Essayer OR - Gratuit
Navigating unemployment data: a response to Minister Meth's critique of StatsSA
Cape Times
|June 23, 2025
MARGARET Thatcher, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom entered the realm of statistics and ultimately destroyed the Office of the National Statistics (ONS) of the United Kingdom.
Felix Romer in a 2022 Journal article titled Poverty, Inequality Statistics and Knowledge Politics Under Thatcher demonstrates thus “Academic experts such as Townsend criticised the government for delays and omissions in official reports and for misleading statistical definitions that deliberately lowered the poverty count.”
It took fifteen years of hard work from its former colonies to rebuild the UK ONS by Bill McClennan of Australia and Len Cooke of New Zealand who had to cross seas and continents to go and fix ONS.
We do not need that history repeating itself in South Africa.
It needs to be nipped in the bud.
And that is what I am going to relentlessly do as statistician emeritus.
The Honourable Tau, Meth, Sekwati and their cohorts are dancing on Thatcher's template, but in StatsSA and its current and previous staff they have a match and South Africa can be assured that a Thatcherite debacle will not fly.
As the unemployment debate rages, another day another political missile.
This time around Minister Nomakhosazana Meth leads with yet uninformed discourse talking through all corners of the mouth under an article titled “Capitec CEO isn’t wrong: Unemployment data needs work”
She takes the reader through a meandering journey of scholarly papers, and for that she should be given credit. However, where she gets it totally wrong in her ventilatory voyage, she fails to go into the foundational methodological documents from StatsSA.
Two such lay the foundation. In addition, each release of StatsSA liberates any doubting Thomas, which Meth has become one of the most illustrious.
Each would be missile she sends in the direction of StatsSA’s methodology which she has not taken time to acquaint herself, finds a mosquito repellent that buries her missives in the deep burrows, so that she never misinforms again.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition June 23, 2025 de Cape Times.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Cape Times
Cape Times
Agriculture Department rejects claims of regulatory collapse in fertilisers and farm feeds
THE Department of Agriculture (DoA) has dismissed claims by the Southern African Agri Initiative (Saai) that the regulatory system responsible for approving fertilisers, pesticides, farm feeds and veterinary products is facing a \"total administrative breakdown.
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Oosthuizen warns Blitzboks must hit the ground running
VETERAN Blitzbok forward Ryan Oosthuizen feels that every match at the Emirates Dubai 7s tournament this weekend will be like a knockout match and warns that a slow start could prove costly to their ambitions of beginning the 2025/26 HSBC SVNS Series on a high.
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Nedbank to pay Transnet R600m in confidential settlement
Bank and parastatal agree to end litigation, and settlement is made without any admission of liability
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Vodacom invests over R1.1bn to boost network infrastructure across KwaZulu-Natal
VODACOM KwaZulu-Natal has announced a major investment of more than R1.1 billion in network infrastructure for the current financial year (FY2026), reinforcing its commitment to expanding connectivity and accelerating digital inclusion across South Africa's most populous province.
1 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Transnet celebrates milestone of 200th Traxx 23E locomotive
TRANSNET recently celebrated a pivotal milestone in South Africa's industrial and economic recovery, as the 200th state-of-the-art Traxx 23E locomotive rolled off the assembly line.
1 min
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
South Africans are still battling the effects of long COVID
\"I FEEL better, but my mind isn't the same.\" Four years after the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, such comments are still heard regularly in many medical practices in South Africa. What began as a respiratory virus seems to have left a lingering mark on some people who were infected.
3 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Octodec Investments boosts dividends amid resilient inner-city portfolio performance
OCTODEC Investments, a prominent JSE-listed Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) primarily operating in Tshwane and Johannesburg, has reported a 7.6% increase in its full-year dividend, now standing at 134.5 cents per share for the year ending August 31.
3 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Van den Berg warns depleted Wales will 'chase lost causes'
SPRINGBOK scrumhalf Morne van den Berg says South Africa cannot afford to underestimate Wales in Saturday's Test at the Principality Stadium, warning that a patched-together Welsh side will still bring the trademark fight, physicality and defiance that South African teams have come to expect in the north.
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
FRANK STEWART BRIDGE
TIME FLIES
1 mins
November 26, 2025
Cape Times
Activists haul government to court over claims of citizens fighting for Israel
ATTORNEY and human rights defender Ziyaad Ebrahim Patel and Safoudien Bester, a Palestinian Solidarity activist have launched a high court application to hold the government accountable to its international and other obligations following allegations that a group of South Africans was unlawfully serving in the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) in the armed conflict in the Gaza Strip.
1 min
November 26, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

