(This article first appeared in The Print in co-authorship with Dr Vandana Mishra and Dr Netajee Abhinandan)
Congress president Rahul Gandhi and other leaders of his
party spared no time in attacking the Narendra Modi government after “108
economists and social scientists” called for restoration of “institutional
independence and integrity to the statistical organisations.”
The use of the statement of academics as a political tool to
score points raises serious doubts about the professed neutrality of this
exercise, which has, lest one forgets, unfolded in the backdrop of a highly
charged political environment with general elections less than a month away.
The nation is once again in danger, we are told, not from
external aggressors but from a slugfest over statistical data. Newspapers and
news portals last week told us that concerns had been raised over “political
interference” and attempts to influence data collection and analysis in the
country. The statement released by the group of academics said: “It (the
statistical machinery) was often criticised for the quality of its estimates,
but never were allegations made of political interference influencing decisions
and the estimates themselves”.