The Seychelles has began participating in the International Monetary Fund's General
Data Dissemination System (GDDS), marking a major step forward in the development
of its statistical system.
Comprehensive information on Seychelles's statistical production and dissemination
practices now appears on the IMF's Dissemination Standards Bulletin Board (DSBB).
Danny Faure, the Governor of the IMF for Seychelles, and also Minister for
Finance, said that improvement in the quality and timeliness of economic, financial,
and social statistics is essential for economic and social policy, and also
for monitoring and assessing the government's development programs.
"As Seychelles undergoes rapid economic and structural changes, it is
important that data-producing agencies develop and improve on their methodological,
compilation, and dissemination practices with a view to making them consistent
with international codes and standards," he said.
"The IMF's GDDS provides a structured reference framework for the development
of statistical systems and participating in it is proof of the commitment of
the data-producing agencies to monitor progress and also implement short- and
medium-term plans for strengthening the system of official statistics. This
will ultimately lead to the production and dissemination of more reliable and
timely statistics, which is important for policymaking and resource allocation
decisions of the country," he added.
Robert Edwards, Director of the IMF Statistics Department (STA), welcomed Seychelles's
GDDS participation and observed: "Seychelles's participation in the GDDS
is a milestone in the country's statistical development. Participation in the
GDDS should allow Seychelles to take full advantage of the framework to enhance
its statistical capacity, especially for macroeconomic and socio-demographic
statistics."
The GDDS was established by the IMF in 1997. It is a framework to help countries
produce comprehensive and accurate statistics for economic policy. Seychelles
is the 88th GDDS participant. So far, six GDDS participants have used the GDDS
framework to graduate to the Special Data Dissemination Standard, a more demanding
dissemination standard also established by the IMF in 1996.