4.1 Article

AFRICA'S STATISTICAL TRAGEDY

Journal

REVIEW OF INCOME AND WEALTH
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages S9-S15

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/roiw.12013

Keywords

C82; O47; O55; Africa; gross domestic product; population; poverty; statistics

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While Africa may have overcome its growth tragedy, it is facing a statistical tragedy, in that the statistical foundations of the recent growth in per-capita GDP and reduction in poverty are quite weak. In many countries, GDP accounts use old methods, population censuses are out of date, and poverty estimates are infrequent and often not comparable over time. The proximate reasons have to do with weak capacity, inadequate funding, and a lack of coordination of statistical activities. But the underlying cause may be the political sensitivity of these statistics, and some donors' tendency to go around countries' own National Statistical Development Strategies (NSDS). Greater openness and transparency of statistics, and a higher profile for the NSDS, possibly with naming and shaming of those who try to circumvent it, may help Africans turn around their statistical tragedy.

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