Archive:MEDSTAT programme
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Introduction
The European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) countries (divided in two groups: ENP-East and ENP-South) are currently combining efforts in order to harmonise their statistical systems along the lines of the European Statistical System. In order to reach this goal, Eurostat and ENP-South (Mediterranean) countries have established closer international cooperation in statistics. The EU has set out to provide the necessary assistance to the beneficiary countries through multi-beneficiary programmes or bilateral national programmes. MEDSTAT is one such programme. It fosters cooperation between the EU-27 and those Mediterranean countries which respond to the data requirements of the Association Agreements between the EU and the Mediterranean partners (especially regarding free trade, sustainable development and social development). MEDSTAT went through various development stages and encompasses three programmes which represent the different progress phases (I, II and III). MEDSTAT I and II together included 10 Mediterranean partners: Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, the occupied Palestinian territory, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey. Ever since Turkey became a candidate country, it is no longer included in what is now known as MEDSTAT III. Libya, which is an ENP-South country, is not an active participant in the MEDSTAT programme.
Brief history
The Euro-Mediterranean statistical cooperation was launched by the Barcelona declaration and the Euro-Mediterranean partnership (1995/1996) which intended ‘to promote cooperation in statistics in order to harmonise methods and exchange data’. The Valencia seminar, which took place in December 1995, was the starting point of the regional programme for statistical cooperation. A number of missions in the Mediterranean countries helped to establish a list of priority fields to be covered, and these were approved during the Naples Seminar in June 1996. Ever since then, three consecutive MEDSTAT programmes have been implemented (I, II and II). The latest of the three, MEDSTAT III, builds on the achievements of MEDSTAT I and MEDSTAT IIand aims to consolidate and further strengthen the statistical cooperation drawing on past results.
MEDSTAT I (1996-2003) – The first cooperation programme with MED countries
The main objective of MEDSTAT I was to provide the foundations for a standardised collection and exchange of reliable, harmonised and up-to-date statistics, which in turn would allow the EU to monitor the development of a free trade area (for manufactured goods) in the whole Mediterranean basin. The programme covered six statistical sectors: Trade in goods and services, Transport, Migration, Tourism, Environment and National accounts. Regarding the statistical assistance supplied by the EU, two horizontal fields of activity (training and information systems) were included in the programme’s operational range. Between 2003 and 2006, a second project (MEDSTAT-Env II) focused on the environment sector.
MEDSTAT II (2006-2009) – Improving the quality of statistical services
Drawing on the results of MEDSTAT I, MEDSTAT II mainly inteded to improve the quality of the statistical services. This was to be achieved through the consolidation of the Euro-Mediterranean statistical cooperation. Another objective was to foster the further development of the statistical information system in the Mediterranean countries (i.e.to improve the quality of the compilation and exchange of statistical data between the EU and the Mediterranean countries). The joint efforts were centred on the promotion of the production of harmonised statistics with respect to international standards (i.e. collecting timely, relevant and high-quality data, necessary for political decision-making and ensuring good governance); on the provision of assistance to the National Statistical Systems (NSSs) of the Mediterranean partners (in terms of institutional and inter-institutional operations, equipment and human resources); on the promotion of the transparency of statistical activities which would make it easier for the growing number of users to find the data they are looking for.
Following an assessment of the statistical situation in each partner country (Country Statistical Situation Report – CSSR), the European Commission, in cooperation with each of the Mediterranean partner countries, identified priorities regarding the necessary actions for each country (Project Orientation Report – POR). As a result, in addition to the six statistical sectors so far covered by MEDSTAT I, the scope of MEDSTAT II was extended to include the following sectors: Social statistics, Agriculture and Energy.
MEDSTAT III (2010-2013) – Promoting evidence-based policy-making
MEDSTAT III was launched in April 2010, initially for a total duration of two years, and it covered a planned budget of four million Euro. Soon afterwards, however, the European Commission revised its plan and decided to extend the programme to the end of 2013 and to provide it with additional funding. The overall objective of the currently running MEDSTAT III is to promote evidence-based decision-making and to stimulate democratic development by improving the availability and use of statistical data in ENP-South countries Moreover, it also aims to consolidate and further expand the progress achieved during MEDSTAT I and II by providing users with a wider range of quality data in the priority thematic sectors. The 6 priority thematic sectors of MEDSTAT III comprise: Agriculture, Energy, Migration, Social statistics, Transport and Trade, and Balance of payments, all within the scope of two horizontal sectors (training and dissemination). Directors of the National Statistical Institutes of the Mediterranean ENP countries and the EU Commission have already begun discussing the future developments of the Euro-Mediterranean cooperation in statistics. These discussions aim at defining a sustainable approach and are monitored and supported by experts from the EU. The partner countries are primarily focused on defining the key priorities for cross-sectional (e.g. quality management, training) and thematic (e.g. employment, short-term economic indicators) courses of action.
