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    The power of data can transform the world

    ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - Statistics is the new oil that leaders must exploit in Africa to harness and engineer business processes on the continent.
    Economic Commission for Africa’s Oliver Chinganya.
    Economic Commission for Africa’s Oliver Chinganya.

    This is according to Oliver Chinganya, director of the African Centre for Statistics (ACS) at the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA). He was speaking on 23 October during a panel discussion on ‘The Political Economy of Statistical Capacity’ at the 2nd World Data Forum in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    Chinganya deplored the fact that when it comes to funding for statistics, “we see more promises than action because our politicians sign documents and make bold statements but a lot of it ends at the level of statements and commitment”.

    The ECA official argued that governments need to take urgent, concrete and significant actions, “to boost and utilise our statistical capacity, which will then guide their efforts to address ongoing global challenges in health, education, migration, gender, and the environment, etc”.

    Commenting on a “very successful” session organised by ECA at the Forum under the theme, Bringing Statistics Where Opinions and Decisions are Made, Chinganya pointed out that the session provided a great bridging-the-gap opportunity for data producers and users.

    "It was such a thrill to sit in that packed room with National Statistics Officers, journalists, researchers, policymakers, representatives of the civil society, academia, and other data stakeholders,” said Chinganya, adding that, “The discussions were vibrant, interactive, honest and enriching, and I think that speaks to ECA’s role as a big contributor to this drive for enhanced data and statistics in Africa.”

    Improved partnerships

    The panel was almost unanimous on the need for improved partnerships within the entire data production and consumption spectrum; the role of the media as essential stakeholders; and the importance of linking privately generated data to the tracking and monitoring of SDGs and African Union’s Agenda 2063.

    Chinganya cautioned: “We need to make sure that we have the necessary data by 2030, otherwise we end up where we found ourselves with the MDGs.”

    The official opening of the forum was graced by UN Deputy Chief, Amina Mohammed, who invited. “All data innovators to work together with the UN to improve the availability and use of disaggregated and local data. Together, we can safely and responsibly harness the power of data to achieve the SDGs and bring about a world where no one, absolutely no one, is left behind.”

    The forum was hosted by the Federal Competitiveness and Statistics Authority of United Arab Emirates with support from the Statistics Division of UNDESA under the guidance of the UN Statistical Commission and the High-level Group for Partnership, Coordination and Capacity-Building for Statistics for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

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