The government is being urged to scrap the expensive 10-yearly paper-based
census and rely instead on locally-collated information from increased data
sharing.
A report from think tank
New Local
Government Network (NLGN) claims the change would produce more
reliable statistics at half the £500m cost of issuing, collecting and processing
hand-written forms distributed to every household in the UK once every decade.
Author Nigel Keohane said the state should maintain a new national address
database with a legal requirement on householders to keep registration up to
date, and reform guidance governing the exchange of data already collected.
And local authorities and other public bodies should be required by law to
develop a minimum population dataset for national statistical purposes in
co-operation with other public bodies.
NLGN called on the Cabinet Office to mount an urgent review of the
alternatives in an attempt to scrap the next census in 2011 - or if too late, to
make it the last.
Existing census-derived statistics are used by central government to allocate
grant aid to local government and plan services, but many local authorities
complain the figures are out of date before they are produced, seriously
understating migration.
The report instead advocates a “local head-count” of each areas' population,
taken from a range of public services such as electoral registers, GP patient
registers, school places records and tax data. The information could be collated
to deliver a more accurate reflection of who lives in the local area.
Other available databases range from the electoral register, school meals,
council tax, council tax benefit, the Department for Work and Pensions, Ordnance
Survey, the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority, university student data and
the police.
Keohane said the use of unique property reference numbers and unique citizen
reference numbers combined with placing the system in local authority hands
would minimise " Big Brother" privacy fears, but data-sharing law and government
guidance would need to be examined in detail to facilitate the necessary sharing
of data.
"Significant challenges relate to matching individual identities between
multiple data sources, harmonising definitions and classifications between the
different types of register and achieving temporal consistency between sources
and issues of differing scope and content," he said.
Keohane said a change in the law would be required to settle the
“tortuous
dispute” over data ownership between the Ordnance Survey and the
National Land and Property Gazetteer, and possibly the Post Office to enable the
address register to be set up.
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