Why is data so important in determining how we live?
Tim Harford investigates how good policies depend on the availability of reliable statistics
Why are good data so important to policymakers around the world – whether they know it or not – and what happens when the data available is bad or even missing?
Presenter Tim Harford speaks to Georgina Sturge, a statistician at the House of Commons library in London and the author of Bad Data: How Governments, Politicians and the Rest of Us Get Misled by Numbers.
Presenter: Tim Harford
Producer: Jon Bithrey
(Photo: Data analyst using a dashboard with charts, metrics and KPI to analyse performance and create insight reports. Credit: Getty Images)
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- Sat 10 Dec 2022 05:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service except Australasia
- Sat 10 Dec 2022 22:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service Americas and the Caribbean
- Sun 11 Dec 2022 00:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service Online, UK DAB/Freeview, News Internet & Europe and the Middle East only
- Sun 11 Dec 2022 14:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service Australasia & News Internet only
- Sun 11 Dec 2022 22:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Mon 12 Dec 2022 00:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service Australasia, South Asia & East Asia only
- Mon 12 Dec 2022 10:50GMTÂé¶¹Éç World Service
Unlock the history and truth behind the data with The OU
Explore how numbers shape, and sometimes mislead us, with The Open University.
When can you trust statistics?
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Tim Harford explains the numbers and statistics used in everyday life
