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Date
: 30/01/2006
Source: Ministry of Finance
Title: Manuel: 2006 Africa Symposium on Statistics
Development
Trevor A Manuel, Minister of Finance’s address to the
2006 Africa Symposium on Statistics Development, Cape Town
THE 2010 ROUND OF POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUSES
Chairperson;
Ambassador Abdellai Jenna, Executive Secretary of the United
Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
Heads of Statistical Agencies
Your Excellencies, Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Distinguished delegates
Dear friends
Let me welcome you to both South Africa and to Cape Town, this city
of such remarkable contradictions. I trust that your stay here will
be memorable, if only for the quality of agreements that you will
strike on the 2010 Round of Population and Housing Censuses.
This conference has its genesis in September 2000 when 147 heads of
State and Governments, at the United Nations Millennium Summit,
committed themselves to making the right to development a reality
for everyone and to free the entire human race from want.
They acknowledged that progress should be based on sustainable
economic growth, which must focus on the poor, with human rights at
its core. The Millennium Declaration is remembered most for its
articulation of the measurable objectives as the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs).
The adoption of that Declaration, with its strong emphasis on human
and economic development across Africa, represents an enormous
victory in the struggle to overturn the ravages and the excesses of
centuries of colonialism on the African continent.
To help track progress, the United Nations Secretariat and the
specialised agencies of the United Nations (UN) system, as well as
representatives of International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World
Bank and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) defined a set of time-bound and measurable goals and targets
for combating poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental
degradation and discrimination against women.
International experts also selected relevant indicators to be used
to assess progress over the period from 1990 to 2015, the targets
date for meeting these expectations.
In September 2005, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr
Kofi Annan, presented the findings of the first review of progress
being made towards achieving the time-bound Millennium Development
Goals.
The findings for Africa were appalling! Not only did the data paint
the picture of the extent of underdevelopment, it also recorded the
fact that even if all of the MDGs were attained by 2015, African
development would still lag way behind every other continent.
Moreover, profound concern was expressed about the quality of the
data available.
Two immediate challenges present themselves. Firstly, how can we
continue to lobby for the centrality of African development
initiatives if the data we present has little credibility?
Secondly, how can we ask governments and donors to direct resources
towards areas of need if we cannot empirically establish where the
needs exist?
I am reminded also of another victory secured in the Bretton Woods
Institutions in the struggle against the
“once-size-fits-all” structural adjustment programmes.
This victory is represented by the shift to the methodology of
Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), which are adopted by
governments in developing countries after participatory processes
in their countries. Whilst these PRSPs describe the macroeconomic,
structural and social policies and programmes that the country will
pursue, the under girding of the PRSPs is entirely statistical.
Undoubtedly, if the under girding is unsound, the programmes built
on such foundations will be severely compromised.
There is common cause that national statistical systems in Africa
still present profound weaknesses, including poor political
support; inadequate legal and institutional framework for
statistical activities; a lack of co-ordination and weak
management. One of the real difficulties that confront statistical
agencies is their relationship with political principals. In
politics, we don’t always wish to hear unpleasant truths. It
is far easier to convince ourselves, our donors and the entire
world that the situation is a vast improvement on reality. However
good that may make us feel, the paradox is that it might generate
disinclination on the part of donors to resource our needs, if we
have made the case that such resources are no longer required. What
then will be the role for our statisticians?
There is an obvious need to reverse the decline of African
statistics. The concern is based on the fact that for instance, 19
out of 56 countries and areas in Africa have not conducted a
population census in the last 10 years, nearly twice as many in the
previous decade. Consequently, factual country-level data in a
majority of the cases replaced by estimates produced by
international organizations often on the basis of inferring
information from other countries or from surveys that are
completely out of date.
As a result, for many African countries, national trends to inform
and monitor the implementation of development policies cannot be
produced.
The history of census taking in Africa has been characterised by
irregularity, incompleteness, inaccuracies and subsequently a gross
under-utilisation of census data. Consequently, census results have
not adequately informed policy formulation and programme
implementation, and socio-economic development in general, more so
because government policy makers and planners were ill-equipped to
utilise the results.
Yet the centrality of population and housing censuses in knowledge
management in Africa, in the pursuit of evidence-based
decision-making, and in monitoring progress made towards achieving
national development goals cannot be overstated.
A number of experts have begun to focus attention on the serious
quality deficiencies in the data on which the conclusions of the
United Nations MDG report are based part of the problem is the
inadequate data and for some MDG indicators, no data exist.
In addition, the process of the preparation of the 2010 World
Programme on Population and Housing Censuses, all regions, with
exception of Africa, have organised working groups, tasks forces
and other meetings, with the collaboration of their member states,
to assess their census experiences for the 2000 round as well as to
have a regional position on the proposed recommendations with
respect to the United Nations Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses.
During the 22 - 26 August meeting in New York, the Expert Group
Meeting on the 2010 World Programme on Population and Housing
Censuses was concerned by the lack of progress and preparation at
the African region level and resolved that a meeting for census
experts being organized in time for preparing the report in time
for submission to the UN Statistics Commission in March 2006.
The main aim of this symposium is thus to facilitate the
strengthening of the role of African countries in the world
programme on 2010 population and housing censuses, to strengthen
collaboration on census related activities, to develop strategies
for African countries to fill the glaring data gaps that limit
Africa’s ability to monitor progress made towards achieving
the Millennium Development Goals.
How do we achieve these objectives?
* Encouraging all African countries to undertake a population and
housing census in the 2010 round
* Focusing and fostering linkages in the MDG related and census
campaigns
* Making a concerted effort to create the necessary capacity to
achieve these objectives and
* Improving reporting mechanisms between National Statistical
Agencies and International Agencies.
I am exceedingly grateful that all of you have responded so
promptly and at short notice to attend this symposium in order to
give impetus to the 2010 initiative. I am particularly appreciative
of the attendance and enthusiasm of the Executive Secretary and his
team at the Economic Commission for Africa.
The 2010 Round of Population and Housing Censuses needs a Pan
African Champion and I can think of no institution or initiative
better placed than the ECA to lead and inspire.
In closing I want to quote my President, His Excellence, Thabo
Mbeki, in his opening address at the launch of the African Union,
Durban, 9 July 2002:
He said, “By forming the Union, the peoples of our continent
have made the unequivocal statement that Africa must unite! We as
Africans have a common and a shared destiny! Together, we must
redefine this destiny for a better life for all the people of this
continent developing new forms of partnerships at all levels and
segments of our societies, between segments of our societies and
our governments and between our governments.”
And this is the challenge for the statisticians, because if we
can’t measure it, we cannot manage it.