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UK Statistics Authority

The UK Statistics Authority (UKSA, Welsh: Awdurdod Ystadegau'r DU) is a non-ministerial government department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for oversight of the Office for National Statistics, maintaining a national code of practice for official statistics, and accrediting statistics that comply with the Code as National Statistics. UKSA was established on 1 April 2008 by the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007, and is directly accountable to the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

Agency overview

1 April 2008 (2008-04-01)

United Kingdom

Fry Building 1st Floor, 2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF[1]

3685[2]

£256m (2018)[2]

Background[edit]

Gordon Brown, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, announced on 28 November 2005, that the government intended to publish plans in early 2006 to legislate to render the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and the statistics it generates independent of government on a model based on the independence of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England. This was originally a 1997 Labour Party manifesto commitment and was also the policy of the Liberal Democrat and Conservative parties. Such independence was also sought by the Royal Statistical Society and the Statistics Commission. The National Statistician, who is the chief executive of the ONS, would be directly accountable to Parliament through a widely constituted independent governing Statistics Board. The ONS would be a non-ministerial government department so that the staff, including the Director, would remain as civil servants but without being under direct ministerial control. The National Statistician at the time, Karen Dunnell, stated that the legislation would help improve public trust in official statistics although the ONS already acts independently according to its own published guidelines, the National Statistics Code of Practice, which sets out the key principles and standards that official statisticians, including those in other parts of the Government Statistical Service, are expected to follow and uphold.


The details of the plans for independence were considered in Parliament during the 2006/2007 session and resulted in the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007. In July 2007, Sir Michael Scholar was nominated by the government to be the three-day-a-week non-executive chairman of the Statistics Board which, to re-establish faith in the integrity of government statistics, has statutory responsibility for oversight of UK government statistics and of the Office for National Statistics. It also has a duty to assess all UK government statistics. Following Gordon Brown's later announcement on his 2007 appointment as Prime Minister of new constitutional arrangements for public appointments, Sir Michael also became, on 18 July, the first such nominee to appear before the House of Commons Treasury Committee and to have his nomination subject to confirmation by the House. On 7 February 2008, following the first meeting of the shadow board, it was announced that the body would be known as the UK Statistics Authority.


UKSA was established on 1 April 2008 by the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007, and is directly accountable to the Parliament of the United Kingdom.[3][4][5] It reports to Parliament through the Minister for the Cabinet Office.

Independent reviews[edit]

In 2023 a review of governance led by Prof Denise Lievesley was announced as part of the cycle of reviews of independent public bodies.[12] Her report was published in 2024, having followed a full review process, including an independent challenge panel comprising Prof Sir John Curtice, Dr Tim Leunig, Prof Guy Nason and Dr Ben Warner among others.


Since it was formed in 2008, the UKSA has also been the subject of a number of reviews in respect of technical matters: in 2015 economic statistics[13] (led by Prof Sir Charles Bean) and in 2016 methodology[14] (led by Dr Andrew Garrett).

the National Statistician and head of the Government Statistical Service, took up post 22 October 2019[19]

Prof. Sir Ian Diamond

Ed Humpherson, the authority's Head of Assessment, responsible for the independent assessment of official statistics

Alison Pritchard, ONS Director General and Deputy National Statistician for Data Capability, has the third executive place on the board

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Official website