Mumbai:Amid concerns over data credibility, the 15th finance commission chairman NK Singh on Thursday said the panel is embarking on a prudential measure of reconciling all publicly available data and arrive at the best conclusion.
He, however, made it clear that the reconciliation exercise to be carried out over the next two days by senior panel officials, has nothing to do with data computation methods which have raised many eyebrows.
"We will try to reconcile and come to a conclusion on what we would consider reliable data in the public domain," Singh told reporters, adding the exercise will be carried out with the CAG and the Reserve Bank.
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"We may or may not succeed, but at least we must come to a conclusion that this is what we believe is the most credible before accepting it," he added.
He was replying to a specific query on whether the row over data credibility came up at the meetings with economists here as part of its two-day visit that concluded on Thursday.
Singh said while the issue did not feature in the meeting with economists, and suggested that the panel took the decision of data reconciliation proactively.
Asked if the panel regularly carries out such reconciliations, he said the exercise will "be within the bounds of acceptable and appropriate prudence to do so".
It can be noted that a group of over 100 top economists, from the country and outside, had earlier this year held a presser expressing concerns over "political interference" in statistical data, and had called for restoration of "institutional independence" and integrity of statistical organisations.
Their appeal came against the backdrop of the controversies over revision of GDP numbers which indicated even in the note-ban year, the economy grew higher the top GDP numbers reported during the previous Congress rule, and withholding employment data by the NSSO that showed that unemployment had hit a 47-year low in FY18, leading to the head of the organisation to quit in protest.