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Beyond data capture: Statistics ought to shape India's narrative
Mint Kolkata
|February 18, 2026
We must tell our own statistical story with clarity and confidence before we find others setting perceptions of our progress
In India today, statistics are no longer confined to official reports or technical briefings.
Employment numbers trend on TV. Inflation figures influence how families think about their monthly expenses. Poverty estimates enter the political discourse. In many ways, this heightened visibility is a sign of progress. It shows that data matters and that citizens care about evidence.
India's statistical system has evolved significantly. Surveys are larger and more sophisticated. Data is processed faster. Digital tools have improved collection and dissemination. Official statistics today occupy a central place in our policy discourse in a way they did not even a decade ago. This institutional shift deserves recognition. Yet, greater visibility has not translated into greater trust. Many citizens listen to official numbers and quietly ask themselves: Does this reflect what I see around me? That is the 'moment of truth' for data credibility. If they feel distant from experience, even robust statistics may struggle to persuade.
Take employment. Our unemployment rate is measured with methodological care. But when people discuss jobs, they often mean something broader: stability, income security and prospects for advancement. In India, employment is fluid. A worker may be self-employed one season, engaged in casual labour the next and assisting in a family enterprise after that. A single unemployment rate cannot capture that volatility or the anxiety that accompanies it. When these nuances are not explained clearly, the data can appear incomplete even when it is technically accurate.
This story is from the February 18, 2026 edition of Mint Kolkata.
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