The Data Revolution: Finding the Missing Millions

Published By: Overseas Development Institute | Published Date: April , 2015

This report sets out the evidence that, even when people are counted, the counting is frequently not good enough. What is assumed to be an empirical fact – a statistic – is too often the result not of direct observation but of inference, assumptions or extrapolation, or political negotiation. The Report argues argues that good quality, relevant, accessible and timely data will allow willing governments to extend services into communities which until now have been blank spaces in planning processes, and to implement policies more efficiently, meaning that a data revolution could, in the medium term, pay for itself. The solutions are threefold: increasing investments in the capacity of national statistical offices (NSOs), thereby potentially improving the scope and frequency of household surveys; using alternative sources of data to fill gaps and building strong administrative systems; and making better use of the data we already have. For example, the World Bank has a hidden database of consumption data that should be made open-access. ODI Research Report 03.

Author(s): Elizabeth Stuart, Emma Samman, William Avis, Tom Berliner | Posted on: May 21, 2015 | Views()


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