02716pab a2200169 454500008004000000100001800040245004800058260000900106300007800115362001100193520216100204650001502365773003402380909001002414999001702424952010502441180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aVidwans, S.M. aIndian statistical system at the crossroads c2002 ap.3819-829;37(38) 21 Sep 2002: p.3943-955;37(39) 28 Sep 2002: p.4060-072. a14 Sep aThe Indian statistical system (ISS) developed essentially as an administrative statistical system decentralised over the states. Since statistics are generated as by-products of administration, the system is the most economical and suitable for our vast country. However, over the last decade, the system of administrative statistic has been deteriorating at its very first stage of data collection due to ebbing efficiency of government administration at all levels, and has almost collapsed in certain important sectors. Since, for the most part, the state governments are responsible for the system, the remedy for its failure lies in exhorting and assisting the state governments to stem its deterioration and bring it back on tracks. The department of statistics (DoS) of government of India, however, viewed the situation differently, and under the pressure of meeting the requirements of Special Data Dissemination Standards (SDDS) of the IMF, engaged itself in a flurry of initiatives since 1998. The DoS perceived the lack of coordination and of modernisation as the major causes of the system's failures. It, therefore, attempted to create an institution endowed with regulatory powers in the field of statistics, and formulate,with World Bank assistance, a project to modernize the ISS. This paper, organised in three parts, attempts to analyse these initiatives, and to highlight their grave implication for the ISS. In this part, the paper gives the background of the development of the ISS, describes the problems it faces at present, and the approach to their resolution suggested by the National Statistical Commission. It discusses the vital issue of desirability of the decentralised structure of the ISS, and points to the adoption of certain modernisation measures that reinforce the emerging tendency to centralisation. Beginning the discussion of its main theme, the paper then critically examines the formal assessment of deficiencies of the ISS made by DoS's secretary, which formed the starting point of DoS's initiatives, and analyses the DoS's proposal for creation of the Statistical authority in India. - Reproduced. aStatistics aEconomic and Political Weekly a53808 c53808d53808 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 37, Issue no: 37pAR54253r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR