Government Statistician, Professor Samuel Kobina Annim, says the new Statistical Service Act (Act 1003) passed in 2019 will help address challenges in misreporting and misrepresentation in statistics.
Prof. Annim said, under the Act, the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) would collaborate with the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) every year to ensure that all generated statistics designated as national information would be used by all stakeholders as the authentic data for national discourse.
This, he explained would help differentiate between the national data generated by the GSS and experimental data by other institutions or civil societies.
The Government Statistician said this on Thursday at a workshop on data interpretation and communication for selected media practitioners specialised in business reporting.
The programme was organised by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in collaboration with the GSS.
"We will be developing a code of practice and ethics under the Act, which will bind all MDAs in the country to follow specific standards for generating data", he said.
Prof. Annim said the Act served as a strategic mechanism for harnessing the changes in the approaches used by the GSS to collect and produce statistical information at the national level.
This, he said included new ways and use of non-traditional statistical information and data such as big data, satellite imagery, administrative data, and commercial data.
Prof. Annim said the GSS was running a project with Parliament to build capacity of its research department and said discussions were far advanced to have a desk in Parliament to help Parliamentarians to be abreast with statistics for effective and efficient decision-making.
He said that was part of the Service's five-year Corporate Plan (2020-2024), which outlined an ambitious journey for the Service with a concentrated and revitalized effort.
The Head of Communications, UNDP, Ms Praise Nutakor, said the training was necessitated because GSS and UNDP often produced research reports on various aspects of development to inform policy decisions.
She, however, said such data was sometimes misinterpreted and misrepresented out of context.
Ms. Nutakor said the training would help improve the knowledge and understanding of journalists on how to effectively communicate the results of data analysis and also get a basic understanding of statistical methods and terminologies.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana and Seychelles strengthen bilateral ties with focus on key sectors
23 mins -
National Elections Security Taskforce meets political party heads ahead of December elections
27 mins -
Samsung’s AI-powered innovations honored by Consumer Technology Association
47 mins -
Fugitive Zambian MP arrested in Zimbabwe – minister
1 hour -
Town council in Canada at standstill over refusal to take King’s oath
1 hour -
Trump picks Pam Bondi as attorney general after Matt Gaetz withdraws
1 hour -
Providing quality seeds to farmers is first step towards achieving food security in Ghana
2 hours -
Thousands of PayPal customers report brief outage
2 hours -
Gary Gensler to leave role as SEC chairman
2 hours -
Contraceptive pills recalled in South Africa after mix-up
2 hours -
Patient sues Algerian author over claims he used her in novel
2 hours -
Kenya’s president cancels major deals with Adani Group
3 hours -
COP29: Africa urged to invest in youth to lead fight against climate change
3 hours -
How Kenya’s evangelical president has fallen out with churches
3 hours -
‘Restoring forests or ravaging Ghana’s green heritage?’ – Coalition questions Akufo-Addo’s COP 29 claims
3 hours