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Revisions for a sceptical audience David Marder, ONS, UK George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four “But actually, he thought, as he re-adjusted the Ministry of Plenty’s figures, it was not even forgery. It was merely the substitution of one piece of nonsense for another . . .” The statistical trade-off Stan the Statistician and his juggling act A PR problem Financial Times, 3 July 2006 Media put the boot in Stan the Statistician gets a kick from the sceptical media Public view of official statistics Len Cook • Users naively expect statistics to remain comparable over time in a fast changing world • In public policy, there is rarely the luxury of waiting until the final statistical measure is available • There are major policy risks in delaying key decisions because timely information is not available • Challenge for statisticians – not only what we measure is changing but so are sources, systems standards and the methods we use to obtain raw data Three types of revisions • Unplanned and regular – for example, regular revisions that fall outside the expected range • Planned and unusual – such as the introduction of methodological changes • Unplanned and unusual – including errors. These inevitably get the media attention Statisticians’ ‘motto’ • Clarity • Communication National Statistics Revisions Protocol Statement of principle Substantial methodological changes will be announced before the release of statistics based on the new methods Additional principles • A general statement describing its practice on revisions from each department • Key outputs subject to scheduled revisions will have a published policy covering those revisions • A statement explaining the effect of revisions will accompany the release of all key outputs subject to scheduled revisions • Revisions comply with the same principles as other new information Additional principles • Timeliness balanced against the need to avoid frequent revisions • Minimal unexpected revisions but, if they occur, they will be released as soon as practicable and in an open and transparent manner • Substantial revisions accompanied by explanation of nature and extent • Long-term effects of revisions on key outputs monitored to improve quality Code of Practice – Statement on revisions Recognising the challenge • Communication – Likelihood – Reasons • The ‘expert’ filter – City analysts – Media correspondents Communication innovations • More information on average past revisions and planned future revisions • Economic statistics forum • Horizon scanning Other lessons • Proactive explanation • Don’t ‘oversell’ • Think about the language – New information = updates – Methodological changes = improvements – Errors = corrections • Be less defensive • Promote statistical literacy Happy Stan