Overall level of statistical capacity (scale 0 - 100) - Country Ranking - Oceania

Definition: The Statistical Capacity Indicator is a composite score assessing the capacity of a country’s statistical system. It is based on a diagnostic framework assessing the following areas: methodology; data sources; and periodicity and timeliness. Countries are scored against 25 criteria in these areas, using publicly available information and/or country input. The overall Statistical Capacity score is then calculated as a simple average of all three area scores on a scale of 0-100.

Source: World Bank, Bulletin Board on Statistical Capacity (http://bbsc.worldbank.org).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Samoa 57.78 2020
2 Fiji 56.67 2020
3 Solomon Islands 55.56 2020
4 Tonga 54.44 2020
5 Papua New Guinea 52.22 2020
6 Palau 48.89 2020
7 Tuvalu 47.78 2020
8 Kiribati 42.22 2020
9 Nauru 37.78 2020
10 Vanuatu 36.67 2020

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Development Relevance: Statistical Capacity is a nation’s ability to collect, analyze, and disseminate high-quality data about its population and economy. Quality statistics are essential for all stages of evidence-based decision-making, including: Monitoring social and economic indicators, Allocating political representation and government resources, Guiding private sector investment, as well as Informing the international donor community for program design and policy formulation.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The Statistical Capacity Indicator score is calculated as the average of the scores of the 3 dimensions, i.e. Availability, Collection, Practice.

Aggregation method: Unweighted average

Periodicity: Annual