Resources and tools
Role of partners
The MEDSTAT III programme involves various actors in the European Union and in the Mediterranean partner countries. Europaid is the contracting authority of the programme. The role of Eurostat is to provide technical advice to Europaid (for instance, through participation in technical meetings with experts) and to manage the exchange of [http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/medstat/database data with the Mediterranean partner countries,] along with the dissemination of Mediterranean statistics at the EU level. The implementation of the objectives of MEDSTAT III is delegated to a subcontractor, which is an executive agency supported by an international consortium that includes private consultant companies as well as national statistical institutes from EU Member States and from partner countries. The role of the consortium is to mobilise experienced and knowledgeable human resources (i.e. team leaders, key experts and short-term experts) and to manage the organisation and the performance of the tasks at each phase of the project. Mediterranean partner countries appoint the National Chief Coordinator, as well as National Sector Coordinators and Task Force members, all of whom participate in the various phases of the projects. Within the Mediterranean partner countries, the National Statistical Offices are usually the key partners of the MEDSTAT programme, but other Ministries may also be involved, depending on the thematic sector. In order to avoid any overlap with other international statistical cooperation projects and to ensure that the methodological performance complies with international statistical developments, international organisations participate in thematic task force meetings. For instance, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) attends the Task Force meetings on Agriculture Statistics and the International Energy Agency (IEA) participates in debates on methodological issues regarding Energy Statistics. The World Bank and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) support the MED-HIM initiative on migration statistics.
How does MEDSTAT III work?
The compilation and exchange of statistical data is a complex process that encompasses a series of actions which need to follow strict guidelines and rules. Therefore, it is necessary to have a controlling body, called the Task Force, which oversees the whole process. A separate Task Force, co-chaired by the European commission and the MED countries, is set up for each priority thematic sector. Its role is to ensure that the sector work programmes are technically relevant and meets the requirements of the MEDSTAT programme. The content of the programmes can be regional, sub-regional or country-specific. Once a specific sector work programme has been approved, there is a large variety of tools which can be used during the implementation phase to reach the agreed objectives. Additionally, during this phase, key experts and short-term experts visit Mediterranean partner countries to provide technical assistance. They aid the partner countries in assessing the training needs of the national statistical systems. Furthermore, they help to implement training programmes (e.g. e-learning courses) along with the training of potential trainers, which is necessary to improve the capacity of an ONS to develop its own training programme in the future. Study visits in Member States and partner countries, as well as numerous fora (workshops, working groups, and the forum of statisticians), are prepared and introduced in order for all those involved to be able to share their experiences, discuss practices and perform methodological work
Outcomes
All the three MEDSTAT programmes have proven efficient, particularly in extending the statistical capacity of the Mediterranean partner countries. They have reinforced the role of statistics in these countries and prompted them to become committed to making the data more transparent and easily available. The communication and visibility plan (CVP) that has been set up to exchange views regarding the results of MEDSTAT III so far (MEDSTAT III E-newsletters, MEDSTAT III project website and publication) and also to improve the dissemination of the data on ENP-South countries collected and published by Eurostat will help to make governments, policy-makers and all other users more aware of the fact that high-quality statistics can be very useful in any given decision-making process. The MEDSTAT programmes have also improved the capacity building in the statistics of the Mediterranean partner countries. Indeed, they have greatly enhanced the human and technical capability to perform the tasks that produce relevant, timely and high quality statistics in the various thematic sectors. In addition, great progress has been made in terms of the transfer of knowledge, improved quality of statistics, data exchanges and registered publications.
Knowledge transfer in statistics
Regional and sub-regional events (workshops, study visits and training courses) help to disseminate the best practices in all aspects of the data life cycle and in each priority thematic sector. This is, for instance, the case in: Agriculture Statistics (e.g. a study visit about using GIS as a tool for census, a workshop on the harmonization of concepts in Agricultural Statistics); Energy Statistics (e.g. a study visit about elaborating renewable energy and energy balances); Migration Statistics (e.g. a workshop to strengthen the use of administrative data); Social Statistics (e.g. a study visit about the methods for measuring and analysing the informal employment, a workshop on the harmonisation of methodologies and social indicators with international standards); Trade Statistics (e.g. a workshop on the best practices and data validation); Transport Statistics (e.g. a study visit on the collection and production of statistics on multimodal transport).
Improved quality of statistics
Quality of the statistical information is a key objective of all statistical systems and can be assessed by means of various criteria. Providing quality data is a key concern of the MEDSTAT programme in promoting evidence-based decision-making and the use of statistical data. As a result, MEDSTAT has planned specific activities (mainly technical assistance or workshop) in each priority thematic sector to improve the quality of statistics. Key or short-term experts are delegated to help the respective countries to adopt better data collection tools (e.g. to improve the design of questionnaires), to implement international standards in data processing and data analysis, etc. Technical assistance, for instance, has been provided to improve price statistics and to validate the agricultural census data (Agriculture Statistics), to improve the quality of data for Energy balance and for Energy efficiency indicators (Energy Statistics), and to set up the training in the data processing of household survey data (Social Statistics).
Data exchanges with Mediterranean partner countries and publications
Data exchange between the Mediterranean partner countries and Eurostat, and the dissemination of data in the Mediterranean countries, form the most visible output of the MEDSTAT programme. Every year, Eurostat distributes questionnaires in the partner countries to collect data on agriculture, balance of payments, environment, external trade, national accounts, prices, social statistics, tourism and transport. The questionnaires are then sent back to Eurostat using the secure EDAMIS data exchange tool. There are a number of validation tools which allow Eurostat to check the consistency and the plausibility of the data. Any issues are flagged immediately and require a response from the data provider. As a result, Eurostat and the partner country in question cooperate to correct the data. Once the final data sets are established and validated,, they are then made publicly available free-to-view within the Eurostat database in the form of either paper publications (pocketbooks, leaflets and Statistics in Focus), or web-products (country profiles and Statistics Explained).