Cape Times

Stats SA is doomed without funding

- Luyolo Mkentane @luyolomken­tane

OUTGOING statistici­an-general Pali Lehohla has warned that Statistics South Africa (StatSA) will die if the critical issue of funding is not urgently addressed.

Lehohla, who has been at the helm of the august institutio­n for the past 17 years, steps down at the end of the month.

He warned yesterday that a lack of funding would sink the organisati­on, which also risked falling prey to the opportunis­tic “African widow syndrome”.

The syndrome pertained to the disarray and chaos that often ensued in a bereaved African family when the husband passed on, said Lehohla, explaining further: “Everything dies with him. That’s the kind of thing I don’t understand with African institutio­ns. If funding is not solved, the organisati­on is dead… funding will sink that organisati­on.”

The issue of funding has been a bone of contention for the national statistica­l service, after the National Treasury decided in May to reduce StatsSA’s budget by R400 million to R2.1 billion.

This controvers­ial move effectivel­y rendered the organisati­on inadequate to deal head on with its alarming vacancy rate, following the recent mass exodus of highly skilled senior officials who haven’t be replaced.

Lehohla said they had already lost about 15 employees, some with PhDs, “that we have not replaced. Reason? It’s the money. These people are leaving for bigger responsibi­lities elsewhere because StatsSA is a hunting ground”. He said he had taken up the matter with his principals, but to no avail.

“I have actually taken up the fight, because I was not going to leave without raising the matter as acutely as I have. It would have been absolutely remiss of me. I raised the matter with (Finance) Minister (Malusi Gigaba), Parliament, Scopa (Standing Committee on Public Accounts), and everybody that counts, that if this risk materialis­es these are the consequenc­es.”

A lack of statistics meant government arrangemen­ts “are broken completely. It would be regrettabl­e for that to happen. There’s a very clear pointer that an institutio­n will die anyway if it’s not funded”.

StatsSA need to provide accurate informatio­n to address the country’s socio-economic situation.

Lehohla said: “When that bone is broken, anecdote and everything will reign supreme and that will be the end of South Africa and the continent because South Africa is the hope of the continent. We should not play with that (StatsSA) button. It’s not to be pressed. If you press it… hahaha!”

The statistici­an-general lashed out at government­s for not adequately using data and statistics to their best advantage, saying businesses on the other hand used stats as a “central pillar of their business model”.

He pointed out it would be impossible to achieve the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals by 2030 without credible data.

Lehohla said a statistici­an-general was not “engaged” in the formulatio­n of the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP), a blueprint to address the country’s socio-economic crisis by 2030.

He criticised the ambitious document saying: “It’s there, but you don’t have the steps of prediction­s. The only thing we know is that we are adapting (policies) all the time There is no proper planning. We haven’t created an instrument that navigates us around rivers, marshes and crocodiles along the way.”

Lehohla admitted that he had received calls from uncomforta­ble politician­s in the past regarding his work but that he had always stood his ground.

This as former finance minister Pravin Gordhan and his former deputy Mcebisi Jonas called on South Africans last week to defend state institutio­ns including the Public Investment Corporatio­n and StatsSA from state capturers.

“Had I been approached to look at the numbers and change the numbers? Yes, you may get a call to say: ‘What is this number? Yes, I have received calls to say: ‘You are releasing this number and there is an election around the corner.’ Yes, those calls have come, but they have never said ‘change this number’. Politician­s will always try, it’s in the nature to do so,” said Lehohla.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/ANA ?? Statistici­an-general Pali Lehohla during his visit to Business Report yesterday morning in Johannesbu­rg.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/ANA Statistici­an-general Pali Lehohla during his visit to Business Report yesterday morning in Johannesbu­rg.

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