The long overdue Census

Business and Economic Commentary by Christopher Ram Part 13

Introduction

The Census is not only a core function of the Statistics Act of Guyana but is the very first function listed under the Act which was passed one year before the progression from a colony to a country. Prior to the Act, responsibility for statistics largely rested with the ministries and departments of government, outside of any central coordination. The Act brought a more centralised structure into being, its timing providing the government with the power to collect, analyse and disseminate information to foster informed planning and decision-making both by the government and the people. Indeed, as the Minister responsible for Finance stated in his 2022 Budget Speech, Census 2022 would “establish baseline data sets that will guide policies at all levels”.

It is very unfortunate however that policies by the current administration are formulated when key political figures visit regions in the country, speak at ceremonial functions, or at press conferences, without any reference to data compiled by the Bureau of Statistics. Because the Bureau has largely operated under the thumb of the Ministry of Finance, it has operated outside of the public purview, a necessary ingredient for enhancement in efficiency and utility. Indeed, the public, unfairly, associates the Bureau entirely with the ten-yearly census which is has never performed with distinction, almost always late. Indeed, increasingly so as the following table shows: