Finance & economics | Half-measures

India’s once-vaunted statistical infrastructure is crumbling

The reasons are worryingly familiar

School children await bus transport beneath a billboard with photographs of successful students outside a school in Nooranad, Kerala, India, Friday, March 4, 2022. Slowly but steadily, life in South Asia is returning to normal, and people hope the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic is behind them. (AP Photo/R S Iyer)
|DELHI

The modern Indian state has a proud statistical heritage. Soon after the country gained independence in 1947, the government resolved to achieve its development through comprehensive five-year plans. The strategy, though economically inadvisable, nonetheless required the creation of a robust data-gathering apparatus. In 1950 PC Mahalanobis, the leading light of Indian statistics, designed the National Sample Survey, which sent staff to the far corners of the vast country to jot down data regarding its mostly illiterate citizens. The survey’s complexity and scope seemed “beyond the bounds of possibility”, reckoned one American statistician.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Half-measures”

The coming food catastrophe

From the May 21st 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance & economics

Can anything spark Europe’s economy back to life?

Mario Draghi, the continent’s unofficial chief technocrat, has a plan

Has social media broken the stockmarket?

That is the contention of Cliff Asness, one of the great quant investors


American office delinquencies are shooting up

How worried should investors be?


China is suffering from a crisis of confidence

Can anything perk up its economy?

America has a huge deficit. Which candidate would make it worse?

Enough policies have been proposed to make a call

Why Oasis fans should welcome price-gouging

There are worse things in life than paying a fair price