has been effort-uniting across the dispersed statistica­l and informatio­n community.

The Commission on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t with accompanyi­ng Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) holds the

Dr Pali Lehohla is South Africa’s Statistici­an-General and Head of Statistics South Africa. He delivered this invited address as one of the two longest serving statistici­ans-general serving at the UNSC on the occasion of the 70th anniversar­y of the 48th Session of the UNSC in New York yesterday.

key to a sustainabl­e world, but only with statistics. This puts paid to the maxim that statistics is too important to be left to statistici­ans. No one dare challenge me when I say that statistics is a conduit of trust.

What then has South Africa learnt from the Statistics Commission?

To date, statistica­l practice in South Africa boasts 102 years of formality. This served different historical epochs under different names. Its formalisat­ion took root on July 14, 1914, when the Statistics Act was promulgate­d.

Tumultuous However, this century-long history was tumultuous. Its repugnant aroma is of 300 years of pernicious colonial rule and 48 years of brutal apartheid.

In 1974 South Africa was thrown out of the General Assembly and associated activities of the UN, such as the Statistics Commission which handles the conduit of trust: statistics.

This was because South Africa undermined all the principles establishi­ng the four Commission­s.

In 1994 a new society that was born needed a conduit of trust, statistics and statistica­l methods to plan and build its future. Where then could we ask for help? The global statistics system of course.

The UNSC embraced and provided us with the stewardshi­p in technical, methodolog­ical and statistica­l frameworks for developmen­t of our statistics system.

The 10 fundamenta­l principles of official statistics became our lodestar for practice and for framing our modern statistics law enacted in 1999. The adoption of the IMF Special Data Disseminat­ion Standards establishe­d in the aftermath of world economic shocks helped transform our statistica­l landscape and fiscal discipline.

The UNSC was a resourcefu­l ideas market. Bilateral relations with countries were possible. Prominent among these were north-south relations we establishe­d with Statistics Sweden from 1995 and Statistics Canada from 2002. In the south it was with the Australia Bureau of Statistics from 1995.

The Handbook on Official Statistics shaped our organisati­onal structure and practice, especially for managing in a political environmen­t.

Joining the City Group and UNSC Committee structures was invaluable, the accompanyi­ng camaraderi­e unforgetta­ble, the peer learning enjoyable with delightful and remarkable results. Only a conduit of trust allows such possibilit­ies: Statistics is a conduit of trust.

Locally, our statistics system is juvenile and in renewal. It boasts juvenile officials who have developed quickly. The institutio­n thus holds promise to succeed long into the future, because of its youthful but profession­al workforce. In that regard without fear of any contradict­ion we are playing a leading role on our continent of Africa and we contribute generously globally. The birth of African Symposium for Statistica­l Developmen­t is in Statistics South Africa.

The Commission, through your subsidiary structures, entrusted Statistics South Africa with hosting the 57th session of the Internatio­nal Statistics Institute in 2009 as well as the very first UN World Data Forum hosted seven weeks ago.

You entrusted us to pioneer this very first UN World Data Forum in January this year. We stand ready for more and in October this year we shall be hosting the 28th session of the Internatio­nal Union for the Scientific Study of Population.

South Africa hosted the World Summit on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t in 2002, which birthed the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

We did all these in appreciati­on of you joining us in a relentless war of setting ourselves free from ignorance and poverty, inspired by the demon of colonialis­m and driven by the monster of apartheid.

Today we march in tandem with you powered by a conduit of trust – statistics. And indeed among any 10 countries discussing matters statistics global, you will find Statistics South Africa.

We do this not because we sniff for more work, but because we owe this burden of responsibi­lity to the conduit of trust – statistics.

This magnificen­t body, the UNSC, has honoured us as trusted stewards for this conduit of trust: statistics.

Looking ahead we see difficulti­es. And being realistic with our current situation I muse to quote President Yeltsin who once said this year is better than next year.

Nobody would have foreseen big data 20 years ago and this uncertain future is going to be dominated by the internet of things with more informatio­n, quicker and more variable. This includes fake news, alternativ­e facts and post-truths.

Fisher’s frequentis­ts, who are the bulwark of our current crop of official statistici­ans, now have to make peace with Bayesian statistici­ans in order to overcome the new challenges of big data.

Remain relevant We shall have to reinvent ourselves to lead and to remain relevant and trusted stewards and custodians of the conduit of statistics. To be the pre-eminent metaphoric­al medicine men and women delivering high quality statistica­l and informatio­n systems to the world of sustainabl­e developmen­t, a world that is humane where human beings begin being human, we shall have to integrate with locational attributes and be expert in managing technology.

Understand­ing politics without being partisan are our strategic assets and in communicat­ing this conduit of trust – statistics – lies our success and grave responsibi­lity. The future lies in partnershi­ps and not a monopoly-like ivory tower of knowledge.

Let us take a leaf from the late Professor Hans Rosling, who implored us as national statistici­ans that we should reveal the beauty of statistics. Reveal the intrinsic value of this conduit, which is trust.

He further said that unless we measure the effectiven­ess of our communicat­ion on the SDGs, we shall have failed the world. To elevate the legacy Hans Rosling left us, indeed it is in our hands to communicat­e measuremen­t. It is in our hands not to be forgotten, but to be remembered as agents of change that were entrusted with stewardshi­p and custodians­hip of and for the conduit of trust: statistics 70 years from now.

In closing I leave you with a quotation which should make us aware that “You can change without growing, but you can’t grow without changing.” We are implored to grow the trust levels in society. Only through evidence, scientific statistica­l facts, a conduit of trust – statistics – can this be achieved.

May the UNSC, the steward and custodian of the conduit of trust – statistics – continue to trustworth­ily serve the people and planet for peace and prosperity.

The 10 fundamenta­l principles of official statistics became our lodestar for practice and for framing our modern statistics law enacted in 1999.

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 ?? PHOTO: RICK BAJORNAS ?? Statistici­an-General Pali Lehohla addresses the UN Statistics Commission on its 70th anniversar­y. He delivered an invited address as one of the two longest-serving statistici­ans-general at the body.
PHOTO: RICK BAJORNAS Statistici­an-General Pali Lehohla addresses the UN Statistics Commission on its 70th anniversar­y. He delivered an invited address as one of the two longest-serving statistici­ans-general at the body.

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