Philippine Daily Inquirer

Methods of generating, processing of official statistics transparen­t

- —ARSENIOM. BALISACAN, PhD, economic planning secretary and National Economic and Developmen­t Authority director general

THIS REFERS to Conrado Banal III’s column titled “Fake it to me gently” (Business, 8/13/15).

As researcher­s and advocates of evidence-based decision-making, we welcome healthy debates on measuremen­ts, data and methodolog­ies as these are useful in enhancing the quality of official statistics. This is why we strive to be transparen­t in the use of terms, technical definition­s, data generation and methodolog­ies for processing and analysis of official statistics. The process of arriving at these is also subject to debates and consultati­ons within and outside of government.

Official poverty statistics, including the country’s poverty threshold, for example, are generated by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) through the Family Income and Expenditur­e Survey (FIES) and the Annual Poverty Indicator Survey (APIS). Poverty thresholds, including the periodic adjustment­s made, are based on sound methodolog­y and best practices agreed upon by an interagenc­y technical committee of experts on measuremen­t. The methodolog­y is applied consistent­ly— regardless of how this affects the resulting poverty incidence data—from one survey year to another; so, the official poverty data are comparable across time. For transparen­cy, changes in official poverty measuremen­t and correspond­ing poverty data generated from the methodolog­y are posted on the PSA website (www.psa.gov.ph) for the public to scrutinize and discuss in healthy debates.

Sadly, Banal, who is very fond of word play as is evident in his columns, does not seem to have a high regard for accuracy and chose not to engage himself in healthy debates. Instead of checking for himself the facts and figures, he convenient­ly cited the views of others (and we do not know how accurately and faithfully he represente­d those views) even as he hid behind “some groups” and “critics” in accusing government of “manipulati­on” and “misuse” of statistics to “polish the image” of President Aquino.

For the informatio­n of Banal and the public, the schedule for the release of official statistics is predetermi­ned; PSA, as an independen­t body, strictly enforces its embargo policy and releases such statistics as scheduled, whether or not the results are favorable to the administra­tion. Other government agencies like the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority can only explain the possible reasons for any result, which is part of the practice of accountabi­lity.

While we do acknowledg­e the limits of statistica­l and technical discussion­s insofar as engaging the broader public, we maintain that rigorous technical discussion­s are necessary, precisely to avoid politicize­d and subjective policy- and decision-making in government.

We hope that this letter will also make the public aware of the government’s processes in conducting surveys and generating official statistics.

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