12
Australia’s national agricultural statistics review h Kiely, Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) riences with Partnerships 1, IAOS 2014, October 2014 Da Nang Vietnam

Australia’s national agricultural statistics review Sarah Kiely, Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Experiences with Partnerships 1, IAOS 2014, 8-10

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Australia’s national agricultural statistics review

Sarah Kiely, Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS)Experiences with Partnerships 1, IAOS 2014,8-10 October 2014 Da Nang Vietnam

Background to the review

• Agriculture and agricultural statistics internationally:

• Food security

• Sustainable development

• Statistical quality and quantity in decline

• Role of agriculture in Australia

• Australia’s approach to agricultural statistics:

• ABS and ABARES main producers of official agricultural statistics

National Agricultural Statistics Review (NASR)

• Opportunity to strengthen collaborative relationships between key statistical producers

• Build upon outcomes of internal reviews

• Aimed to identify:

• Priority information needs

• Information gaps

• Overlaps and inconsistencies in existing statistics

• Opportunities for improvement

Framework for consultation - Enduring goals for Australian agriculture

Stakeholder engagement - Overview

• Multiple phases and modes of engagement

• Initial consultation phase:

• Internal ABS and ABARES consultation

• Discussion paper:

• Public consultation (including submission process)

• Secondary consultation phase:

• Consolidation of input from initial consultation phase

• Preliminary findings paper:

• Further public consultation (including public forums, submission process)

Stakeholder engagement – Contribution of stakeholders to preliminary findings

Preliminary findings – High priority information needs

• Information needs varied by stakeholder groups and by the enduring goals

• Needs of industry less well met than those of government

• Majority of priority information needs are partially met by existing statistical assets:

• One-third of stakeholders needs fully met• A small number of needs not met at all

• Reasons needs not being met:

• Barriers (i.e. cost, capability)

• Structural issues with the assets

• Availability of specific information

Preliminary findings – Information need by enduring goal

Preliminary findings – Key issue themes• Respondent burden

• Poor relationships between data collectors and respondents

• Contributing to reduced data quality

• Data quality

• cost, timeliness, coherence, accuracy, relevance, interpretability, accessibility, institutional environment

• Statistical infrastructure

• Methods, standards and frameworks, classifications, physical systems, people capability

• Coordination and governance

• Leadership, roles and responsibilities, principles of an effective statistical system

Preliminary findings – Opportunities for efficiencies

• Data collection• Online surveys, real-time data collection,

integration• Data management

• Common standards• Dissemination

• Improved electronic communication, ‘one stop shop’, improved reporting capability, concordant data

• Coordination• Collection harmonisation, joint ABS-ABARES data

collection, integration and analysis, administrative data

• Statistical capability

Conclusion and next steps

• A modern, adaptive and responsive agricultural statistical system for Australia

• High quality agricultural official statistics:

• Role of statistical leadership

• Partnerships and collaboration

• Final NASR recommendations due for release by end 2014

• Framework for the assessment, coordination and governance