Lack of data in critical sectors in Africa is fuelling bad governance on the continent, according to a new study that highlights the importance of research in planning for the future.
That means most countries on the continent are flying blind into the future because they lack critical data for setting public policy, such as population censuses and birth and death registration.
This week, the Mo Ibrahim Foundation’s (MIF) IIAG Series 2023 Report focused on data and governance. Its new report, The Power of Data for Governance: Closing Data Gaps to Accelerate Africa’s Transformation, released on January 29 in Accra, Ghana, revealed appalling data gaps.
For example, only three African countries have a death registration system that records at least 90 percent of deaths that occur.
In 14 African countries, the last population census was conducted before 2010, meaning that all planning in recent years has been based on estimates.
The UN’s Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 1 calls for the eradication of extreme poverty by 2030. But if you don’t know how many mouths need food, you can’t plan how much to import or even grow.
As of April 2023, only 10 African countries, accounting for 19.6 per cent of the continent’s population, have a birth registration system that registers at least 90 percent of births.
They are Algeria, Botswana, Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Morocco, São Tomé and Príncipe, Sierra Leone, South Africa and Tunisia.
While Algeria, Botswana and Tunisia have the highest birth registration completeness on the continent – 100 per cent – Ethiopia has the lowest at 3 per cent.
The report reveals that in six African countries, accounting for 20.4 per cent of the continent’s population, less than 30 per cent of births are registered. The six countries are Angola, Chad, Ethiopia, Niger, Tanzania and Zambia.
Eritrea and Somalia have no data on the completeness of birth registration as of April 2023.
Good data
The Power of Data for Governance report highlights the role of good data in driving progress, assessing government performance, setting policy priorities and ensuring trust in government.
Data plays a critical role in informing strategy and policymaking by enabling baselines, benchmarks and targets to be set, allowing governments to monitor and evaluate policies and commitments.
Data also enables governments to improve the design, delivery and effectiveness of public services. It is essential to ensure that government policies take into account the most vulnerable groups and individuals and leave no one behind.
The report highlights the strong link between quality data and effective governance.
“Without sound data, governments drive blind and there can be no real progress towards development,” said Mo Ibrahim.
Even in areas where progress has been made, critical governance data gaps remain on issues such as health structures, the informal economy, the environment, violence against women, child labour, and illicit financial flows.
Data underfunding remains a serious challenge globally, with statistics receiving only 0.34 per cent of total Official Development Assistance (ODA).
In Africa, the ODA received for data and statistics has nearly halved between 2018 and 2021.
While statistical capacity has improved across the continent in recent decades, it remains low compared to other world regions and is hindered by several challenges, such as insufficient capacity in African National Statistical Offices (NSOs) and low levels of data literacy.
According to the African Development Bank (AfDB), the economic potential of open data for Africa could equate to roughly 1-2 per cent of the region’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).